Paradiso Country House
Located on the quiet hills outside Pescara, Paradiso Country House overlooks the Adriatic Sea. It offers a free swimming pool with hydromassage corner, a sun terrace and traditional restaurant/pizzeria. WiFi is free throughout. With air conditioning/heating, all rooms at the Paradiso have a functional décor, tiled or wooden floors and TV. Some rooms have a balcony and some include a patio. Regional cuisine prepared with local produce is served at the property's restaurant daily, and breakfast is buffet style. Guests also enjoy a garden, bar and playground. A 6-minute drive from the sandy beach, the Paradiso Country House is 5 km from Pescara city centre. The Aeroporto D'Abruzzo airport is a 10-minute drive away.
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What to see in Pescara
Pescara (IPA: [Peˈskaːra] ,; in Abruzzese: Pisco) is a town in Central Italy, in the region of the Abruzos. The city is divided by two by the river of the same name and is located at the center of a metropolitan area of 400,000 inhabitants. In 1927, Pescara, the part of the city south of the Pescara River (in the province of Chieti), and Castellammare Adriatrico, the part of the city north of the river (in the province of Teramo) joined in a single city, The current fish. The poet Gabriele D'Annunzio, born in this city, was one of the main drivers in the creation of the new city.
The origins of fish are prior to the Roman conquest. The name, both from both cities and the river, was a forerus. was connected with Rome through the Claudia Valeria road and the Tiburtina via. The main building was the temple of Jovis Arutium. The city was an important port for commerce with the eastern provinces of the Empire.
In the Middle Ages, Pescara was destroyed by the Lombards in 597. On that occasion, the bishop of the city, Ceteo (current saint pattern of fish), was accused of fraternizing with the Christian Greeks (the Lombards were Arrians) and It was thrown from the bridge with a stone tied to the neck.