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Mediterranean from Split

MSC Armonia

Salida

1 Nov ‘25

Detalles del crucero

11 noches   MSC Armonia  

Itinerario: Split - Venecia (Marghera), Italia - Katakolon - Heraklion - Rodas - Limassol - Port Said - Alejandría - Split

ventana

U$S 1,853 por persona

Alojamiento de mejor valor seleccionado expresado en dolares americanos

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Itinerario

Fecha
Puerto
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Llegada
Salida
1st Nov 2025
Split
18:00

With its seafront cafés and ancient alleyways, shouting stallholders and travellers on the move, bustling, exuberant Split is one of Croatia’s and the Mediterranean’s most compelling cities, it’s easy to see this feeling when you step aground from your MSC cruise.

It has a unique historical heritage too, having grown out of the palace built here by the Roman Emperor Diocletian in 295AD. The palace remains Split’s central ingredient, having been gradually transformed into a warren of houses, tenements, churches and chapels by the various peoples who came to live here after Diocletian’s successors had departed.
Adapted long ago to serve as Split’s town centre, Diocletian’s Palace is certainly not an archaeological “site”. Although set-piece buildings such as Diocletian’s mausoleum (now the cathedral) and the Temple of Jupiter (now a baptistery) still remain, other aspects of the palace have been tinkered with so much by successive generations that it is no longer recognizable as an ancient Roman structure. Best place to start exploring with an MSC excursion the seaward side of the palace is Split’s broad and lively Riva.
Running along the palace’s southern facade, into which shops, cafés and a warren of tiny flats have been built, the Riva is where a large part of the city’s population congregates day and night to meet friends, catch up on gossip or idle away an hour or two in a café. Nearly everything worth seeing in Split is concentrated in the compact Old Town behind the waterfront Riva, made up in part of the various remains and conversions of Diocletian’s Palace itself, and the medieval additions to the west of it. You can walk across this area in about ten minutes, although it would take a lifetime to explore all its nooks and crannies.

2nd Nov 2025
Venecia (Marghera), Italia
09:00
20:00

Venecia, un romántico destino de MSC Cruceros por el Mediterráneo, es una obra maestra de la artesanía. La ciudad está construida sobre 118 pequeñas islas, separadas por canales, en una laguna poco profunda en el mar Adriático. Esta ciudad, declarada Patrimonio de la Humanidad por la UNESCO, rebosa belleza, desde los canales bordeados de góndolas y los antiguos palacios de mármol hasta las proezas arquitectónicas históricas como la Basílica de San Marcos y el Palazzo Contarini del Bovolo. Visitar Venecia es como estar en una tierra de fábula, una mezcla centelleante de cultura, historia y agua.

3rd Nov 2025
En el mar
4th Nov 2025
Katakolon
10:00
17:00

Aventurarse al lugar de nacimiento de los Juegos Olímpicos, con el estadio, los templos de Hera y Apolo. Visite el Museo Olímpico, cuyas atracciones más populares incluyen la famosa Victoria de Painios y el Hermes de Praxíteles.

5th Nov 2025
Heraklion
11:00
18:00

La capital de Creta, Heraklion, destino de MSC Cruceros por el Mediterráneo, es una ciudad enérgica con una prolífica historia.
Admire el majestuoso Monte Yioúhtas mientras atraca en el puerto y la antigua Fortaleza de Koules en el muelle oeste del puerto. Descubra el mítico Palacio de Cnosos o visite históricos monasterios e iglesias. Creta es una fascinante porción de la vida insular griega que espera ser explorada.

6th Nov 2025
Rodas
08:00
17:00

Hogar de Helios, Dios del Sol, Rodas es encantadora desde su
ciudad amurallada a el Templo de Lindos con vistas al mar.

7th Nov 2025
Limassol
10:00
18:00

Limassol es el lugar de nacimiento de Afrodita, la diosa del amor. Camine
por el camino de los cruzados y maravíllese con los frescos Bizantinos,
templos y casas de los antiguos griegos y romanos.

8th Nov 2025
Port Said
07:00
21:00

Port Said is an Egyptian city at the northern end of the Suez Canal, on the Mediterranean Sea. A concrete lighthouse dates from the canal’s opening in 1869. On the waterfront is the former department store Simon Arzt. Now disused, the art deco building offers a glimpse into the past, to when Port Said was a cosmopolitan trading hub.

9th Nov 2025
Alejandría
08:00
22:00

Descubra la historia antigua de esta metrópolis intelectual, política, económica y famosa por su clima de templados inviernos, playas de arena y su magnifico paisaje.

10th Nov 2025
En el mar
11th Nov 2025
En el mar
12th Nov 2025
Split
08:00

With its seafront cafés and ancient alleyways, shouting stallholders and travellers on the move, bustling, exuberant Split is one of Croatia’s and the Mediterranean’s most compelling cities, it’s easy to see this feeling when you step aground from your MSC cruise.

It has a unique historical heritage too, having grown out of the palace built here by the Roman Emperor Diocletian in 295AD. The palace remains Split’s central ingredient, having been gradually transformed into a warren of houses, tenements, churches and chapels by the various peoples who came to live here after Diocletian’s successors had departed.
Adapted long ago to serve as Split’s town centre, Diocletian’s Palace is certainly not an archaeological “site”. Although set-piece buildings such as Diocletian’s mausoleum (now the cathedral) and the Temple of Jupiter (now a baptistery) still remain, other aspects of the palace have been tinkered with so much by successive generations that it is no longer recognizable as an ancient Roman structure. Best place to start exploring with an MSC excursion the seaward side of the palace is Split’s broad and lively Riva.
Running along the palace’s southern facade, into which shops, cafés and a warren of tiny flats have been built, the Riva is where a large part of the city’s population congregates day and night to meet friends, catch up on gossip or idle away an hour or two in a café. Nearly everything worth seeing in Split is concentrated in the compact Old Town behind the waterfront Riva, made up in part of the various remains and conversions of Diocletian’s Palace itself, and the medieval additions to the west of it. You can walk across this area in about ten minutes, although it would take a lifetime to explore all its nooks and crannies.

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