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Painting by Jakob Alt, 1835–36. The Blue Grotto (Italian: Grotta Azzurra) is a sea cave on the coast of the island of Capri, southern Italy.Sunlight shining through an underwater cavity is reflected back upward through the seawater below the cavern, giving the water a blue glow that illuminates the cavern.
Entdeckung der blauen Grotte auf der Insel Capri (Discovery of the Blue Grotto on the Isle of Capri) is an 1838 book by German writer and painter August Kopisch in which he describes his 1826 rediscovery of the Blue Grotto in Capri together with his friend Ernest Fries.
Capri has twelve churches, seven museums and several monuments. The most visited attraction in Capri is the Grotta Azzurra ('Blue Grotto'), a cave discovered in the 19th century by foreign tourists. On one side of the grotto are the remains of ancient Roman rock, with a narrow cavern. [22]
The Blue Grotto on the north side of the island of Capri had become renowned as an attraction for tourists during the 19th century. Because its entrance was about three feet high it could be entered in a small rowboat. The interior of the grotto is about 39 feet high and its depth is 50 feet.
The book that spawned the 19th century fascination with Capri in France, Germany, and England was Entdeckung der blauen Grotte auf der Insel Capri (Discovery of the Blue Grotto on the Isle of Capri) by German painter and writer August Kopisch, in which he describes his 1826 stay on Capri and his (re)discovery of the Blue Grotto.
Blue Grotto (Capri), a cave on the Italian island of Capri; Blue Cave (Kastellorizo), a cave on the Greek Island of Megisti (Kastelorizo) Blue Grotto (Malta), a cave in Malta; Blue Grotto, an area under the Manhattan end of the Brooklyn Bridge; Grotta dello Smeraldo, a cave at the Amalfi Coast in Italy; Blue Grotto, a dive resort in Williston ...
The Blue Grotto at Capri, an 1835 painting now in the Kunsthalle Bremen. Heinrich Jakob Fried (11 March 1802, Queichheim - 2 November 1870, Munich) was a German painter.
Faraglioni di Scopello, on the north coast of Castellammare del Golfo Faraglioni in Zagare Bay, Gargano National Park, Apulia. In Italian, faraglioni (pronounced [faraʎˈʎoːni]; Neapolitan: faragliune [faraʝˈʝuːnə]; singular faraglione in both languages) are stacks, coastal and oceanic rock formations eroded by waves.