Belmond Grand Hotel Timeo
Belmond Grand Hotel Timeo | |
---|---|
General information | |
Location | Via Teatro Greco 59, 98039, Taormina, Sicily |
Management | Belmond Ltd. |
Other information | |
Number of rooms | 70 |
Website | |
belmond.com/grandhoteltimeo |
Belmond Grand Hotel Timeo is a hotel located at the centre of Taormina in Sicily, adjacent to the Greek Theatre.
Chronology
- 1787Johann Wolfgang von Goethe wrote for the first time about the Greek Theatre in his Italian Journey :
- 1863Otto Gèleng, a 20-year-old Prussian baron, visited Taormina to paint watercolours and took residence in a private house belonging to Don Francesco La Floresta. Don Francesco had started renting rooms in 1850 and called his house “Timeo”, the name of the founder of the Greek city “Tauromenion” in 358 BC. Geleng’s watercolours of the snow-capped Etna and its green slopes overlooking the sea created enormous interest in Berlin and Paris, resulting in a series of artists visiting Taormina, staying at Don Francesco’s “Timeo” house. :
- 1874Don Francesco sold an orange field and with the proceeds bought a house right below the Greek Theatre, where he continued his activity with five guest rooms on the spot where Belmond Grand Timeo now stands. :
- 1883Don Francesco and his son Giuseppe enlarged the Timeo to 12 rooms. The American writer and art critic Bernhard Berenson remembers the Timeo as the only hotel in Taormina. :
- 1896Giuseppe La Floresta inherited the Timeo after the death of Don Francesco and added 60 new rooms to the existing 12 between 1896 and 1906. By now, the Timeo was a hotel of great standing, visited by emperors, kings and grand dukes of European courts who wanted to spend winter in a warm climate. Thanks to this mild weather the Timeo was a winter resort and closed between May and October. In 1896, Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany visited Taormina, stayed at the Timeo,[1] and returned in 1904 and 1906 when he rented the entire hotel for a month for his family and court. Luxury tourism kept increasing until the First World War and thereafter, from 1920 to 1929, during the time of the Belle Epoque in Europe :
- 1906The Timeo was first visited by Edward VII, King of England,[2] and his wife Augusta, followed by further visits in 1907 and 1908. :
- 1920The English writer D. H. Lawrence lived at the Timeo for four years,[3] during which time he wrote Lady Chatterley’s Lover. When Giuseppe died, the Timeo was inherited by his son, Francesco, nick-named Don Ciccino, who continued to manage the hotel. During the Second World War, the Timeo was requisitioned for a number of years by the British Royal Air Force. :
- 1943On the 9th July, heavy bombing damaged the Timeo and large portion of Taormina, but by 1947 life had returned to normal. :
- 1948From this year until the end of the 1950s, the Timeo had as its guests Jean Cocteau, Jean Marais, Roger Peyrefitte, Tennessee Williams and Truman Capote. :
- 1966After the death of Don Ciccino, the reins of the hotel passed to his daughters, who continued at the hotel for another 15 years. :
- 1981The Timeo was sold by the Floresta family to Gaetano Graci, who totally refurbished and modernised the hotel. :
- 1998The Franza family from Messina purchased the Timeo and added a meeting centre and pool. The family also purchased Belmond Villa Sant’Andrea in Mazzarò Bay, beside the sea at Taormina. :
- 2000The Film Festival “Taormina Arte” (Taormina Film Fest) was inaugurated, attracting large numbers of visitors to Taormina and Grand Hotel Timeo. :
- 2010In January, the Franza family sold both Grand Hotel Timeo and Villa Sant’Andrea to Orient-Express Hotels. :
- 2014The company changed its name to Belmond Ltd. At that time the hotel was renamed Belmond Grand Hotel Timeo[4] :
References
- ↑ "Grand Hotel Timeo - Taormina - Italy - OFFICIAL WEBSITE of JP Moser". Retrieved 17 October 2014.
- ↑ "Taormina". Wish Sicily. Retrieved 17 October 2014.
- ↑ "Grand Hotel Timeo in Sicily Hotels on Concierge.com". Retrieved 17 October 2014.
- ↑ "Orient-Express Hotels Ltd. to launch Belmond brand". Retrieved 17 October 2014.
Further reading
External links
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