It should be taken into account that Fenix Tours - Private Tours Puglia & Basilicata, is the initiative of Simeone Andrulli (personal site Tymbaryon Village), writer and webmaster of the site.
The purpose of this tourist initiative is not simply to tell the same refrain, promising incredible sensations, an unforgettable experience, a magic place where all your dreams come true... you'll hear this and that, over and over again. It might sound exciting but Disneyland is in Paris, Orlando, Los Angeles, Tokyo and Shangai...
After working many years in Paris, probably the most tourist place on the planet, I decided to distance myself from dream factories. As matter of a fact my intention is not making commercial promises rather letting the visitor discover and understand two very diverse territories so that your soul might get impregnated by the stillness and mystic beauty of Basilicata as well as the "joie de vivre" and lively culture of Puglia.
It will be you and your group, you and your family and nobodyelse (and me of course), in the end solely you. Being a private tour we can change and adapt the itinerary (when possible...) therefore neither just taking pictures nor listening the usual bla-bla, neither going after a chimeric dream ... rather enjoying yourself, ultimately enriching yourself with a valuable experience!
Matera is in a particular geographical situation. Located on the edge of the Murgia plateau, as much as most of Apulian cities bordering the Murgia and leaning on the Ionian Sea, Matera is characterized by a canyon locally called "gravina". Its municipal territory, like Gravina in Puglia (Bari province) and Ginosa (Taranto province), have hybrid characteristics with one part lying over the Murgian plateau and the other over the Bradanica Foredeep
Basilicata has two provinces, Matera and Potenza, and the latter since it became the regional capital in 1807 has always tried to overshadow the cumbersome presence of Matera. Matera, nonetheless until 1663 was part of Puglia. Due to historical reasons, the administrative center of the small region of Basilicata was Salerno, outside Basilicata. Then in an attempt to reorganise the vice-kingdom of Naples and not finding a urban center among the Lucanian towns that could meet their requirements, the Spaniards detached Matera from Puglia and made it its capital. Later on, during the Napoleonic administration, in 1807 in a new reorganization of the territory of the Kingdom of Naples, the regional capital was transferred from Matera to Potenza due to the eccentric position of the former in the Lucanian territory. Since then the rivalry between the two cities has never stopped.
The day after the proclamation of Matera, the capital of European culture 2019, the ancient rivalry between Matera and Potenza exploded. The regional leaders of Potenza, instead of promoting Matera, tried to drain as much as possible media attention over their own town and diverted most of the funds for the European Cultural Capital event to the rest of the region and above all to Potenza, trying ridiculously to rival the city of "Sassi" by presenting Potenza as a place of tourist vocation which it has never had. As matter of fact its historic center was wiped out in the frenetic modernization process of the 50s and 60s. Consequently Potenza ended up favoring Puglia.
In spite of it, the position straddling the two regions makes Matera a privileged starting point to explore these two different, beautiful and charming regions of Italy