Mafia Tour Rome

mafia tour rome

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mafia tour rome

Mafia Tour Rome Guide - All You Need to Know BEFORE You Go (2024)

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Private and small group city tours in Rome

Criminal Tour of Rome

Meeting point: piazza della minerva, 42, 00186 roma rm.

See Rome from an original and intriguing perspective! Book our guided tour in Rome and discover the dark side of the City!!

Tour Description

Murders, executions, conspiracies a criminal tour of rome..

A dark and twisted Rome also existed. Journey back to a time when the beautiful piazzas we have learned to admire were the settings of public executions. In the back alleys, influential politicians were kidnapped and murdered! How a band of street thugs grew into one of Rome’s biggest and most powerful threats. Hear of an argument that degenerated into a homicide. The murderer? One of the most gifted and avant-garde baroque artists of all time. You’ll discover all this and more on the Criminal Tour of Rome.

Tour Includes

The tour includes:.

  • Rome’s famous crimes scenes
  • Conspiracies of the Roman Empire
  • Papal executions
  • Victims of Terrorism
  • Organized crimes
  • Children under 18 years of age are free

Places visited:

Largo argentina, jewish ghetto.

  • Campo de’ Fiori

Tour Timeline

Santa maria sopra minerva, meeting point.

Meet your guide at Santa Maria Sopra Minerva, next to the Pantheon. Prepare for a completely different way to see Rome.

Visit and Tour

After visiting the location where Galileo Galilei was trialed for heresy, follow your guide to the exact spot where Julius Cesar was betrayed by the Senate.

Piazza Mattei

On the Criminal Tour of Rome you’ll find out also hidden secrets of Rome’s dark past and our guides will be equipped with police records and written witnesses of the famous crime scenes.

Stroll through the Jewish Ghetto and hear about the segregation and deportation the citizens had to bear with.

Campo de' Fiori

Then to Campo de Fiori, today one of Rome’s lively nightlife locations, but in the past an area for public executions. Our guides with their captivating storytelling abilities will bring you back to dangerous times.

End of the Tour

End of our Criminal Tour of Rome at campo de Fiori. Our guides will give you great recommendations on where to have dinner or show you to the closet taxi stand.

Tour Schedule

*available all year long, other rome tours you may like.

A wine and food picture of traditional Italian products. Learn and discover traditional italian wine and food pairing with our Wine Tour in Rome

Wine Tour Rome with Tasting Class

Saint Peter Square's view during our Vatican Museums Tour

Museum Tour

Vatican museums tour.

A subterranean view of Rome during our Catacombs tour. Descend into subterranean, learn about the struggle of the first christian communities in Rome.

Christian Rome

Catacombs rome tour.

Mafia Tour Rome

mafia tour rome

  • German • Italian • English
  • Professional tour guide

Similar Experiences

mafia tour rome

Mafia Tour Rome (Italy): Address - Tripadvisor

Mafia Tour Rome

mafia tour rome

  • German • Italian • English
  • Professional tour guide

Similar Experiences

mafia tour rome

Mafia Tour Rome (Italy): Address - Tripadvisor

Mafia Tour Rome

mafia tour rome

  • Duits • Italiaans • Engels
  • Professionele tourgids

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mafia tour rome

Mafia Tour Rome - Alles wat u moet weten VOORDAT je gaat (met foto's) - Tripadvisor

Mafia Tour Rome

mafia tour rome

  • German • Italian • English
  • Professional tour guide

Similar Experiences

mafia tour rome

Mafia Tour Rome - All You Need to Know BEFORE You Go (2024) - Tripadvisor

Epicure & Culture

Epicure & Culture

Food, wine & culture for the ethical traveler

4 Fascinating & Powerful Anti-Mafia Tours In Italy

things to do in italy

The Italian mafia is a topic that many know exists, but actually know little about. Today the mafia still plays a huge role in shaping the culture of Italy — most notably Sicily — and not in a good way. The following tours allow you to see the negative impact of the mafia on the community while also providing a cultural view into several small Sicilian villages. They’re all highly recommended as unique things to do in Italy that also give your trip a responsible tourism twist.

things to do in italy

Table of Contents

1. Learn About Anti-Mafia Activism

Price:  $49/per person for five hours

Addiopizzo Travel is a social enterprise that continues the legacy of Giuseppe “Peppino” Impastato, an anti-mafia activist and martyr that led the fight against Cosa Nostra and spoke out against the mafia until his death. Today, Addiopizzo Travel offers the opportunity to retrace Impastato’s steps through the towns of Cinisi and Terrasini and learn about the legacy he left behind, as well as today’s continuing battle to save Sicily from the mafia.

italy falcone

2.  Discover The Histories Of Falcone & Borsellino

Price:  $43 per person for five hours

Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino, both Italian judges and prosecuting magistrates, were two anti-mafia activists that died fighting for their cause, killed by the Sicilian mafia. Today, visitors to Sicily can explore Palmero, a town where violence is steadily declining, as well as the locations that the mafia placed bombs to kill activists. Today these places exist as symbols to keep moving forward in the fight against the mafia.

Image of Sicily courtesy of Scott Wylie/Flickr

3.  Explore Palmero

Price:  $36 per person for three hours

Spend the day exploring Palermo on foot with anti-mafia activists as they explain the history of the mafia in Sicily’s historic center. Sicily is home to a large mafia presence and it negatively affects the daily life of individuals; however, citizens have begun an anti-mafia movement. Some business owners are now refusing pizzo (“protection tax”) while consumers have started an ethical shopping campaign, “Pago chi non pizzo” (I shop where they don’t pay pizzo). On the tour you’ll also get the unique opportunity to speak with these anti-mafia business owners to learn more about their perspective on the situation.

Image of Corleone courtesy of Orientalizing/Flickr

4.  Understand The True Events That Inspired The Godfather

Price:  $43 per person for three hours

Spend the day exploring Corleone, a village in the Sicilian countryside, and learn about local efforts to stop the mafia. The tour starts with the 19th century history of Corleone and continues through the “Legal Laboratory” in the city center, before ending with a walk through the canyon of Corleone and the “Waterfall of Two Rocks,” a gorgeous natural attraction. For fans of The Godfather, it can be an eye-opening experience to visit the places in the movie while learning about the true events and history that inspired it.

If you’re interested in learning about the history and impact of the mafia, these tours provide some of the most unique things to do in Italy as well as local insight.

What are responsible tourism-related things to do in Italy do you recommend? Please share in the comments below! 

Recommended:.

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Cosa Nostra: A History of the Sicilian Mafia by St. Martin’s Griffin [Great Reads]

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Mafia Tour Rome

mafia tour rome

  • German • Italian • English
  • Professional tour guide

Similar Experiences

mafia tour rome

Mafia Tour Rome (Italy): Address - Tripadvisor

Mafia Tour - Naples

  • Naples Tours
  • Culture & Theme Based Tours
  • Local Culture & Education Tours
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Tour Information

Key Details

  • Mobile Voucher Accepted
  • Hotel pickup Available
  • Free Cancellation
  • Duration: 3 Hrs
  • Language: English
  • Departure Details : Piazza Municipio, 80133 Napoli NA, Italy Traveler pickup is offered Ports naples Traveler pickup is offered Ports naples" />
  • Return Details : Returns to original departure point
  • Cancellation Policy : For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours in advance of the start date of the experience. Tours booked using discount coupon codes will be non refundable.

The tour is unique because so far it is the first mafia tour in Naples and it is gonna be explained from a person that has grown up in the system so that nobody can know how evrything works better than me

Know More about this tour

Itinerary This is a typical itinerary for this product Stop At: Quartieri Spagnoli, Montecalvario Vico S.maria Delle Grazie Toledo3/c, 80134, Naples Italy We will go to all the central places of the city where you can understand with simple explanations how the mafia operates and what they do. We will walk through the alleys of the historic center, Forcella and the Spanish quarters where there is still criminal activity even if you can't see it. The tour will be done only in the central area where once it was not very touristy and very dangerous but now it has become much safer and besides you will be guided by me who am a local person. Duration: 1 hour

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Mafia Tour Rome

mafia tour rome

  • German • Italian • English
  • Professional tour guide

Similar Experiences

mafia tour rome

Mafia Tour Rome - All You MUST Know Before You Go (2024)

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Want Some Mafia With Your Pizza? How The Mob Is Taking Over Rome’s Restaurants

mafia cafe de paris

ROME -- Pizza Ciro, a picturesque restaurant in the heart of Italy’s capital, still displays the colorful tiles and fake ancient paintings of Neapolitan landscapes it was known for in its heyday. Nestled between the Spanish Steps and the Trevi Fountain, the pizzeria used to be a magnet for hungry tourists.

Pizza Ciro is no longer so popular. At lunchtime on a recent workday, only four Japanese tourists were inside, maybe lured in by Neapolitan folk music. But the Japanese girls enjoying their pizza in an empty hall, sitting just underneath a big, non-operational flat-screen TV, would be unsettled if they knew a few facts.

The pizzeria had been in business for more than a decade before it was seized by Italian authorities last month, along with 26 other restaurants and cafés in the heart of Rome. In a major sweep against the Mafia, police arrested 90 people and seized assets worth 250 million euros, including pizzerias allegedly owned by a crime syndicate that used them to launder proceeds from drug dealing, extortion and loan-sharking.

Assets including Ciro, as well as the revenue they generate, could still go back to their owners. Those assets have just been frozen, pending trial, for now. The bill paid by the four Japanese girls could someday end up in the pockets of criminals from the Camorra, the ruthless Neapolitan version of the Mafia. Along with the Sicilian original and the ‘Ndrangheta, the Calabrian mob based in the toe of Italy, the Camorra is one of Italy's big three criminal groups that rake in enormous amounts of money. Prosecutors say a lot of that money is being laundered into legitimate businesses in Rome, some located just steps from Parliament and government buildings.

Michele Prestipino, a veteran anti-Mafia prosecutor who in 2006 helped capture the Sicilian Mafia’s boss of bosses, Bernardo Provenzano, told International Business Times the January sweep was a landmark operation because it unveiled a new way of doing business by the Camorra. The camorristi used to set up dummy firms and figurehead owners, a classic Mob tactic, but now they are stealthily forging alliances with healthy, lucrative, legitimate businesses that are able to justify large financial transactions.

The Reach Of The Octopus

"The raid on pizzerias unveiled an emblematic alliance between a well-established family of business owners in Rome and one of Naples’ most powerful Camorra families," Prestipino, who leads the investigation as Rome’s deputy chief prosecutor, said in an interview. The size of the Mafia presence in Rome is difficult to assess, according to Prestipino, but "for sure, there is so much wealth in Rome that is indirectly linked to criminal groups,” he said.

According to Sabrina Alfonsi, the president of Rome's central district, "nearly 70 percent of restaurants and bars in downtown Rome are thought to be in the hands of organized crime." Figures from LUISS University in Rome put the turnover for Mafia groups from their Rome operations at more than one billion euros, or $1.35 billion, a year.

Marco Genovese, a local representative for anti-Mafia NGO Libera, said the police raids helped awaken Rome to a reality the Italian capital had long neglected. "The biggest achievement of the Mafia-linked asset seizures in Rome is that they brought the issue under the spotlight, but much remains to be done," he said.

People may not even realize that they are ordering their pizza from the mob, whose extensive reach is exemplified by the euphemism many Italians use to describe it: la piovra , the giant octopus, whose tentacles reach far and wide.

Outside Pizza Ciro, just steps away from government offices on Via della Mercede, a waiter came to the doorway after noticing a reporter persistently hovering around outside. "I just can't say anything, there's an ongoing investigation," he said politely, sounding worried and even slightly apologetic. The waiters and cooks at Ciro’s four branches, three in Rome and one in Naples, are being checked by prosecutors for links to organized crime.

While waiters and other staff looked professional and busy, people who dined at Pizza Ciro in the past described a different atmosphere. "I used to have lunch there, but I soon realized the personnel was unprofessional. Waiters would serve you hastily, and they looked like everything but a waiter," said a journalist who used to work nearby and asked his name not be published for safety reasons.

A Waiter And A Criminal

The tale of Pizza Ciro is similar to that of the other pizzerias seized last month, like Pummarola e Drink, Sugo or Jamma Ja. Their Neapolitan-dialect names are supposed to bring to mind the city’s pizza-making tradition, not its expanding crime families, buoyed in recent decades by a tight control of the drug market. But they offer a peek into how Mafia groups have broken out of their traditional stronghold in the South of Italy, spreading their tentacles across the country and swallowing a large slice of retail commerce in Rome.

“Rome helps Mafia groups disguise their presence thanks to its vast business activity. You have many businesses in Rome that can justify huge flows of money," Prestipino said. Those firms provide criminals with an easy and highly efficient way to launder money, and it’s hard to tell who’s a bad apple. “There are the good companies, the bad companies entirely in the hands of Mafia groups, and then there are those in between,” Prestipino added.

Anti-Mafia prosecutors are focusing on the many shops and commercial activities in the city whose ownership has changed very rapidly. Many of the new buyers, mostly from southern Italy, are quick to replace staff and suppliers with people coming from their own areas. Then they hire relatives, or crime-family affiliates, who often are made to appear as legitimate owners of the business.

mafia ciro

The people suspected of laundering money through Ciro followed a different pattern.

"You had this very powerful Camorra group in Naples that had had a long-time relationship with a family of real entrepreneurs, not figureheads, well-established in the Rome food market," Prestipino said.

That family, the Righis, specialized over years in the lucrative food business in Rome. They allegedly became a de facto partner of the Contini Camorra family, selling them their knowledge of the market in Rome and the possibility of investing in a thriving business, catering to the millions of people who visit Rome every year. In exchange, the Righis allegedly enjoyed protection, a non-unionized workforce, and often the illegal procurement of ingredients such as tomatoes and mozzarella, both produced in the Camorra-dominated Naples area.

Fancy Mafiosi Go Abroad

In sharp contrast with the violent crimes they commit in southern Italy, mafiosi in Rome are very careful to avoid clamor, so as not to draw attention from the authorities. Some criminal organizations are said to have agreed to a non-aggression pact in order to avoid public attention. Departing from traditional money-laundering strategies, they no longer invests in smoky bars, cheap hotels or run-down strip clubs in the suburbs, good for stocking cash rather than generating it. Today, the mafiosi increasingly choose prestigious locations and fashionable restaurants they expect to generate a profit.

Prosecutors found the Continis indirectly owned pizzerias located right in front of the Senate, or even tauntingly close to the headquarters of the National Anti-Mafia Prosecutor’s Office. One could be forgiven for having no idea who’s really behind those places; many didn’t, even among the rich and famous who ate there and whose pictures still grace the doorway at Pizza Ciro. Among them are actresses, soccer players, even former prime minister Mario Monti and the celebrated anti-Mafia prosecutor Antonio Ingroia.

In 2010 authorities seized the Café de Paris, once the symbol of the Dolce Vita on fashionable Via Veneto and a hangout for Frank Sinatra and Federico Fellini. Prosecutors found it had been sold for 250,000 euros to a hairdresser from Calabria, a suspected member of the Alvaro-Palamara 'Ndrangheta family. Today Café de Paris is owned by Malaysian billionaire Robert Kuok and trying hard to stay in business. The Mafia scandal still scares customers away.

Two years later, police seized Antico Caffè Chigi, a bar right in front of the Italian government's headquarters in the heart of Rome. Politicians, cops, journalists and security officials regularly mingled there, until it was found to be owned by people linked to the 'Ndrangheta. Unlike the Café de Paris or Pizza Ciro, it closed up shop because of the scandal and mismanagement. Its sign was removed and it now lays bare, filled with dust, scrap paper and waste.

But unwittingly helping the Mafia launder its money doesn't necessarily have to happen in Italy. Mafia groups are among the most powerful and connected to other similar organizations globally. A report in 2012 from Confesercenti, an Italian business lobby, estimated that the main Mafia groups had a yearly turnover of 140 billion euros ($190 billion), almost one tenth of the size of the entire Italian economy, with cash reserves of 65 billion euros and assets all over the world.

Supply Meets Demand

Officials say the penetration of organized crime was made easier by the Italian debt crisis and a two-year recession that crippled businesses. According to Confesercenti, a retail business lobby, 417 bars and restaurants closed shop in Rome between January and September last year.

Enterprises on the brink of bankruptcy, sometimes already victim of loan-sharking or forced to pay blackmail, fell easily in the hands of Camorra or 'Ndrangheta. Both organizations, as well as the more famous Sicilian Mafia and the Banda della Magliana, a Roman-native criminal group, are flush with cash they need to launder. Supply met demand and, as a result, the mafiosi have thrived during the crisis.

Italy's Anti-Mafia Investigation Directorate, the main entity fighting against Mafia organizations, said it has seized assets worth over 14 billion euros since its creation in 1992. Among the assets seized are commercial property, hotels, bank accounts, luxury mansions and even castles. In the same timespan, it monitored over 5,000 businesses and ordered the arrest pending trial of roughly 9,000 people.

Still, once seized, assets can be recovered by the Mafia when they are sold; criminals put forward straw buyers, and the cycle begins anew.

The government agency that manages seized assets "needs reform,” Rosy Bindi, an Italian politician who chairs the Anti-Mafia Committee in Parliament, recently said. She mentioned bureaucratic delays and the lack of a reliable database. Giuseppe Caruso, the magistrate who leads the agency, conceded that some agency officials used seized assets for "personal purposes," enjoyed "stratospheric fees" and kept a seat on the boards of confiscated companies, acting as "the supervisor and supervised entity".

But tourists sitting in Rome’s Mafia-linked restaurants don’t know any of this. They have no clue that the cheese on top of their margherita pie may have come from a dairy farm controlled by the Camorra, or that the young man serving them may really be a crime-family enforcer moonlighting as a fake waiter. And they don’t know that the lyrics of the Neapolitan folk song blasting from the speakers at Ciro sound like a perfect, sadly ironic image of many Italians’ unwillingness to face the hard truth that organized crime is buying up their country: “Let's forget the past! We're from Naples!"

© Copyright IBTimes 2024. All rights reserved.

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IMAGES

  1. Rome's notorious mafia families are putting their rivalries aside to

    mafia tour rome

  2. Mafia a Roma, i ristoranti sequestrati al Pantheon

    mafia tour rome

  3. Rome's notorious mafia families are putting their rivalries aside to

    mafia tour rome

  4. En Italie, la mafia est encore loin d'être vaincue

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  5. Mafia in Italien: Kampf um Rom

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  6. A police video showed an opulent villa interior

    mafia tour rome

VIDEO

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  3. Eroilor Mafia Skateboarding

  4. There Is A New "Mafia Content" Channel + We Learn Some Interesting Things

  5. 1604 MAFIA TOUR 2023. Финал

  6. ROME vs The Mafia

COMMENTS

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  3. Criminal Tour of Rome

    A criminal tour of Rome. A dark and twisted Rome also existed. Journey back to a time when the beautiful piazzas we have learned to admire were the settings of public executions. In the back alleys, influential politicians were kidnapped and murdered! How a band of street thugs grew into one of Rome's biggest and most powerful threats.

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  8. Thousands march in Rome against the mafia, demanding justice for

    Tens of thousands of people marched through the streets of Rome on Thursday to remember the hundreds of people killed by the mafia in Italy and to demand justice. The "Day of Remembrance and ...

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    Mafia Tour Rome. #429 of 614 Food & Drink in Rome. City ToursBar, Club & Pub ToursCultural ToursFood Tours. Write a review. About. Take a dive into the underworld and gangland of Rome: you will get to know the hidden history of organized crime, see where it all happened and eat where mobsters and godfathers dine.

  10. Mafia Capitale

    Mafia Capitale. The Mafia Capitale is the name given to an organized crime organization, [1] [2] and subsequent investigation, [3] involving the government of the city of Rome, in which members stole money destined for city services and carried out other criminal activities such as racketeering, conspiracy, money laundering, illegal works, and ...

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  12. Things To Do In Italy

    Today these places exist as symbols to keep moving forward in the fight against the mafia. 3. Explore Palmero. Price: $36 per person for three hours. Spend the day exploring Palermo on foot with anti-mafia activists as they explain the history of the mafia in Sicily's historic center.

  13. Mafia Tour Rome (Italy): Address

    Mafia Tour Rome. Take a dive into the underworld and gangland of Rome: you will get to know the hidden history of organized crime, see where it all happened and eat where mobsters and godfathers dine. A unique and unforgettable trip for everyone. Revenue impacts the experiences featured on this page, learn more.

  14. Organized crime in Italy

    Felice Maniero. The Nuova Mala del Brenta (NMB), also known as the New Brenta Mafia, is a criminal organization based in the Veneto region of Italy. The group is believed to have emerged in the late 1990s as a successor to the original Mala del Brenta, which was active in the area during the 1970s and 1980s.

  15. Taormina: Godfather v/s Mafia Tour with Lunch

    Compare the plot of The Godfather saga with the history of real-life Sicilian Mafia during this guided day trip from Taormina to the villages of Savoca and Forza D'Agro. Travel in comfort on a minivan with hotel pickup and drop-off. Enjoy an authentic Sicilian lunch with a glass of wine. Begin the tour with a drive to Savoca and take a guided ...

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  17. Mafia Tour: Triphobo

    The tour is unique because so far it is the first mafia tour in Naples and it is gonna be explained from a person that has grown up in the system so that nobody can know how evrything ... Pompeii And Naples From Rome: Small Group Day Tour With Lunch Duration: 10 hrs. 82 Reviews. From USD280 Naples City And Pompeii Half Day Sightseeing ...

  18. A New Anti-Mafia Museum in Italy Will Immerse Visitors in Sights

    A new, immersive and itinerant anti-mafia museum will open in Palermo this month to commemorate Italy's battle against organized crime. The museum's home is an 18th-century neo-classical palace ...

  19. Mafia History Walking Tour in Little Italy, New York City

    Take a thrilling journey though mob history on this walking tour in New York's Little Italy, where some of the most notorious events in American gangster lore took place. Start with the violent tactics of early black hand gangs and the battles to control the liquor trade during prohibition, leading to the rise of Joe "The Boss" Masseria.

  20. The Godfather Origins of Mafia: Corleone & Visit Monreale Duomo

    Discover the origins of The Godfather during this day-long tour of Sicily. Taking in sites linked to both real-life mafia events and sites based on the Francis Ford Coppola movies, the tour gives you the lowdown on Sicily's gangster history. Visit the site of the Portella della Ginestra massacre, sample traditional Sicilian cannoli, and explore the village of Corleone as tales of Don Vito ...

  21. Mafia Tour Rome (Italy): Address

    Mafia Tour Rome. #420 of 608 Food & Drink in Rome. City ToursBar, Club & Pub ToursCultural ToursFood Tours. Write a review. About. Take a dive into the underworld and gangland of Rome: you will get to know the hidden history of organized crime, see where it all happened and eat where mobsters and godfathers dine.

  22. Want Some Mafia With Your Pizza? Mob Taking Over Rome's Restaurants

    02/14/14 AT 6:25 PM EST. Cafe de Paris, in downtown Rome, which used to be a Mafia front and now advertises Mafia-free food. REUTERS/Tony Gentile. ROME -- Pizza Ciro, a picturesque restaurant in ...

  23. Taormina: Godfather V/S Mafia Tour With Lunch

    Set out on a captivating journey with the Taormina Tour: Godfather V/S Mafia with Lunch, where guests can explore the intricate world of The Godfather movie's filming locations and uncover the riveting tale of the Sicilian Mafia's history and clan conflicts. The tour offers a 5-hour immersive experience with a live tour guide in English ...