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This small museum at the east end of town is hodgepodge collection. It's no great shakes (certainly not at €6 for admission), but worth doing if you're around town for a while.
The collections include lots of inlaid wood furnishings (Sorrento's famous craft), majolica, porcelain figurines, Neapolitan baroque paintings (plus a Rubens), and crumbling bits of Roman statuary to remind you of the city's venerable—if little visible—heritage.
The property also sports marvelous views over the gardens to the Bay of Sorrento.
Museo Correale
Via Correale 50
tel. +39-081-878-1846
Museocorreale.it
€8
Open: Tues-Sat 9:30am–6:30pm, Sun 9:30am–1:30pm
Planning your time: Sorrento has maybe 2-3 hours of mediocre sightseeing. To be brutally honest it is probably the least interesting town in this area. It is only famous for its location.
Sorrento makes an ideal base for exploring Campania thanks to its location at the nexus of regional public transit—pretty much the only place from which you can get anywhere without having to change mode of transportation: Trains direct to Pompeii and Naples; ferries to Capri; buses or ferries down the Amalfi Coast.
If you prefer the home-base style of travel, Sorrento is the perfect base. Figure on three days/two nights here (hit Pompeii on the train ride down from Naples—you can store your luggage temporarily at the Pompei train station—then spend one day each visiting Capri and the Amalfi Coast).
If, however, you prefer to travel from town to town, just treat Sorrento as a way-station to switch from train to bus or ferry; skip Sorrento entirely and sleep in a more interesting locale on the Amalfi Coast or Capri.
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