Cruise Itinerary Details
12-night Mediterranean (Civitavecchia (Rome) roundtrip)
- Ship Name : Navigator of the Seas
- 2010 Sail Dates : April 24
Select your sailing date :
| Sailing Dates | Inside Cabin | Ocean View | Balcony | Suite | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 24-May 6, 2010 | $1,359 | $1,749 | $2,199 | $2,999 | Select |
Prices are the lowest per person rates in U.S. Dollars based on double occupancy and include port charges. Government taxes and fees, cruise line surcharges, and booking fee are additional.
* Arrival times, departure times, and ports vary slightly for this date. Rollover the 'view' link to see the exact times and ports for this sailing.
View all sailings for this itinerary.Cruise Itinerary
| Day | Ports of Call | Arrival | Departure |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Civitavecchia (Rome), Italy | --- | 5:00 pm |
| 2 | Naples, Italy | 7:00 am | 7:00 pm |
| 3 | At Sea | --- | --- |
| 4 | Piraeus (Athens), Greece | 9:00 am | 7:00 pm |
| 5 | Rhodes, Greece | 10:00 am | 6:00 pm |
| 6 | Kusadasi (Ephesus), Turkey | 7:00 am | 7:00 pm |
| 7 | At Sea | --- | --- |
| 8 | Alexandria, Egypt | 7:00 am | --- |
| 9 | Alexandria, Egypt | --- | 7:30 pm |
| 10 | At Sea | --- | --- |
| 11 | Messina, Sicily, Italy | 2:00 pm | 8:00 pm |
| 12 | At Sea | --- | --- |
| 13 | Civitavecchia (Rome), Italy | 4:00 am | --- |
Arrival and departure times may vary slightly by sailing date.
Itinerary Map
Ports of Call
Civitavecchia (Rome), ItalyIn the footsteps of the Ceasars you will spend your time in the Eternal City. From the Roman Forum, it's a short walk to the Colosseum, the Arch of Constantine and Palatine Hill. Across the Tiber River, the Sovereign State of the Vatican holds the key to the Sistine Chapel and Bernini's awesome colonnade.
Naples, Italy
Naples, located in beautiful southern Italy, is the country's third most populated city. You'll immediately feel the friendly spirit of this sunny metropolis as you sample its historic sights, fabulous shopping galleria and irresistible cuisine situated on the Bay of Naples. Mount Vesuvius, the Amalfi Coast and the romantic isle of Capri's famous Blue Grotto are just a short drive from the city.
Piraeus (Athens), Greece
High above pulsating modern Athens, the sereneAcropolis reigns as it has for 25 centuries. Gaze on the timeless majesty of the marble-columned Parthenon. Down in the city, snap a photo of the colorfully-costumed Evzone guards at Constitution Square; go shopping for souvenirs, silver jewelry and bright flotaki rugs.
Rhodes, Greece
Rhodes, set behind impregnable 14th-century walls, invites you to navigate through crooked streets to shop for sea sponges and visit the gorgeous Palace of the Grand Masters from where the Knights of St John set out on the Crusades. Tour to the village of Lindos and climb to the Acropolis. Look down and you'll see where St. Paul landed, as well as the rocky peninsulas where many believe the Colossus of Rhodes once stood. This 110-foot-tall statue of Helios was destroyed by an earthquake, and its remains were melted down by the Arabs for scrap metal.
Kusadasi (Ephesus), Turkey
Ephesus, not far from the port at Kusadasi, is home to the one remaining pillar from the Temple of Artemis—an Ancient Wonder of the World. Marble streets lead past magnificent ruins of temples and baths, and the Celsus Library. Don't miss the amphitheater where St Paul preached to the Ephesians. Roman ruins are also on display at Pirea and Didyma.
Alexandria, Egypt
Alexander the Great's timeless city is the portal to Cairo and its many wonders: the Egytpian Museum of Antiquities, with the treasures of royal tombs and mummies of their former inhabitants, as well as King Tut's stunning turquoise and gold death mask. Not far away are the enigmatic Sphinx and the Great Pyramid of Cheops, and just across the desert lies the step Pyramid of Sakarra, thought by many to be oldest free-standing structure in the world.
Messina, Sicily, Italy
Messina's astrological clock is as much a man-made masterpiece as the road leading to Taormina, which canitlevers out of the rocky cliff face and stands on impossibly tall pylons. Leave it to the Italians to design a road that's both a thrill-ride and a feat of engineering! Once you're safely in Taormina, walk to the sublime Greco-Roman theatre that overlooks Naxos Bay and snow-capped Mt. Etna, and spend some time on the Corso Umberto with a gelato firmly in hand.