🗓️ Events not to be missed
✅ The Gusta Minori
The Gusta Minori is the highlight of the summer in Minori: a festival that mixes art, culture, gastronomy and promotion of the territory, involving not only the entire community, but also materially a large part of the town.
The event, in fact, includes, on the one hand, a series of musical and scenic performances, which take place in the central part of the town (generally between the seafront, the two central squares and the Villa Romana), and, on the other, a series of food stands with regional and local products, to be bought and tasted.
In addition to this, there is also the involvement of local catering businesses, which prepare ad hoc menus or dishes inspired by local traditions for the occasion.
The event is usually held in late summer, in the last week of August or the first week of September.
If you are lucky enough to be in the area at that time, you should not miss it.
✅ The festival dedicated to the patron saint
Like all the small villages on the Coast, Minori too has its patron saint, celebrated and adored with love and devotion by locals.
The saint is celebrated on three occasions: 5 and 27 November and 13 July.
The most festive time is undoubtedly 13 July: believe it or not, many locals away from home coincide their holidays with this time of year, so as not to miss the celebrations in honour of the Saint.
If you find yourself in Minori around 13 July, you will certainly notice a particular atmosphere: that of waiting for the feast.
You will see more people out and about, candy and nougat stalls on the seafront, the local band cheering up the village streets, and the traditional procession of the Saint.
It will all end with an impressive fireworks display, bringing the celebrations to a fitting close.
✅ If you are travelling at Easter time, get ready for an atmospheric Good Friday
In the area, religious rites, handed down from generation to generation, involve the entire community and create a truly unique atmosphere. Among the most characteristic rituals is the procession of the Battenti, hooded men who chant penitential songs in two distinct tones, a legacy of the ancient confraternities. The culmination of Holy Week is reached with the Good Friday procession, a moment of intense emotion that involves the entire community: for the occasion, from the moment the sun sets, torches and candles are lit throughout the streets of the town.
The entire town is left in darkness, illuminated only by these tenuous flames. In this dark and evocative atmosphere, the procession of the ‘battenti’ takes place, proceeding along the streets of Minori, singing their sad songs, in honour of the Dead Christ.
The tradition of the Battenti di Minori is a cultural asset of inestimable value, recognised nationwide, and represents a living example of how faith can be handed down over time, indissolubly linking people to their territory.