Past the church of San Francesco, which has a Romanesque cloister, and the church of Santa Chiara, you'll find Villa Cimbrone.

 An avenue runs through its beautiful park to the Belvedere Cimbrone with incomparable views of the Amalfi coast. 

Stray from this promenade to find flower gardens tucked behind walls and a wide-ranging collection of bits and pieces -- statues, fountains, columns, temples, well heads, and architectural elements -- that were brought here from ruins in this area and beyond.

 These were collected by the English lord who bought the villa in 1904, and incorporated into the gardens in idiosyncratic ways in the midst of the greenery and flowers