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2020
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316
pages
English
Ebook
2020
Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage
Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne En savoir plus
Publié par
Date de parution
01 janvier 2020
Nombre de lectures
0
EAN13
9781788686792
Langue
English
Poids de l'ouvrage
27 Mo
Publié par
Date de parution
01 janvier 2020
Nombre de lectures
0
EAN13
9781788686792
Langue
English
Poids de l'ouvrage
27 Mo
Venice & the Veneto
Contents
Plan Your Trip
Welcome to Venice & the Veneto
Venice & the Veneto’s Top 10
What’s New
Need to Know
Top Itineraries
If You Like...
Month by Month
With Kids
For Free
Tours
Escaping the Crowds
Eating
Drinking & Nightlife
Entertainment
Shopping
Explore Venice & the Veneto
Neighbourhoods at a Glance
San Marco
Sights
Eating
Drinking & Nightlife
Entertainment
Shopping
Dorsoduro
Sights
Eating
Drinking & Nightlife
Entertainment
Shopping
Secrets of the Calli
San Polo & Santa Croce
Sights
Eating
Drinking & Nightlife
Entertainment
Shopping
Cannaregio
Sights
Eating
Drinking & Nightlife
Entertainment
Shopping
Activities
Castello
Sights
Eating
Drinking & Nightlife
Entertainment
Shopping
Activities
Giudecca, Lido & the Southern Islands
Sights
Eating
Drinking & Nightlife
Shopping
Sports & Activities
Murano, Burano & the Northern Islands
Sights
Eating
Shopping
Venetian Artistry
Day Trips from Venice
Brenta Riviera
Padua
Vicenza
Prosecco Country
Verona
Verona’s Wine Country
Magnificent Palladio
Sleeping
Understand Venice & the Veneto
Venice Today
History
Architecture
Architectural Marvels
The Arts
The Fragile Lagoon
Survival Guide
Transport
Arriving in Venice
Getting Around
Directory A–Z
Accessible Travel
Discount Cards
Electricity
Emergency
LGBT+ Travellers
Medical Services
Money
Opening Hours
Public Holidays
Safe Travel
Taxes & Refunds
Telephone
Time
Toilets
Tourist Information
Visas
Women Travellers
Language
Table of Contents
Behind the Scenes
Venice Maps
San Marco
San Polo & Santa Croce
Santa Croce West
Cannaregio
Dorsoduro
Castello
Arsenale & Giardini Pubblici
Giudecca
Lido di Venezia
Murano
Burano & Torcello
Our Writers
Welcome to Venice & the Veneto
Imagine the audacity of building a city of marble palaces on a lagoon – and that was only the start.
Epic Grandeur
Never was a thoroughfare so aptly named as the Grand Canal, reflecting the glories of centuries of Venetian architecture in the 50 palazzi and six churches lining its banks. At the end of Venice’s signature S-shaped waterway, the Palazzo Ducale and Basilica di San Marco add double exclamation points. But wait until you see what’s hiding in the narrow backstreets: neighbourhood churches lined with Veroneses and priceless marbles, convents graced with ethereal Bellinis, Tiepolo’s glimpses of heaven on homeless-shelter ceilings, and a Titian painting that mysteriously lights up an entire basilica.
Venetian Feasts
Garden islands and lagoon aquaculture yield speciality produce and seafood you won’t find elsewhere – all highlighted in inventive Venetian cuisine. The city knows how to put on a royal spread, as France’s King Henry III once found out when faced with 1200 dishes and 200 bonbons. Today such feasts are available in miniature at happy hour, when bars mount lavish spreads of cicheti (Venetian tapas). Save room and time for a proper sit-down Venetian meal, with lagoon seafood to match views at canalside bistros and toasts with Veneto’s signature bubbly, prosecco.
An Artful Lifestyle
The Piazza San Marco is Venice’s show-stopper, but you need time to see what else Venice is hiding. Stay longer in this fairy-tale city and you’ll discover the pleasures of la bea vita (the beautiful life) that only locals know: the wake-up call of the gondoliers’ ‘Ooooeeeee!’, a morning spritz in a sunny campo (square), lunch in a crowded bacaro (bar) with friends and fuschia-pink sunsets that have sent centuries of artists mad.
Defying Convention
Eyeglasses, platform shoes and uncorseted dresses were all outlandish Venetian fashions that critics sniffed would never be worn by respectable Europeans. Venetians are used to setting trends, whether it be with controversial artwork in the Punta della Dogana, racy operas at La Fenice or radical new tech start-ups. On a smaller scale, this unconventional creative streak finds vibrant expression in the showrooms of local artisans where you can find custom-made red-carpet shoes, purses fashioned from silk-screened velvet, and glass jewels brighter than semiprecious stones. In a world of cookie-cutter culture, Venice’s originality still stands out.
Basilica di Santa Maria della Salute | ADISA/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Why I Love Venice
By Paula Hardy, Writer
My love of Venice begins with the lagoon in which it stands. Although often overlooked, this 550-sq-km shallow bowl is as great a marvel of engineering as San Marco’s golden domes. Every palace and every person is reflected in its teal-coloured waters, creating the mirage-like double image that lends the city its magical quality. Not only has it inspired the extraordinary physical fabric of the city and countless creative and technological inventions, but it also shapes the unconventional and creative spirit of all who reside here. Therein lie possibilities barely imagined in other cities.
For more, see Our Writers .
Venice & the Veneto’s Top 10
Basilica di San Marco
1 Early risers urge you to arrive when morning sunlight bathes millions of tesserae (mosaic tiles) with an other-worldly glow, and jaws drop to semiprecious-stone floors. Sunset romantics lobby you to linger in Piazza San Marco until fading sunlight shatters portal mosaics into golden shards, and the Caffè Florian house band strikes up the tango. Yet no matter how you look at it, the basilica is a marvel. Two eyes may seem insufficient to absorb 800 years of architecture and 8500 sq metres of mosaics – Basilica di San Marco will stretch your sense of wonder.
WUTANG.PHOTOGRAPHER/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Venice & the Veneto’s Top 10
Palazzo Ducale
2 Other cities have government buildings; Venice has the Palazzo Ducale, a monumental propaganda campaign. To reach the halls of power, you must pass the Scala dei Censori (Stairs of the Censors) and Sansovino’s staircase lined with 24-carat gold, then wait in a Palladio-designed hall facing Tiepolo’s Venice Receiving Gifts of the Sea from Neptune . Veronese’s Juno Bestowing her Gifts on Venice graces the trial chambers of the Consiglio dei Dieci (Council of Ten), Venice’s CIA. Upstairs is the Piombi attic-prison, where Casanova was confined in 1756 until his escape.
ANSHARPHOTO/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Venice & the Veneto’s Top 10
Tintoretto’s Heaven on Earth
3 During Venice’s darkest days of the Black Death, flashes of genius appeared. Tintoretto’s loaded paintbrush streaks across 50 dramatic ceiling scenes inside the Scuola Grande di San Rocco like a lightning bolt, revealing glimmers of hope in the long shadow of the plague that reduced Venice’s population by a third. Downstairs scenes from the story of the Virgin Mary adorn the vast assembly hall, starting with the Annunciation and culminating in a brooding Assumption where angels lift Mary heavenwards amid a turbulent, stormy sky.
ISOGOOD/ALAMY STOCK PHOTO ©
Venice & the Veneto’s Top 10
Opera at Teatro La Fenice
4 Before the curtain rises, the drama has already begun at La Fenice. Wraps shed in lower-tier boxes reveal jewels, while in top loggie (balconies), loggione (opera critics) predict which singers will be in good voice, and which understudies may merit promotions. Meanwhile, architecture aficionados debate whether the theatre’s faithful reconstruction after its 1996 arson attack was worth €90 million. But when the overture begins, all voices hush. No one wants to miss a note of performances that could match premieres here by Stravinsky, Rossini, Prokofiev and Britten.
JUSTIN FOULKES/LONELY PLANET ©
Venice & the Veneto’s Top 10
Gallerie dell’Accademia
5 They’ve been censored and stolen, raised eyebrows and inspired generosity: all the fuss over Venetian paintings becomes clear at the Accademia. The Inquisition did not appreciate Venetian versions of biblical stories – especially Veronese’s Last Supper, a wild dinner party of drunkards, dwarves, dogs, Turks and Germans alongside apostles. But Napoleon quite enjoyed Venetian paintings, warehousing them here as booty. Wars and floods took their toll, but international donations have restored Sala dell’Albergo’s crowning glory: Titian’s Presentation of the Virgin in the Temple, where a young Madonna inspires Venetian merchants to help the needy.
BALONCICI/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Venice & the Veneto’s Top 10
La Biennale di Venezia
6 When Venice dared the world to show off its modern masterpieces, delegations from Australia to Venezuela accepted the challenge. Today La Biennale di Venezia is the world’s most prestigious creative showcase, featuring art and architecture and hosting the Venice Film Festival and performing-arts extravaganzas annually. Friendly competition among nationals is obvious in the Giardini Pubblici’s pavilions, which showcase architectural sensibilities ranging from magical thinking (Austro-Hungary) to repurposed industrial cool (Korea).
ITALIAN PAVILION, GIARDINI PUBBLICI | EDEN BREITZ/ALAMY STOCK PHOTO ©
Venice & the Veneto’s Top 10
Basilica di Santa Maria Assunta
7 Nowhere is Venice’s wild and woolly past more evident than on the island of Torcello, once Ernest Hemingway’s favourite bolthole and the former capital of the Byzantine city. The island is still charmingly overgrown and harbours at its centre the mesmerising medieval basilica of Santa Maria Assunta, covered in golden mosaics. Climb the attached bell tower and you’ll be rewarded by stunning views over the swampy landscape, a rare snapshot of what Venice must have looked like to those early escapees from the mainland.
DALIU/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Venice & the Veneto’s Top 10
Venetian Artisans
8 In Venice, you’re not just in good hands – you’re in highly skilled ones. As has been done for centuries, artisans here ply esoteric trades, those that don’t involve a computer mo