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Showing posts with the label Italy

venice city of romance

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Unlike many 'romantic' hotspots in Europe, Venice has actually kept it's romantic essence despite the hoards of tourists that head there every year.  Here are some of your romantic options :) 1. Go to Punta della Dogana.  You can just sit there together taking in this view of San Giorgio Maggiore.  2. Walk to the Rialto Bridge through the shops, cafes and back streets.  Look up often to appreciate romantic historic structures.  Masks, Canals, Bridges,  Glass, Lace, amazing.  3. If you don't want to walk, let Fabio, Marco, Antonio or any other such sleek Italiano zoom you off in one of these awesome water taxis. 4. Have an early lunch in the shadow of said Rialto Bridge and experience la dolce vita. 5. Let your lunch settle in your bellies as you ride in a gondola on the Grand Canal.  [Actually, you may also want to take a gondola through the narrower canals for real romance].  Some of the gondolier...

venice city of the brown roofs

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From the top of the Campanile di San Marco, you can see all of Venice in an incredible 360 panorama view.  The adjacent group of islands such as Burano, Murano and Torcello are also visible.  The view is similar to what you get from the Zizkov tower in Prague . The ocean of brown rooftops in Prague is very often interrupted by green though, while in Venice, it is distinctly and more homogeneously, brown.

venice city of windows

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Is it me or does Venice have more than its fair share of windows? Every building, old or new, seems to have a window at every possible space. Ironically I didn't see any 'venetian blinds' on any of them :) This has apparently been the case since the beginning. The oldest palace on the Grand Canal, the  Ca' da Mosto, [13th Century building, immediately below - second palace from the right] is no different.

venice city of intricate detail

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One of the reasons why I really like very old, yet well preserved European cities is the fact that you can get a glimpse of what it was like back then. You can really get an appreciation of how much effort they put into everything. Much of this is evident in the extent of intricacy in the decoration of their architecture. Venice, even though decaying and quickly descending to the bottom of the Adriatic, is one of such cities.

venice city of st. marc

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The one most prominent structure in all of Venice is the very lofty Campanile di San Marco.  To quote a presenter in a documentary I watched on YouTube in anticipation of the trip, it is like a 'giant exclamation mark'.  Located in Piazza San Marco, it is the bell tower of Basilica Cattedrale Patriarcale di San Marco  [St. Mark's Basilica] Yes 'Mark' as in the author of the Gospel of Mark in the Bible.  It is said that the Venetian merchants of old stole the relics of St. Mark from Alexandria over a thousand years ago and brought it to Venice.  The original basilica was built to house the relic, as well as all the other loot such as the four horses of Alexandra the Great.  Turns out the merchants got rich from not only trade, but theft.  Fast forward to 2014 - Cities of London, New York, Frankfurt, Paris, Tokyo..  It appears nothing has changed. I was mind-blown by the magnificence of the horses as I stood before them in abs...

venice city of water

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The Grand Canal is really a sight to behold.   Grand  not just because it is the widest and longest canal that cuts right through the main group of islands, but because it is the body of water on which you can truly witness the grandioseness of what Venice once was. At some point in history, this was the undisputed centre of the world in terms of sheer wealth.  Palace after palace after palace line the banks of the canal.  Merchants of old that owned these palaces were wealthier than the kings and queens of Europe; or so they say. Sat in a boat, or more fabulously a gondola, you can relax and take it all in.

venice city of canals

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Before visiting Venice for the first time last month, Amsterdam had been my favourite canal city. That top spot has since been replaced by Venice , 'City of Canals'.  The island of venice is really a group of 118 islands linked by bridges over canals.  And you have never seen so many canals and so many exquisite bridges in your life. The main [group of] island(s) is completely pedestrian - no cars or motor bikes allowed.  For the first time in Italy, I felt comfortable walking around with earphones on without the fear of being mowed down by a car or moped.  Venice is true bliss. When you arrive in Venice, you are immediately charmed by its rustic beauty.  I hadn't seen such picturesque decay since Havana, Cuba. You have also never seen so many boats, which is the main form of transportation in the city.  That and your feet of course.  In the narrower canals are canoes, boats and the famous gondolas.