Venezia-Venice
Taking
advantage of the bank holiday the first Monday in May, we took a long weekend
and went to Venezia as the Italians say or Venice. It is a 2 hour flight from our part of
England. It takes longer to get to the
airport, check in, board the plane then it does to fly there.
Being an
island at the north end of the Adriatic Sea, it has one access point by land
and the rest by water. It actually is 118 small islands connected by canals and
bridges, but you think of them as one island. A cause way has been built for trains, buses
and cars. It arrives at the north end of
the island and that is where all land transportation stops. From there on it is all water or foot
transport. Vaporetti, water buses, connect points along the Grand Canal which
runs down the middle of the Island.
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Grand Canal |
Probably the most expensive bus system in the world at $9 for a single
trip, or $24 for a 12 hour ticket of unlimited rides.
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Vaporetti at St. Mark's stop |
We took a
bus from the airport to the island and then a water taxi to our stop at San
Giglio.
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Walk way from our Vaporetto stop to our B&B |
From there it was a short walk
to our B&B. We were on a side canal and our room over looked the
canal.
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Walk way and canal in from of our B&B |
It was used by the gondolas all
day, and they often came by serenading the passengers.
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View from our window |
We spent 2 ½
days walking all over Venice. It was
easy to get mixed up as the buildings are tall, and it’s hard to get your
bearings. We actually got good at
wandering around the neighborhoods and finding our destination.
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Scala Contarini del Bovolo |
There are bridges everywhere, about 400, as
well as dead ends that ended at a canal. Churches are everywhere. There are over 81 of them in the
approximately 6.25 square miles that make up Venice.
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San Giovanni Bragora- Vivaldi baptised here |
They are very unobtrusive
and you can easily walk by a church without realizing it’s there. Most of the outsides are unimpressive but the
interiors are expansively decorated.
The Basilica
Di San Marco or St Mark’s is the most famous church. It has certainly the
largest square.
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St Mark's square, church and bell tower |
The clock is magnificent,
the bell tower impressive, but the church is over the top.
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Clock in St Mark's square. Chimes,tells time in Roman numerals, and give current astrological sign. |
It has on the
outside every imaginable kind and color of marble.
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Main entrance to St Mark's |
The mosaic floor inside is dizzying, and the
gold, silver, copper and glass tiles on the ceiling are the only impressive and
unifying factor. It was not our favorite church.
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Floor of St. Mark's |
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Ceiling of St Mark's |
John’s
favorite church was the Basilica Di Santa Maria Della salute because it is
built in the round with all of the side chapels round also.
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Basilica Di Santa Maria Della Salute |
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Interior of the Basilica |
Mine was San Moise
because the carvings behind the altar were so unusual.
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Church of San Moise |
They are life size of Moses receiving the Ten
Commandments from God.
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Altar of San Moise |
The Palazzo
Ducale connected to St Marks is a very impressive palace.
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Largest Hall in Palazzo Ducale |
We both enjoyed
wondering through its expansive and lavish rooms as well as crossing the Bridge
of Sighs and touring the jail.
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Bridge of sighs- connects Palace Ducale on left to Jail on right |
Many years
ago our Renew group was asked to choose a saint as our groups name sake. We
looked for the oddest saints we could find. We picked St Rocco the patron saint
of communicable diseases.
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Statue of St Rocco |
While in Venice, we found a school named after St
Rocco. So a visit was a must. It was one
of our favorite stops. It was called a scuola (school), but was really more of
a guild hall.
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Upper Hall of San Rocco scuola |
The paintings were by Tintoretto, and they call it his Sistine
chapel. They told the complete history of Christ in life size paintings. Every
surface was covered in paintings.
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Ceiling of Albergo Hall in San Rocco Scuola |
The Saint Rocco church was next door but
under renovation so was only open for mass on Sunday morning. It holds relics (bones) of Saint Rocco. It
would have been nice to see the inside of the church.
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John at entrance to San Rocco church |
The Rialto
Bridge is impressive and stands where the first bridge crossed the Grand
Canal.
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Rialto Bridge- the site of the first bridge over the Grand Canal. |
It is massive and has shops all
along the center of the bridge. It is a
mass of people on weekends. Anywhere near it is crazy with shoppers.
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Middle of the Rialto Bridge |
While we liked the bridge, it was nice to get
off into the quieter
neighborhoods away from the tourists and shoppers.
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Murano glass studio |
We spent
part of a day on the island of Murano which is known for its glass blowing
factories. They make amazing creations
including jewelry, vases, chandeliers, statues, glasses, and dishes.
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Glass sculpture on the island of Murano |
A gondola
ride in Venice seems a must, but we did have second thoughts as its $107 for 40
minutes. We bit the bullet and did enjoy
the ride through the canals.
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Our gondolier John |
Our Gondolier, John, was young about 30 and spoke
English well, so he was able to point out special sights along the way and
answer all our questions. There are 425
gondoliers in Venice and the job and boats are handed down from father to
son. They start training with the boats
at the age of 12.
There are some
gondolas that serve as ferries across the Grand Canal where there are no handy
bridges, about $1.30. On these you’re expected to stand on the journey across so
we didn’t venture onto one. The Grand
Canal was very choppy, and I didn’t fancy standing in a gondola to cross it.
The Grand
Canal has the Vaporetto or public water buses, private taxis, gondolas,
delivery boats, garbage boats, service boats, ambulances, police, and private
boats going all the time. It’s not a tranquil water way.
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Verona's Roman Arena |
Verona is an
hour by train NW of Venice, so we ventured there one day. It has the largest and best preserved Roman
Coliseum or Arena in the world. They
still use it today for concerts.
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Interior of Arena- set up for the up coming opera performance. |
We also
visited Castelvecchio a castle built by the medieval rulers of Verona the Della
Scala family. Very different from English castles.
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View of castle's entrance and outer walls from the Castle. Hole if forground remnants of a church. |
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Castle (white) with part of outer wall |
Verona is the stage for Shakespears Romeo and Juliet. Juliet's family home is quite the attraction. the balcony was added in 1921 to play up the tourist angle.
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The house of Capulet (Juliet's family) |
On the
return to the airport, we took a water taxi. It made a complete circumnavigation
of the island stopping at outlying islands and then heading to the
airport.
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Kathy in water taxi on the way to the airport. |
It was a good way to sum up our
trip and leave. We enjoyed our visit, but Venice is a very expensive city.
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