|
Venice:
Founded 1500 years ago on a cluster of mudflats in
the centre of the lagoon,Venice rose to become
Europe’s main trading post between the West and the
East, and at its height controlled an empire that
extended from the Dolomites to Cyprus.The
melancholic air of the place is in part a product of the
discrepancy between the grandeur of its history and
what the city has become.
In the heyday of the
Venetian Republic, some
200,000 people lived in
Venice, three times its present
population. Merchants
from Europe and western
Asia maintained warehouses
here; transactions in the
banks and bazaars of the
Rialto dictated the value
of commodities all over
the continent; in the dockyards
of the Arsenale the
workforce was so vast that
a warship could be built
and fitted out in a single
day; and the Piazza San
Marco was thronged with
people here to set up deals
or report to the Republic’s
government. Nowadays it’s
no longer a buzzing
metropolis but rather the
embodiment of a fabulous
past, dependent for its survival
largely on the people
who come to marvel at its
relics.
The monuments which
draw the largest crowds are
the Basilica di San Marco –
the mausoleum of the city’s
patron saint – and the
Palazzo Ducale or Doge’s
Palace. Certainly these are
the most imposing structures
in the city, but a rollcall
of the churches worth
visiting would feature more
than a dozen names. Many
of the city’s treasures remain
in the churches for which
they were created, but a
sizeable number have been
removed to one or other of
Venice’s museums, with the
Accademia holding the
lion’s share.This cultural
heritage is a source of endless
fascination, but you
should also discard your
itineraries for a day and just
wander – the anonymous
parts of Venice reveal as
much of the city as its wellknown
attractions.
|
|
|
|
How to Make a Booking
|
Online, secure bookings with a wide and unique selection of hotels, B&B’s, apartments, country villas and spa and health resorts |
|
 |
|