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Venice Night Secrets Unveiled – This is a night tour you will remember: Venice is even more beautiful at night when the most amazing monuments of the city and the most secret hidden gems are enlightened by dim street lights. Loose yourself in the myriad reflections created by the buildings in the waters of the Grand Canal and immerse your soul in the magic that pervades Venice after sunset.
Venture into the intricate maze of narrow streets winding through Venice Night Secrets Unveiled, uncovering ancient stories, legends, and mysteries. During this unique nighttime tour of Venice, uncover hidden secrets as they unfold before you.
Stroll through Venice’s most significant corners at night, and witness enchanting silhouettes of churches and ancient palaces. These captivating sights come to life against the magical night sky.
Embark on the Venice Night Secrets tour, unveiling the city’s hidden gems and mysterious tales under the enchanting night sky. This captivating experience promises an unforgettable adventure.
Firstly, meander through the city’s labyrinthine streets, uncovering ancient stories and legends as they come to life. Additionally, explore off-the-beaten-path locations, adding to the tour’s intrigue and allure.
Furthermore, admire the striking silhouettes of historic churches and palaces against the magical backdrop of nighttime Venice. As you venture on, appreciate the city’s beauty from a unique, nocturnal perspective.
In conclusion, the Venice Night Secrets tour offers an enthralling blend of history, mystery, and charm, providing a truly unforgettable experience for visitors seeking to explore the city’s lesser-known treasures.
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Giddily over the top even by rococo standards, this impressive building is a gaudy, glitzy 18th century Jesuit church. Almost impossible to take a picture in all at once!
Instead of a father son sunday soccer play, sculptor Pietro Lombardo and his sons had something more ambitious in mind: a high Renaissance polychrome marble facade for the most important confraternity in Venice! Mauro Codussi put the finishing touches of this gem, particularly beautiful at the sunset or at night. Magnificent lions of St. Mark prowl above the portals, while sculpted trompe l’oeil perspective beguile the eye. Nowadays this beatiful building is hosting a public hospital.
Named after two minor martyrs of early Christian Rome, Santi Giovanni e Paolo, elided to san Zanipolo in Venetian dialect, this church was designed to make worshippers feel small and reverential. The cavernous interior (90m by 38 meters) could accommodate virtually half of the population of the neighbourhood n the 14th century. Its 33m high nabe is reinforced by a clever series of cross-beams - necessary because of Venice’s waterlogged soil. Typical of Italian gothic (and different from the French one), its exteriors and interiors have a barnlike simplicity. Rarest of all is the surviving 15th century stained glass in the south transept, created in the closeby Murano. For centuries Zanipolo was the site of the Doge’s funerals and the walls are punctuated by 25 of their lavish tombs.
Bartolomeo Colleoni ‘s galloping bronze equestrian statue is one of the only two such public monuments in Venice. It commemorates one of Venice most loyal mercenary commanders: from 1448 Coleoni commanded armies for the Republic of Venice, though in true mercenary from he switched side a couple of times when he had been stiffed on pay or promotions!
In this palace used to live Marco Polo (1254-1324), who captured his adventures across central asia and China in memories entitled il “Milione” (1299), the first travel blog at intercontinental level history records.
This bridge is know since the 15th century as “Tits Bridge”. Back in those days, shadowy porticos around this bridge sheltered a designated red light district where neighbourhood prostitutes were encouraged to display their wares in windows instead of taking marketing campaigns to the streets in their legendary platform shoes.
The market place in Venice is Rialto: its fish and vegetable market in the morning is noisy, raw, authentic and full of true venetian life. In the night is a quiet place to walk through (with a fish smell!) and one of the hotspot of Venetian nightlife.
Even in the dead of winter and the heat of the summer, you can count on action here in Venice at night. The oblong, unruly square features a bevy of beverage temptations with several wine bars and restaurants. During the day it hosts a small regular weekday market, an flea market once a week and periodic political protests.
This square and church may look familiar, even for newcomers in Venice. A scene in the 1989 film Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade was shot in the Campo San Barnaba in front of the church, with the church's façade as an imaginary library. Indiana was then escaping from the library through an undergoing tunnel (which of course does not exist) ending up in the middle of this square, surprising elegant italian families having an ice cream. Also an inconic scene from the movie “Summer Time” (1955) was show shot here, with Catherine Hepburn falling into a nearby canal.
This wooden bridge was built in 37 days in 1933, to replace a corroded 1854 steel bridge) and was meant to be temporary. It is still here! It connects Dorsoduro and the Gallerie dell'Accademia with San Marco district offering one of the most scenografic view above Canal Grande
The Basilica della Salute is a monumental sigh of relief (Salute means health), placed in the final part of the Canal Grande, when the canal ends up into the basin of Saint Mark.. This splendid domed church was commissioned by Venice’s plague survivors as thanks for salvation.
This warehouse (Dogana means Customs) has been built in 1677 by Giuseppe Benoni to ensure no ship entered the canal Grande without paying duties It has been renovated and reopened in 2009 (after an intervention by Tadao Ando) and now it belongs to the french Collectionist Pinaul (together with Palazzo Grassi). It is now a art space helding exhibitions organised bt the Pinault collection. From the top you can enjoy a magnific view spotting in one shot The Doge’s Palace, Piazza San Marco, the island of San Giorgio, the Canal Grande, the Canal Della Giudecca and the Giudecca island with the Zitelle and Redentore church and the Venice Giardini.