Blog sur les visites de Venise

saint-mark-s-square-in-venice-venice-tours
par Iryna Drevetska 10 novembre 2024
Venice has only one square or piazza: St.Mark’s Square, a 170 meter-long trapezoid which differs from all other squares that are called "campi" (fields).
doge-s-palace-venice-venice-tours
par Luca Bordon 8 novembre 2024
The Doge’s Palace, the centre of Venetian power, residence of the Doge and home to the judiciary, this is where the governance of the city took place.
the-clock-tower-venice-venice-tours
par NICOLO ASEO 7 novembre 2024
The Clock Tower, or as it is usually called Moors Tower, is one of Venice landmarks.
piazza-san-marco-venice-venice-tours
par Iryna Drevetska 5 novembre 2024
You are now entering Piazza San Marco. This is the true heart of Venice, which Napoleon called “the most elegant drawing-room in Europe”.
san-marco-square-venice-venice-tours
par Luca Bordon 5 novembre 2024
Venice, the splendid lagoon city, is famous for its unique architecture and rich cultural heritage.
the-new-prisons-in-venice-venice-tours
par elena giacon 30 octobre 2024
The huge prisons were made of large marble and Istrian stone blocks and were intimidating and frightening. Still today we don’t know how they were assembled. The article The new prisons comes from Venice City Tours - Blog.
a-gondola-cross-the-bridge-of-sighs-in-venice-venice-tours
par elena giacon 29 octobre 2024
You are now on the Ponte della Paglia, the Bridge of Hay, where boats would drop off stacks of hay for the horses’ stables inside the Palazzo Ducale on the ground floor.
st-mark-s-square-in-venice-venice-tours
par elena giacon 29 octobre 2024
St. Mark's Square (San Marco, in Italian) is one of the most important, beautiful and fascinating places in Italy, famous worldwide for its beauty, its magic and its architectural integrity.
st-mark-s-bell-tower-venice-venice-tours
par elena giacon 25 octobre 2024
The building of St.Mark’s Bell Tower (once used as a lighthouse) begun in XI century under the Doge Pietro Tribuno but the current look was reached only between 1511 and 1514.