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You are here: Home / Archives for Destinations / Europe

Europe

Tuscany Travel Tips

August 17, 2010 by admin Leave a Comment

Tuscany travel tipsBeautiful Tuscany holds great vacation ideas for every traveler whether you are looking for a family adventure, an historical exploration, or a romantic retreat, Tuscany travel tips.

From majestic mountains to medieval cities, from regal palaces to exceptional museums or galleries, from picturesque islands to unspoiled forests, Tuscany offers everything needed for an unforgettable vacation. Nostalgia, culture, unparalleled cuisine – sample everything this region has to offer and learn why it has become one of Italy’s most popular vacation destinations. Read on for Tuscany travel tips that will make you want this to be your next vacation destination.

Tuscany Travel Tips For Families

Tuscany travel tips for families. Tuscany is very family-friendly, offering many sights and activities that will occupy active children and interest everyone in your group. Stay in a farmhouse, which is much like a condo in a rural setting. [Read more…] about Tuscany Travel Tips

Filed Under: Europe

Chruches and Culture of Venice Italy

April 7, 2010 by admin Leave a Comment

Venice is one of the most intriguingly different places to visit on the face of the earth. Today the brilliance and influence of the long-ago merchantile sea culture has long since faded, leaving a town of tarnished glories, out of time and out of place but so beautiful it’s hard to resist.  I found visiting Venice one of the most memorable of experiences. The highlight is probably Basilica Di San Marco but there is a lot more to see as well.

Venice is busiest in spring (Easter-June) and September/October and accommodation can be hard to find, as well as around Christmas, New Year and Carnevale (February). In high summer (June/August), Venice is crowded, and oppressively hot and sticky. The most pleasant time of year to visit is late March into May, with milder spring days and fewer crowds. September is the next best in terms of weather, but October is quieter. Flooding occurs in November and December, and winter can be unpleasantly damp and cold, but seeing Venice under snow is truly a sight to behold (although snow in Venice is a rarity).

So what is there to see and do in Venice? Do you mean besides taking a gondola ride through this magical city situated on its maze of narrow water canals?  For the hopeless romantic that is a treat making any trip to Venice worthwhile.  But, if you stick to the main tourist areas between St. Mark’s Square and the Rialto Bridge it is a crowded place with many tacky souvenir shops. But the architecture, the history and the magnificent artwork makes it all worthwhile.

Basilica Di San Marco

Basilica di san marcoOne of the truly impressive sights not to be missed is Basilica Di San Marco, a magnificent Byzantine cathedral that many tourists “Ooh” and “Aah” over.  The 11th-century exterior, with its soaring domes, spires, and statuary is only the beginning. Inside the Basilica Di San Marco the interior walls and ceilings are covered with one and a half square miles of dazzling, painstakingly assembled mosaics, and other similarly impressive treasures are held inside, including the spectacular, gem-encrusted Pala d’Oro altarpiece. The original bronze Horses of San Marco are on display inside (the ones currently adorning the cathedral’s facade are replicas) and were believed to be stolen from Constantinople’s Hippodrome in 1204. The basilica still holds Mass at 7:00 a.m. and one can see the beauty of  the early-morning light gleeming onto the mosaics.

Santi Giovanni e Paolo – Other  churches sure to impress the tourist are the Dominican’s church of Santi Giovanni e Paolo and the Franciscans’ church of Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari (generally known as I Frari).  When the Dominicans and Franciscans arrived in Venice at the dawn of the Renaissance, they enticed parishioners by filling their churches with art, some of which rival exhibits in major art museums. The church of Santi Giovanni e Paolo, begun in 1246, holds a polyptych by Giovanni Bellini, magnificent ceiling paintings by Paolo Veronese, and works by Titian and Lorenzo Lotto which were all commissioned as adornment. The Franciscans’ church of Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari (1330) is also magnificent with Titian’s extraordinary Assumption, with the Virgin Mary soaring heavenward above the high altar in a swirl of sumptuous hues, and his gracious Madonna di Ca’ Pesaro dominating the left aisle, and Giovanni Bellini’s  Madonna and Child is one of his finest works.

Gallerie Dell’accademia – The Gallerie Dell’accademia holds  a viewable collection of valuable art from masters, including Paolo Veneziano, Mantegna, Giorgione, Titian, and Tintoretto.  doesn’t disappoint. Although the gallerie is presently under renovacations, it is due for completion in late 2007. When the Grandi Gallerie dell’Accademiahe is opened in their entirety the exhibition space will have doubled to almost 40,000 square feet and will display 650 works instead of the current 400. At present look for gorgeous narrative works like Bellini and Carpaccio’s Miracle of the Relic of the True Cross on the Rialto Bridge, and Carpaccio’s Life of Saint Ursula; both exquisitely detailed depictions of 15th-century Venice.

Palazzo Grassi– Re-opened in spring of 2006, the Palazzo Grassi  was formerly an art exhibition space owned by Fiat, the car manufacturer. The 18th-century palazzo, which overlooks the Grand Canal, was taken over by French luxury-goods magnate François Pinault in 2005 and refurbished by architect Tadao Ando.  It now hosts major shows of contemporary art.

Peggy Guggenheim’s personal art collection, turned down by London’s Tate Gallery, was brought to Venice in 1949. The 20th-century collection moved into the Palazzo Venier dei Leoni on the Grand Canal. The collection, which grew to incorporate works by Dalí, Klee, Picasso, Mondrian, Duchamp, de Kooning, Pollock, and Man Ray, among others, is now a memorable must-see for modern-art buffs.

Piazza San Marco – An immense open public space of almost 40,000 sq. ft., was once known as as “the drawing room of Europe” when Napoleon and his army descended on venice in 1797.  the museo correr, in the southwest corner of the square, now houses a statue of Napolean  along with an impressive collection of historic globes, weapons, and artworks by tintoretto, vittore carpaccio, and antonello da messina. visitors can pay an the entry fee  which gives access to other attractions around the piazza, like the museo archeologico and the biblioteca marciana (st. mark’s library), with its collection of historic tomes. visitors can also visit the doge’s palace, a huge gothic structure that was the nerve center of the venetian republic; and take the itinerari segreti guided tour to see the difference between the frescoed, gilded public rooms and the plainer offices where the real business was done. one of the piazza’s two towers, the campanile, at 325 feet, is the tallest structure in venice and visitors can climb to the top for a breathtaking view over the city. the 15th-century torre dell’orologio (clock tower), unveiled in late 2006, is now open to the public and visitors can finally go inside.

I could go on and on about the many art works and magnificent architecture of Venice, but then I might not get around to telling you about the shopping that Venice is also famous for.  As with any Italian city, Venice offers the big-name fashion labels of Fendi, Gucci, and Ferragamo and shops are located in the area immediately northwest of St. Mark’s Square: Calle Larga XXII Marzo and the labyrinth of alleyways known collectively as the Mercerie and the Frezzerie. For slightly less central but more uniquely Venetian shops, check out our recommendations below.

To see the real Venice, one can venture off the beaten track to shop in the real markets and experience where the local people live. Make sure that you visit Basilica Di San Marco as well as the other churches and ancient Venice landmarks

Filed Under: Europe

Holidays in Venice Italy

April 4, 2010 by admin Leave a Comment

Venice is one of the most intriguingly different places to visit on the face of the earth. Today the brilliance and influence of the long-ago merchantile sea culture has long since faded, leaving a town of tarnished glories, out of time and out of place but so beautiful it’s hard to resist.  I found visiting Venice one of the most memorable of experiences.

Venice is busiest in spring (Easter-June) and September/October and accommodation can be hard to find, as well as around Christmas, New Year and Carnevale (February). In high summer (June/August), Venice is crowded, and oppressively hot and sticky. The most pleasant time of year to visit is late March into May, with milder spring days and fewer crowds. September is the next best in terms of weather, but October is quieter. Flooding occurs in November and December, and winter can be unpleasantly damp and cold, but seeing Venice under snow is truly a sight to behold (although snow in Venice is a rarity). [Read more…] about Holidays in Venice Italy

Filed Under: Europe

Family Travel to Berlin

March 7, 2010 by admin Leave a Comment

Berlin brings to one’s mind the great divide (or the Berlin Wall) that divided the city into two different political entities. However, the new rejuvenated and reunited Berlin is marching ahead into the future post millennium. It is casting itself as the most important new and modernistic city of Continental Europe.

Berlin’s dark past as Hitler’s capital of Nazi atrocities and as the capital of Cold War in the later years, has not escaped the psyche of the local population or the visitors. The popular opinion says that Berliners do not know where they are going, but know their past, and do not want to go back there. After being completely annihilated in the WW II bombings, Berlin has since optimistically rebuilt itself as a modern structure of glass and steel.

The scars still remain, mostly as a tourist attraction. For example the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial church displays the shell of the bell tower that remains, in striking contrast to the modern church constructed to the west, fondly nicknamed “lipstick and powderbox” because of the design. [Read more…] about Family Travel to Berlin

Filed Under: Europe

A Bit About Amsterdam

March 3, 2010 by admin Leave a Comment

One of Amsterdam’s claims to fame is being known to be a haven for hippies. It has moved since then to be a bigger economy and a successful cosmopolitan business centre. The hippie era was the 60’s and 70’s is when Amsterdam got its name as the hippie haven, a free-for-all culture. Most people still look at Amsterdam in that light even today.

The new economy has brought prosperity which is evident all around from the growing business zones and transformation of the general landscape surrounding ancient town houses and canals.

With about ¾ of a million of populace, the transformation of Amsterdam from a hippie haven to a buzzing business city is not yet complete. The culture of free thinking and collective living has not yet gone away. Only the free culture is not an offshoot of semi legal toxic and exotic plants, but a by-product of successful economic growth today. [Read more…] about A Bit About Amsterdam

Filed Under: Europe

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