Showing posts with label Torcello. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Torcello. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 25, 2017

VENICE 2017: Torcello Island and the Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta


As you surely know by now, Astrid and I tried to see every possible place of interest while in Venice during our 7 days. Torcello, the island farthest away and to the north of Venice, was one of our highlights.

It took us an hour on the vaporetto to get there.
(Wiki image)

To save our feet, knowing it would be a long day, we opted to sit inside to view what passed us by.
There are over 50 islands in the Venetian Lagoon, many of them only as big as a postage stamp.
When you finally see Torcello (bottom-right) you see why we went there.

From the vaporetto stop, there's only one way into the "village," population 60+/-.

The main drag, passing the cafés and 2 hotels, eventually gives view of the cathedral's bell tower.

But before you get there, you can't resist what I called the White House (a restaurant)!

Then you see it/them:  first the Church of Santa Fosca (center with dome) from the 11th century,
and next to it the Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta, with bell tower, founded in AD 639.
It's the oldest building in the Venetian Lagoon.

While purchasing our tickets, we discovered the bell-tower bells would strike noon in 20+ min.,
so we opted for climbing the ramped staircase of the bell tower, before entering the cathedral.
We made sure we were back down before the bells chimed because they were loud.
In fact, they warn you 5 minutes ahead of time before each hour.

But what a view from up on high!

We could even see Burano with its tilted tower, the island we would visit later that afternoon.

Down from the bell tower, we finally entered the Byzantine cathedral, a basilica.

The marble columns are from the 11th century.
The rood screen separating the nave from the chancel area...I wanted to know more.
The skull of St. Cecilia....

Behind the rood screen is the main aspe with its 11th cent. mosaic of the Virgin and the Apostles,
and its marble mosaic floors (where I saw a quilt!).

The present basilica is from 1008, but the marble pulpit is from fragments of the first 7th c. church.
On the west wall, over the main door, is the huge mosaic of the Last Judgment (12th century).

[No photos were allowed inside, which explains why I have so few. surreptitiously taken behind Astrid as my shield.
I can mention in comments why I "disobey" these rules, if you wish.]

Outside in the courtyard are Roman relics galore.
It's believed Attila the Hun used the marble seat as his throne (bottom-center) in the 5th century.

So many things to see...an outdoor museum.

We even walked around to the back of the complex where we got the bell tower in the sun.

The bigger picture, indeed!

By then it was time for lunch, at one of the cafés we had passed on our way in.

And then we were off to the nearby islands of Burano and Mazzorbo (next post)....


Thursday, April 06, 2017

VENICE & VERONA 2017: Overview via Facebook Posts


Now that you know Astrid and I took a trip away without much fanfare here, I'll start the onslaught of posts with this overview via the collages I put up on Facebook every day.  Gotta keep the social media thing going, you know!

Day 1, Friday, 24 March--Cannaregio District, Grand Canal and Campanile Tower

Before hopping on a vaporetto waterbus on the Grand Canal to Piazza San Marco in Venice, 
we walked around the Cannaregio district of our B&B.  We visited one church, the San Geramia.  
Can you tell we were in heaven...and this was only our first day!

[As an aside, see the NW district in yellow?  Squint to see the X spot, where our B&B was located.
Get used to this map because you'll see it again.]

One of Venice's most iconic landmarks is the Campanile Tower at the Piazza San Marco.
I had been to Venice for 2 days in a past life, so I had seen Piazza San Marco.
But it was a first for Astrid and a first for both of us to visit the Campanile to see the views.
(Once I get into those posts, I'll include links to everything.)

Day 2, Saturday, 25 March--The Murano and San Michele Islands

You can't think of Murano without thinking of it's glass.
But we both know a lot about blowing glass, etc, because it's a Dutch trade as well.
So we didn't go to visit a glass factory (as most tourists do) but ended up getting a personal tour
when we stopped in one store to buy a couple of glass gifts.  Win-Win.

Our main goal for the day in Murano was to visit the Basilica dei Santa Maria e Donato from the 12th century.
The floor from 1140 incorporates fragments of ancient glass from the island's foundries (left-center).
Glass really IS important in Murano.
For us, this was more important than any glass we could ever buy.

Can you imagine an island that is only a cemetery?
Because San Michele is on the way back to Venice from Murano, we stopped there.
It's a walled cemetery with a church from 1469 and contains graves from famous foreigners,
including Igor Stravinsky (composer) and Serei Diaghilev (founder of the Russian Ballet).
A bonus was seeing a coffin being transported back to the city after a service (bottom-right).  
As Astrid and I often say, we learn a lot about a country and culture from its cemeteries.

Day 3, Sunday, 26 March--Accademia Walk and Piazza San Marco Basilica

We walked 3 km+ from the famous Rialto Bridge, through the San Polo and Dorsoduro districts,
ending up at the Accademia Bridge, where we had the only rain of the trip, for maybe 30 minutes.
It gave everything a magical look for us because of the umbrellas.

We had so much fun people-watching along the way.

[After our walk we visited St. Mark's Basilica at the Piazza San Marco but I didn't show a collage on FB.]

Day 4, Monday, 27 March--Torcello, Mazzorbo and Burano Islands

We chose this day to take the vaporetto to the farthest-out islands of the Venetian lagoon.
The draw of Torcello (population 60) is the Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta, 
a basilica founded in AD 639, making it the oldest building in the lagoon.
We even climbed the bell tower!

Burano is known for its painted houses and lace...and its tilted church tower.
[The wee island of Mazzorbo is joined to Burano by a pedestrian bridge...which I didn't post on FB.]

Day 5, Tuesday, 28 March--San Giorgio and Salute Churches

On our first day in Venice, last Friday, we went to the top of the Campanile Tower at the Piazza San Marco,
where I took the pic of Palladio's church from 1559 on the San Giorgio Maggiore island (top--loft).
From THAT bell tower, we looked back to the Campanile in the Piazza (top-right).

From the San Giorgio tower you look across the canal to the Santa Maria della Salute church (top-left),
started in 1630 in Thanksgiving for the deliverance of the city from the plague.
Salute means health and salvation.
From the front of the Salute church you look across the canal to the Piazza San Marco (bottom-left).
You can see how close all these landmarks are in Venice!

Day 6, Wednesday, 29--Castello District Walk

As you know, Venice is the main island of 117 in the Venetian lagoon, comprising 106 sq. miles.
On this day we took the vaporetto around Castello, the most eastern district of the island,
to complete our circumnavigation of Venice.  
It included the Arsenal area with its naval dockyard.

Once we got off the vaporetto at the Arsenal stop, we walked around,
visiting more churches and people-watching.

Every evening, except this one, we stayed home at our B&B to recuperate from the day!
But we HAD to see Venice at night, so we hopped on a vaporetto and spent 2 hours on the Grand Canal,
from 7:30-9:30, stopping off at the Piazza San Marco before our return back.
So glad we did it!

Day 7, Thursday, 30 March--San Simeon Piccolo Crypt

We've decided it's Venice's best-kept secret:  the crypt in the San Simeon Piccolo church,
across the Grand Canal from the railway station.  We went to buy our train tickets for our ride to Verona
the next day and when we saw the church, we decided to visit it...our last for Venice.
Once inside, the attendant told us about the crypt down below, for which we paid only €2 each,
and for which we were given flashlights to navigate throughout.
OMG!  It was the whipped cream on top of our Venice experience 
(and was nowhere to be found in both of our travel books)! 

♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥

Day 8, Friday, 31 March--Train to Verona and the San Zeno Basilica

After arriving by train in Verona (120 km from Venice), settling into our B&B and finding a place to eat,
we had time to walk by the Castelvecchio from 1355, looking back on the Porte Scaligero bridge
as part of the castle's defense (top row).  That was on our way to visit the Basilica San Zeno Maggiore,
built between 1120-1138.  Later I'll show you the inside.  Another OMG!

Day 9, Saturday, 1 April--Major Verona Sites

This was our first full day in Verona, chock-full of this, that and the other:
The Arena (the 3rd largest amphitheater in the world), Piazza Elbe with its stalls, statues and fountain (14th century), the Scaligeri Tombs lifted up against the sky (bottom-left), the Juliet Balcony, the Renaissance staircase from the Palazzo della Ragione (Palace of Reason), the hunchback beggar holding up the font in the Basilica di Sant'Anastasia, and a lift to the top of the Lamberti Tower to get the lay of the land, with the Duomo/Cathedral (center-right)
which we visited later.

Day 10, Sunday, 2 April--Roman Theater and Churches

A bit of a mishmash from another full day in Verona.
Besides spending time at the Roman Theater and the Archeological Museum 
(top row and bottom-right), we walked around and visited several churches.
Some of the finest inlaid woodwork in all of Italy is in the Santa Maria in Organo church (bottom-left).
We also had a fun surprise at the San Giorgio in Braida church when we arrived just before 4 p.m.
and watched people coming in for a children's first communion service, to which the Bishop was invited.
It was like a big party.  OMG!  I had tears in my eyes.

Day 11, Monday, 3 April--Verona Cemetery

We made the decision to "lie low" our last full day of vacation by going to the nearby cemetery.
You already know how much we LOVE cemeteries.

The next day we were up bright and early for our 9 a.m. flight back to Amsterdam.
What a fabulous trip and experience for both of us.
As we often say, we were "short of eyes."

And now, in the days to come, I'll add more flesh to this skeletal overview!


Garderen Sand Sculptures 2025: "Amsterdam 750 Years"

For how much Astrid and I both LOVE LOVE LOVE the Garderen sand-sculpture themes ever year, it's hard to believe that the last time we ...