Veneto's three main cities of art are on the Venice-Milan motorway: Padua,
Vicenza and Verona. Padua, abode of one
of the most ancient universities of
Europe, was one of the big Renaissance
centre in the Veneto: Giotto, Donatello
and Mantegna created here some of their
major works of art. On and all through
an area not too far from Padua extend
the Colli Euganei, with their
extraordinary artistic and scenic
beauties, where, in Arqua', Petrarca
lived ad died. Nearby there is
Montagnana, a city closed in by
protective walls and in the same area
lie the famous thermal baths of Abano.
Further down the motorway there's
Vicenza, the city where Palladio lived,
and then Verona, from which the lago di
Garda is but 30 km away.
TREVISO, BELLUNO AND THE DOLOMITS
The
green countryside zones of the
province of Treviso dominate the
area behind Jesolo, with the
pre-Alps north of it. In the
Treviso area, also known as the
garden of Venice, you can see
some of the most beautiful
villas by Palladio, like Villa
Maser, backed by the enchanting
scenery of the colli asolani.
Just a little further there's
Possagno, with the Canova's
gypsotheque , Bassano, famous
for its ceramics and another
city protected by ancient walls,
Castelfranco, home to Giorgione.
Proceeding down the valley of
the Piave or going through the
city of Conegliano, one of
Italy's major wine centres, and
of Vittorio Veneto, we reach
Belluno and Feltre right in the
heart of the Dolomites. Cortina
D'Ampezzo, in the middle of a
unique area which was awarded
such a status thanks to the
beauty and variety of the alpine
landscape, will be ideal for a
trip by car.
AQUILEIA, PALMANOVA AND TRIESTE
Of
great historical interest are
also all the routes east of
Jesolo, starting from
Portogruaro, the Republic's very
old river post of call and main
centre of a ziba that’s very
well known for its wines, and
Caorle with its beautiful
Romanic cathedral and
bell-tower. Along the coast
you’ll bump into Aquileia, the
major north Italy's Roman port,
and then Trieste. Not far from
Aquileia there's Palmanova,
unique example of Renaissance
city-fortress built in 1593 by
Vincenzo Scamozi to protect the
eastern territories of the
Venetian Republic, and the city
of Udine.
THE VENICIAN VILLAS
The
Venetian countryside areas are
spangled by ancient villas that
were built on the XVI, XVII,
XVIII centuries by rich people
from Venice as their summer
places of abode. They are
witnesses to one of the most
civilised ways of life of the
Renaissance period and among
these villas are some of the
greatest works of art belonging
to the Italian architecture. The
most famous are, most certainly,
Palladio's, like for example the
Malcontenta, near Venice, and
Maser, in the Treviso area, both
of them are open to the public.
Along the Riviera del Brenta,
which connects the lagoon to
Padua, an incredible collection
of these villas from different
ages can be admired, among these
is the one of Stra, built in
'700 as the Doge's residence.
The fortunes of the Brenta are
closely related to the urban
structures of Venice and the
Veneto. The river begins in the
lakes of Caldonazzo and Levico,
near Trento, passes through
Valsugana and enters the Veneto
plain
at Bassano del Grappa, where it
has been spanned by a bridge
since at least 1209. The history
of the river is of its
continually changing course, of
its floods and changes in its
bed. Following the flood of 589
which also modified the courses
of the rivers Mincio, Adige,
Piave and Tagliamento, the
Brenta veered from Padua and the
Malamocco branch, directing
itself towards Chioggia. Again
breaking its banks in 1152, the
river emptied into the Venice
Lagoon, carrying its silt as far
as Venice and the Port of San
Nicolo', and in time causing
reed-beds and malaria to
develop. From that time on the
Veneti began their great
struggle against the elements
that would otherwise have
suffocated them, by making small
cuts and taking other measures
too to divert the flow. Often
these works were cause of
contention between Padua and
Venice at time when Venetian
territory was limited to the
Dukedom itself, whose 1375
boundary mark, El Termen, can be
still admired at Oriago Termine.
The major works were carried out
between 1457 and 1896: four
canals were constructed which
gradually turned the waters away
from the Lido basin towards
Malamocco and Chioggia, and
finally to the sea.
The Naviglio Brenta, or Brenta
Canal, that we see today is the
result of this massive hydraulic
work and is fitted with a system
of locks and swing bridges to
make it easy to navigate. The
gates at Dolo are particularly
important as they are installed
on a picturesque island complex
that includes old water mills
and the boatyards. The last lock
downstream was located at
Moranzani, just before the river
enters the lagoon at Fusina. The
canal was a vital commercial
waterway. Great barges loaded
with goods, burchi, were pulled
upstream by horses; but gondolas
and passenger barges, splendidly
adorned burchielli, also plied
the waters conveying parties of
aristocrats from the city to
their country houses.
Life in the villa
Not all the Veneto country
houses, have survived until
today. Nevertheless, over the
north-east of Italy they still
number thousands. In the 15th
century, after the Venetian
Republic's conquest of the
"mainland" territories, Venetian
investments slowly shifted from
the Orient to its own
landholdings. However, already
in the 14th century, when the
borders of the Venetian State
did not extend beyond the edges
of the lagoon, the wealthiest
nobles owned estates in the
provinces of Padua and Treviso.
From then the old nobility, and
those that had only recently
reached a certain wealth, aimed
to secure a part of their
capital in safer though less
profitable investments than
those deriving from the shipping
trade.
The life of the villa combined
two apparently diametrically
opposed aspects: the
contemplative pleasure of
country life, observed from the
humanistic standpoint of the
epoch (which is why the country
villa draws upon the classical
world), and the cultivation of
the country estate itself, whose
affairs the proprietor managed
in person.
Over the centuries the
conception of the country house
underwent a number of changes:
from originally being a
gentleman's country house, by
the 18th century - when there
was competition to possess the
most magnificent demesne - it
had assumed the splendour of a
palace. The elegant but
restrained forms of the
Renaissance gave way to imposing
building complexes located in
vast parks ornamented with
pavilions, fountains, statues,
woods, and whatever else could
be suggested for the fancy and
pleasure of ladies and their
beaux. Many months were spent in
the villa between the spring and
the summer. Time was passed in
grand balls, coursing hares, and
card and garden games, and then
it was time to return to the
city with the first cool breezes
of autumn - where it was
immediately Carnival, and the
entertainment could continue in
other ways.
Ca' Venezia - Jesolo Lido : Monica Da Venezia,
Winter Address: Via A. Da Corona, 1/L - 31100 /
Treviso - ITALY
Summer Address : Via Rossini, 7 -
30016 / Jesolo Lido / Venezia - ITALY