MOBY WONDER | amazing beautiful arrival and departure in Livorno (Italy) | 4K-Quality-Video
Amazing beautiful arrival and departure of the MOBY WONDER from MOBY in Livorno (Italy). Immediately after the MOBY WONDER the MOBY VINCENT left Livorno.
Filmed with a SONY FDR-AX53 in high 4K-Quality.
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4K | New MegaYacht Lana under outfitting by Benetti Yachts Livorno / Italy
LANA is a new 107m luxury yacht, built by Benetti Yachts Livorno and will be delivered in 2019.
#Superyacht #MegaYacht #Benetti
SR13: Italian Purim (Livorno-Tunis) - Cantors Sidney Ezer and Matthew Klein
Cantors Sidney Ezer and Matthew Klein
with Elizabeth Rodgers, piano
Traditional melodies arranged by Ramon Tasat
Performed at the Jewish Theological Seminary, H. L. Miller Cantorial School,
Plesser/Weiss Memorial Senior Recital of Sidney Ezer, Jonathan Schultz, Matthew Klein, and Yakov Hadash
Watch our entire senior recital:
FATE ONORE AL BEL PURIM (From Livorno)
Today I want to sing in honor of this occasion
I have found, saw salvation
From the narrowness [of destruction]
I shall be happy, thankful to my Rock [God] who freed us from death
From the sword of the dove with happiness and great joy
Honor the beautiful Purim that truly deserves it
I say unto you, young ones seeking pleasures
Do not fear at all being considered drunkards
Honor the beautiful Purim!
Honor the beautiful Purim for the beautiful ladies
In its honor the old maids make cakes
For our young ones honor the beautiful Purim!
UAL VIVA NOSTRO BURINO (From Tunis)
Long live our Purim! Let us drink as much wine as possible
Today the Jew has now worries; happily, it is Purim!
Everyone shouts: Let's go, let's go and kill Haman, the traitor
And with his death all the evil people, the nation of Amalek
In order to remember this event I want to sing this tale
And all together let's be merry, let's make melancholy go away
ALAVEMOS JUNTAMENTE AL GRAN DIO DE ZION (From Livorno)
Let us all bless the great God of Zion
Who has given us wine to make our hearts merrier
And with the intention of not boring our audience
I shall conclude this song
May God send us redemption speedily
Let us all bless the great God of Zion
Florence in the Morning + We Found a Locals only Beach! Italy Vlog!
LOCATION: FLORENCE, ITALY
We spent our last morning in Florence visiting a beautiful viewpoint then made our way towards the Amalfi Coast where we stumbled across an amazing locals only beach in the middle of busy season and watched the sun set over the ocean.
See more of my photography: instagram.com/juliatrotti
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Julia Trotti
Website // juliatrotti.com
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Beautiful ladies of ARKLOW SHIPPING from IRELAND sailing in GALICIA.
Beautiful ladies of ARKLOW SHIPPING from IRELAND sailing in GALICIA, inbound to Corcubión in Fisterra bay, in front of the CELTIC OLIMPUS MONTAIN of, MONTE DO PINDO, PEDREJAL DO PINDO. Finisterre sea and cape.
Miss & Mister del Garda for Italy 2016
Buona la prima! Si è svolta ieri a Lazise la finale del concorso di bellezza nazionale Miss & Mister del Garda for Italy, con il patrocinio del Comune e del consorzio turistico Lago di Garda Veneto.
Visiting Shrine of the Virgin of the Rosary of Pompei City Italy 4K
#GreetingsfromItalyzbyglus Pompei (city)
Pompei: a city of beliefs and secrets
The city has a lot to offer thanks to the world-famous archaeological site and the place of prayer. The Shrine of Our Lady of the Rosary is popular and one of the most important places for many believers.
This pilgrimage church was built between 1876 and 1901. Construction of the 80 m. high bell tower was only finished in 1925.
Because of the inhabitants, the numerous tourists and pilgrims from all over Italy who worship the church, the space became too small and the church had to be enlarged.
Many relics and valuable images are kept in the sanctuary. The 17th century Marie miraculous picture was painted by a student of Luca Giodano.
Francesca Giordano crowned Miss International Italy 2019
Francesca Giordano was crowned Miss International Italy 2019 at the Altromondo Studios of Rimini where 32 delegates competed for the national crown.
Modigliani_ The Complete Works
Amedeo Modigliani, (born July 12, 1884, Livorno, Italy—died January 24, 1920, Paris, France) Italian painter and sculptor whose portraits and nudes—characterized by asymmetrical compositions, elongated figures, and a simple but monumental use of line—are among the most-important portraits of the 20th century.
Modigliani was born into a Jewish family of merchants. As a child, he suffered from pleurisy and typhus, which prevented him from receiving a conventional education. In 1898 he began to study painting. After a brief stay in Florence in 1902, he continued his artistic studies in Venice, remaining there until the winter of 1906, when he left for Paris. His early admiration for Italian Renaissance painting—especially that of Siena—was to last throughout his life.
In Paris Modigliani became interested in the Post-Impressionist paintings of Paul Cézanne. His initial important contacts were with the poets André Salmon and Max Jacob, with the artist Pablo Picasso, and—in 1907—with Paul Alexandre, a friend of many avant-garde artists and the first to become interested in Modigliani and to buy his works. In 1908 the artist exhibited five or six paintings at the Salon des Indépendants.
In 1909 Modigliani met the Romanian sculptor Constantin Brancusi, on whose advice he seriously studied African sculpture. To prepare himself for creating his own sculpture, he intensified his graphic experiments. In his drawings Modigliani tried to give the function of limiting or enclosing volumes to his contours. In 1912 he exhibited at the Salon d’Automne eight stone heads whose elongated and simplified forms reflect the influence of African sculpture.
Modigliani returned entirely to painting about 1915, but his experience as a sculptor had fundamental consequences for his painting style. The characteristics of Modigliani’s sculptured heads—long necks and noses, simplified features, and long oval faces—became typical of his paintings. He reduced and almost eliminated chiaroscuro (the use of gradations of light and shadow to achieve the illusion of three-dimensionality), and he achieved a sense of solidity with strong contours and the richness of juxtaposed colours.
The outbreak of World War I in 1914 increased the difficulties of Modigliani’s life. Alexandre and some of his other friends were at the front; his paintings did not sell; and his already delicate health was deteriorating because of his poverty, feverish work ethic, and abuse of alcohol and drugs. He was in the midst of a troubled affair with the South African poet Beatrice Hastings, with whom he lived for two years (1914–16). He was assisted, however, by the art dealer Paul Guillaume and especially by the Polish poet Leopold Zborowski, who bought or helped him to sell a few paintings and drawings.
Modigliani was not a professional portraitist; for him the portrait was only an occasion to isolate a figure as a kind of sculptural relief through firm and expressive contour drawing. He painted his friends, usually personalities of the Parisian artistic and literary world (such as the artists Juan Gris and Jacques Lipchitz, the writer and artist Jean Cocteau, and the poet Max Jacob), but he also portrayed unknown people, including models, servants, and girls from the neighbourhood. In 1917 he began painting a series of about 30 large female nudes that, with their warm, glowing colours and sensuous, rounded forms, are among his best works. In December of that year Berthe Weill organized a solo show for him in her gallery, but the police judged the nudes indecent and had them removed.
In 1917 Modigliani began a love affair with the young painter Jeanne Hébuterne, with whom he went to live on the Côte d’Azur. Their daughter, Jeanne, was born in November 1918. His painting became increasingly refined in line and delicate in colour. A more-tranquil life and the climate of the Mediterranean, however, did not restore the artist’s undermined health. After returning to Paris in May 1919, he became ill in January 1920, and 10 days later he died of tubercular meningitis. The next day Hébuterne killed herself and their unborn child by jumping from a window.
Little known outside avant-garde Parisian circles, Modigliani had seldom participated in official exhibitions. Fame came after his death, with a solo exhibition at the Bernheim-Jeune Gallery in 1922 and later with a biography by Salmon. For decades critical evaluations of Modigliani’s work were overshadowed by the dramatic story of his tragic life, but he is now acknowledged as one of the most significant and original artists of his time.
Although he died in 1967, of pancreatic cancer, much of the work of Rene Magritte is still on display today, in his hometown, and around the world. Not only did he introduce a new style, he was a leader in the surrealist style. And, he brought an entirely new way of looking at art, with the paintings, as well as some of the sculptures which he created, during the course of his career.
SCARLET LADY | amazing construction views at FINCANTIERI yard in Genoa (Italy) | 4K-Quality-Video
Amazing look at the current state of construction of the SCARLET LADY (Virgin Voyages) in June 2019 at the FINCANTIERI shipyard in Genoa (Italy). The SCARLET LADY is the type ship of a new class of cruise ship with a size of around 110,000 GT. The SCARLET LADY is also the first new cruise ship of the new cruise line Virgin Voyages. The handover of the completed SCARLET LADY is scheduled by FINCANTIERI to Virgin Voyages for spring 2020. Virgin Voyages has ordered three more sister ships for SCARLET LADY from FINCANTIERI to be delivered in 2021, 2022 and 2023. At 1:56 a section for the first sister ship is to be seen in the foreground of SCARLET LADY.
Filmed with a SONY FDR-AX53 in high 4K-Quality.
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ms Koningsdam • Barcelona, Spain • Sep 28, 2017
Holland America Line's cruise liner ms Koningsdam in the port of Barcelona, Spain on September 28, 2017 as part of the 31-Night Iberian Adventures & Passage to America Cruise. Views of Barcelona, Port Vell Aerial Tramway, Columbus Monument, La Rambla, Plaça Reial, Sculpture The Cat by Fernando Botero, Jardins del Baluard, Maritime Museum, Basilica of Our Lady of Mercy, El Born Cultural and Memorial Centre, Parc de la Ciutadella (Citadel Park) with the Font de la Cascada (Fountain), Arc de Triomf, Barcelona França Railway Station and the Rambla de Mar.
Ports of call: Amsterdam, Netherlands • Portland, England, United Kingdom • A Coruña, Spain • Leixões, Portugal • Lisbon, Portugal • Huelva, Spain • Gibraltar • Málaga, Spain • Cartagena, Spain • Barcelona, Spain • Palma de Mallorca, Spain • Ajaccio, Corsica, France • Livorno, Italy • Civitavecchia, Italy • Alicante, Spain • Málaga, Spain • Cádiz, Spain • Funchal, Madeira, Portugal and Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, USA.
10 Important Things to Know Before Visiting Florence
Visiting Florence soon? These are the most important things to know before you go to Florence, Italy. Top tips for first time visitors, including how to get from Pisa airport to Florence's city center, tips for eating well (beyond pizza and pasta), and the lowdown on taxis in Florence.
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10 Important Things to Know Before Visiting Italy:
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BOOK THESE FOR YOUR FLORENCE TRIP (some links are affiliated)
Eating Italy (super local, great to support a small biz):
Fun in Tuscany - this is the #1 Tuscany tour I have recommended to friends and family for years, they always love it and it's good value, plus you literally ride a Vespa through Tuscany... If Sam (Issam) is your guide please tell him Jess Dante says hello!
The Tour Guy (Florence, Rome and Tuscany tours. If you want to skip the line at the Uffizi Gallery and the Accademia, where David is, use this company):
Nice area to stay in -- Oltrarno district (try around Piazza Santo Spirito) but you can't go too wrong. Make sure you have air conditioning if visiting in the summer. Horto Convento is a beautiful choice :
**Free course sign up is no longer available**
Florence specialities - Bistecca Alla Fiorentina, Lampredotta, Ribollita, Crostini
Places to see in ( Pistoia - Italy )
Places to see in ( Pistoia - Italy )
Pistoia is a city in Italy’s Tuscany region. Set around its central Piazza del Duomo are the Cathedral of San Zeno, which has a silver altar, and the octagonal Battistero di San Giovanni in Corte baptistery. Also on the square is the Palazzo dei Vescovi, an 11th-century palace housing a number of museums. On the nearby Piazza della Sala, the Pozzo del Leoncino is a well with a marble frame. Pretty Pistoia sits snugly at the foot of the Apennines. An easy day trip from Pisa, Lucca or Florence, it thoroughly deserved its 2017 status as European City of Culture. A town that has grown well beyond its medieval ramparts, its centro storico is well preserved and stands guardian to striking contemporary art.
Pistoia is a little-known delight. It lies in the tourist heart of Tuscany, a stone's throw from Florence, Lucca and Siena, but tends to get missed out by travellers. This isn't completely surprising. The town is less grand than Florence, less ancient than Siena and less complete than Lucca, and its name doesn't perhaps sound as pretty. Yet Pistoia is a gem. All the ingredients of an old Tuscan city are there - old walls, striped churches, frescoes, medieval watchtowers, arcaded piazzas - packed into a rather small centre.
Pistoia was a smallish Roman town, notable mainly for a nearby battle in which Cicero's great enemy the conspirator Catiline died an outcast and rebel. It flourished in the Middle Ages, getting itself recognised as a pilgrimage site for the cult of Saint James and establishing a form of republican self-government, like several other Tuscan cities. Later rule by Lucca and Florence seems to have done the place no lasting damage. Pistoia was well known for its crafts, and has some claim to the origin of pistol, originally meaning a small weapon. The city fared less well during the tumults of the 19th century and could be described as rather a backwater today, but something of the old colour still remains. There's a medieval-style palio called the Giostra dell'Orso (including processions and a horseback tournament between rival neighbourhoods) in the main piazza on 25th July, while several villages once under the aegis of Pistoia stage their own historical events on other dates in the summer.
Visiting Pistoia’s old town is like taking a journey back in time. In fact, Pistoia is a city with multiple amazing facets, thanks to its elegance and refined beauty. The evidence of the city's Roman origins appears immediately upon entry: an unexpected series of churches, cloisters, palaces and art treasures not only dating back to the ancient past, but to more recent times, as well. Amidst the narrow, Medieval streets and irregularly-shaped piazzas, prestigious palaces and small tower-houses, a surprising city emerges, bearing an innate an discrete charm, perfect for travelers who appreciate quality and slow-paced tourism.
Not far from Pistoia, one reaches Pescia, a town that has a lot to offer to those who passionate for art and nature. The city's origins are Medieval and belong to both banks of the river from which Pescia takes its name: on the right bank, the center's foundation is its characteristic, elongated Piazza, while on the left lies Pescia's religious hub. Among the sights to see, beginning with Porta Fiorentina, one arrives at the Cathedral, re-built at the end of the 17th Century. Just opposite is the Church of San Giuliano, and next to the Cathedral is the Seminary Cloister and the nearby Church of the Oratory of Sant'Antonio Abate, conserving the wooden sculpture The Ugly Saints that dates back to the 13th Century. Also here is the Gipsoteca Libero Andreotti Civic Museum with its plaster cast collection.
Waterways, and chestnut forests, mills and paper mills, remains of ancient walls and picturesque views open onto the valley, making for lovely visits and walks among history and nature: this is Svizzera Pesciatina, located to Pescia's north. It is also known as Valleriana; the former name honors Giovan Carlo Sismondi, historian and economist from Geneva that here found the valley landscapes and colors of the valleys so similar to those of his own Switzerland.
( Pistoia - Italy ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Pistoia . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Pistoia - Italy
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Florence in a Day: Hidden Gems & Top Attractions
The Roman Guy's top tips for visiting Florence on a day trip from Rome.
For more info, visit our blog:
All Florence Tours:
Check our Rome Tours:
Where to eat, how to get reservations to museums, how to get around, the best hidden gems and what are the top sights to see for first time visitors.
Below are also other videos you might like!
The Best & Only Way to See Venice:
How to Order Pizza in Rome:
Roma How To: Ordering Coffee
Hi. Welcome to The Roman Guy How 2 Series. Today, we're going to show you to get the most out of your day trip to Florence.
A lot of people refer to Florence as a city, but it has much more of a small village type feel. It's perfect for a day trip because it's centrally located between Milan, Venice, and Rome, and very easy to get to by fast train. It's an hour from Rome, two hours from Venice, and an hour and 40 minutes from Milan. Think of it this way, it's a three-hour car ride from Rome to Florence or a one-hour train ride.
Our first stop is Accademia which is about 13 minutes by foot from the main train station. Be sure to RSVP tickets to Accademia to see Michelangelo's David. You can call ahead to get the lowest price or book online with one of our partners.
I recommend getting inside by 9:30 AM. Be sure to give yourself at least 30 minutes between your reservation and your train arrival time.
It's heavily debated on what Michelangelo's masterpiece is, but David is an amazing work of art with a great story. After David's completion, Michelangelo was asked why he worked so fast. His response was, I saw an angel trapped in that marble and I carved him until I set him free.
The central market of Florence is about a seven-minute walk from Accademia. In Italian, it's referred to as il Mercato Centrale. It's a great place to grab a coffee, some fruit or snacks to keep you going all day.
After the central market, you should head to Brunelleschi's Cathedral, which is Florence's central focal point. You'll hear the massive cathedral being referred to as il Duomo. It's recognized for its captivating color scheme, bronze doors, and magnificent cupola, or dome. The cathedral took over a hundred years to build and was consecrated in 1436 during the height of the Florentine Renaissance.
Right in Piazza del Duomo is a great artisanal gelato shop called Gelato Edoardo Bio. It's family-owned, organic, and has recipes that are over a hundred years old.
The Basilica of Santa Croce, is not only a beautiful church but the final resting place of Michelangelo and Galileo. One of the best parts about Santa Croce is on the outside. This lively piazza is a people-watchers dream.
There are plenty of outdoor restaurants in Florence but consider La Cantinetta Verrazzano. This is a local favorite and recommendation of one of our guides in Florence.
From here, you should pass by one of Italy's most famous bridges, the Ponte Vecchio or old bridge, famous for its shops physically built into the bridge. Today, most of them sell gold, but they've been selling different artisanal goods here since it was constructed as far back as the 12th century.
Now you're right around the corner from Piazza della Signoria. This square is connected to one of the world's most impressive collections of Renaissance art, the Uffizi Gallery.
Piazza della Signoria is host to a beautiful array of outdoor statues, monuments, and fountains. The most notable building in this square is Palazzo Vecchio which is the Town Hall of Florence.
By now, it should be getting late and you should consider going to All'Antico Vinaio for a Florentine sandwich.
On the way to the train station, you should stop by La Fontana del Porcellino. It's a bronze statue of a boar and Florence's most famous piece of folklore. You put a coin in the boar's mouth and let it slide out. If it successfully falls the grate below, it ensures a safe return to Florence. This tradition was documented as early as 1766.
From here, you're only 10 to 15 minutes from the main train station, but by a rule of thumb when in a foreign city, you should try to get there 20 minutes early.
For more information on tours and excursions, visit our website; theromanguy.com
Happy New Year Tango Improv by Inja Vojnovic at Terrazza Mascagni Livorno, Italy
Entre tu amor y mi amor
Alfredo De Angelis/ Canta Juan Carlos Godoy
Erin K - Beautiful Monkeeh
Beautiful Monkeeh “Bellissima Scimmia”
Available to steam:
Released by Erin K on the album “Little Torch” 2017 with La Tempesta
Written by Erin Kleh and produced by Andrea Appino. Performed by: Erin Kleh (vocals, guitar), Andrea Appino (bass), Simone Padovani (drums). Recorded at 360 Music Factory, Livorno, Italy and engineered by Andrea Pachetti. Mixed by Kristofer Harris.
Video recorded by Justin Davey in Bassano del Grappa, Italy
Drawings by Erin K, Animation by Gravy Media
A special thanks to Simone Sangalli for the translation
Nick and Joyce adventure- Livorno Pisa Italy
Looking around the place of Livorno Italy.
Livorno, Italy
I created this video with the YouTube Slideshow Creator (
Florentine Delights and Tuscan Side-Trips
Rick Steves' Europe Travel Guide | In this second of two episodes on Florence, we'll enjoy more of the exquisite artistic treasures of the city that propelled Europe out of the Middle Ages. Then we'll side-trip to a couple of rival cities and cultural capitals in their own right, Pisa and Lucca, where we'll marvel at a tipsy tower, circle a city on its ramparts, and enjoy some Puccini in his hometown. © 2012 Rick Steves' Europe
Best Volleyball Actions by Elena Pietrini | Women's VNL 2019
Elena Pietrini (born 17 March 2000) is an Italian volleyball player for the Italian national team.
She participated at the 2017 FIVB Volleyball Women's U20 World Championship, and 2018 FIVB Volleyball Women's Nations League.
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