The Port of Livorno, Italy - 3rd August, 2010
Views from the quayside and from the Thomson Destiny cruise ship of the port of Livorno. Footage features a number of other ships and ferries, as well as the port infrastructure, including cranes, silos, and industry.
Livorno, Italy Sail Away
Recorded August 23, 2008.
Livorno is a port city on the Tyrrhenian Sea on the western edge of Tuscany, Italy. It is the capital of the Province of Livorno and the third-largest port on the western coast of Italy, having a population of approximately 170,000 residents.
This video was shot enitely on board the Sea Princess as we leave the port in early evening. During the sail away Royal Caribbean's Brilliance of the Seas is also seen leaving the port.
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Livorno Italy, Tuscany (videoturysta.eu)
[EN] Livorno is a huge (second largest) port in Italy, but you can also find here interesting buildings and shopping centers among water channels with lots of boats.
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[PL] Livorno to wielki (drugi co do wielkości) port we Włoszech, ale także ciekawe budynki i centra handlowe wśród kanałów wodnych z mnóstwem łodzi.
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Visit Livorno, Italy: Explore Livorno Attractions | Princess Cruises
Visit Livorno, Italy, like a local with Local Connections by Princess Cruises. Meet Giovanni Spadoni, one our Tuscan regional experts and part of our Med Cruise team. Giovanni describes how Livorno is the gateway to many places and experiences.
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Sardinia ferries ferry from Sardinia arriving in Livorno port in Italy
Large ferry from Sardinia arriving in mainland Italy in Livorno port
Lusben Re-fit shipyard in Livorno, Italy
Livorno, Italy
View of the port city of Livorno, Italy.
Italy - Port of Livorno (Villages of Cinque Terre)
Video hightlights our tour of Cinque Terre - the five hamlets located on the west coast of the Italian Rivieria.
Boat tour in Livorno, Italy.
While on NCL cruise ship Epic we took a boat tour in old Venizia.
Livorno Italy Excursion
Things to do when coming in to the port of Livorno in Italy.
This details the Puccini Lake and Pisa excursion that takes about 5 or 6 hours.
You are given a tour of Puccinis house and grounds, a boat ride on the lake, all bus transfers and a visit to the Leaning Tower of Pisa.
This is an excellent tour that I would recommend to anyone who is travelling to Livorno by cruise ship.
You will find many other excursions for this area but I think this gives a fine balance of tranquility with the more busier life of Pisa. Enjoy.
Marina at Livorno, Italy
Marina at Livorno, Italy
Places to see in ( Livorno - Italy )
Places to see in ( Livorno - Italy )
Livorno is an Italian port city on the west coast of Tuscany. It's known for its seafood, Renaissance-era fortifications and modern harbor with a cruise ship port. Its central Terrazza Mascagni, a waterside promenade with checkerboard paving, is the city's main gathering place. The bastions of the 16th-century Fortezza Vecchia face the harbor and open onto Livorno's canal-laced Venezia Nuova quarter.
Alot to see in ( Livorno - Italy ) such as :
Quattro Mori
Museo Civico Giovanni Fattori
Old English Cemetery (Oldest in Italy, open on reservation).
Acquario Comunale D. Cestoni
Tuscan islands
Other museums
Funicolare di Montenero one of the few cable railways still in service (another one is in Montecatini Terme near Pistoia.
Livorno is a good starting point and base for a tour of Tuscany. You can reach Pisa in half an hour, Lucca and Florence in somewhat over an hour. (See note under Get in By Boat above). In a well-organized day you can tour from a hotel in Livorno you might sample Chianti-side, Monteriggioni, San Gimignano, Siena and Volterra and be back for dinner. However, return before by expected time for a cruise ship departure could be quite problematic.
( Livorno - Italy ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Livorno.
Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Livorno - Italy
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Thomson Majesty leaving Livorno, Italy
This time-lapse video shows the Thomson Majesty leaving Livorno in Italy June 2016. Shot using an iPhone 6 Plus.
I fossi di Livorno (Livorno on boat)
LIVORNO - Italy Travel Guide | Around The World
Livorno is a port on the coast of Tuscany in central Italy, on the Tyrrhenian Sea. Though not generally seen as holiday destination, Livorno has many travellers passing through or spending a few hours in town as it features on cruise itineraries and is the departure point for ferries to the islands of Corsica, Elba and Capraia. Although overshadowed by nearby attractions such as Pisa and Florence, Livorno is a pleasant enough place to spend a short time and it is a practical base if you have an early or late ferry. The port's English name, dating back to a time of merchant ships and Grand Tourists, is Leghorn.
Livorno doesn't have the long history or quaint medieval centre of a typical Tuscan town. This is because it was purpose-built as a port in the 16th century, designed as an ideal mercantile modern city. Its harbours, fortresses and waterways are testament to the functional planning of the town, while a variety of churches record the presence of merchants from many countries. Nowadays Livorno is a busy city with, in places, a vaguely down-at-heel air, but a bit of exploring soon reveals the town's more interesting sights.
As Livorno is not a particularly obvious venue for sightseeing, a good first stop is the tourist information office on Via Pieroni, between Piazza Grande and Piazza del Municipio (housed in a building like a small shopping mall). Here you can obtain a map, timetables for boat trips and additional information about local attractions.
The most interesting part of Livorno to explore is the 17th-century New Venice district, the Quartiere Venezia, or Venezia Nuova. Surrounded by canals, this was a rather grandiose conception where merchants' houses and warehouses were built with water access. Nowadays there are a few interesting shops, restaurants and bars in this area, where plenty of locals still keep their boats moored. Some of the town's grander architecture can be seen along Via Borra, which runs through the heart of this unusual district. A festival called Effetto Venezia takes place here each summer.
The Scottish writer Tobias Smollett died in Livorno in 1771 and is buried in the town's historic Protestant cemetery. This is usually only open by special arrangement, but you can peer through the gate or over the wall to see the clutter of stone monuments filling the leafy graveyard. Smollett's Journeys Through France and Italy (available on the Project Gutenberg website) is a very entertaining read and full of tales of villainous innkeepers. The cemetery (Cimitero Inglese) is alongside Via Verdi, with its gateway on a side-street, almost opposite the junction with Via Adua.
Other sights include the 'old' and 'new' brick fortresses, both dating to the 16th century and encircled by water - the walls of the Fortezza Nuova now enclose a park, closed in recent years. The town's cathedral was rebuilt after Second World War bombing; inside is a painting by Fra Angelico, displayed in the Cappella del Santissimo Sacramento. Other historic churches are scattered around the town. Livorno has a city art gallery, the Museo Civico Giovanni Fattori, housed in 19th-century Villa Mimbelli, and also an aquarium. If you are spending time in Livorno, it may be worth purchasing the Livorno Card which includes local transport and museum admission; details can be found on the council website.
A boat trip around Livorno's canals (fossi) is an entertaining way to see the town; tours run several times a day and some include extra attractions such as a visit to the market. Sights along the canals include the market and churches including the lovely but crumbling Dutch-German church, the Chiesa degli Olandesi (near Piazza Cavour).
Via Grande, a street lined with modern arcades, cuts through the centre of Livorno, from Piazza della Repubblica to the Porto Mediceo, and is a useful place for a spot of high-street shopping. Bus number 1 from the station follows this route. The wide Piazza della Repubblica has views across the canal to the Fortezza Nuova, and is a majestic open space. After touring the centre of Livorno, visitors can enjoy a walk along the seafront to the south of the town centre, beyond the port district, where the seafront road passes parks, bathing establishments and little harbours.
Livorno has a choice of cheap and moderate restaurants where you can eat seafood and traditional Tuscan cuisine. The canal area is a good place to start - options include the informal Sugo at Via Borra 51. Livorno has a large purpose-built covered food market, open Monday-Saturday mornings, where you can find local produce. The grand 19th-century market building stands alongside a canal and is a picturesque as well as lively sight. Specialities to try in Livorno include ponce, a drink composed of coffee and rum, and cacciucco, a hearty local seafood stew.
Places to see in ( Livorno - Italy )
Places to see in ( Livorno - Italy )
Livorno is an Italian port city on the west coast of Tuscany. It's known for its seafood, Renaissance-era fortifications and modern harbor with a cruise ship port. Its central Terrazza Mascagni, a waterside promenade with checkerboard paving, is the city's main gathering place. The bastions of the 16th-century Fortezza Vecchia face the harbor and open onto Livorno's canal-laced Venezia Nuova quarter.
Tuscany's third-largest city is a quintessential port town with a colourful history and cosmopolitan heritage. Declared a free port in the 17th century, Livorno (Leghorn in English) attracted traders from across the globe, who brought with them new customs and habits, exotic goods, slaves and foreign forms of worship. The result was a city famed throughout Europe for its multiculturalism. Today its seafood is the best on the Tyrrhenian coast, its shabby historic quarter threaded with Venetian-style canals is full of character, and its elegant belle époque buildings offer evocative reminders of a prosperous past. An easy train trip from Florence, Pisa and Rome, it makes an understated but undeniably worthwhile stop on any Tuscan itinerary.
Livorno is a charming city located on the Western coast of Tuscany, on the Ligurian Sea and is considered one of the most important port of Italy. Don't expect to visit a quaint medieval town like many others in the region, since Livorno is one of the most modern cities in Tuscany, even if there are many archaeological remains that fortunately have not been destroyed during the World War II.
Like every port city, Livorno has always been a crossroads and melting pot of the world's cultures and owes its fascinating charm to this multiethnic aspect. Its origins date back maybe to prehistoric times, while many Etruscan and Roman remains have been found all closeby; during the XVIth century, the Medici Family contributed in the development of the city and its sea port, charging the renowed artist Buontalenti with the construction of a new fortified city with fosses and bastions, that gave Livorno those aspect that we can see today.
At the end of the XVIth century, Livorno began to house a large Jewish community - of traders principally - that grew more and more till it began one of the most important of Italy; today, you can visit the Synagogue (actually, you need to schedule your appointment to go inside), an impressive religious builiding that stands out from the traditional Italian architecture.
One of the most enchanting quarters of the city is La Venezia, a Venezia- style quarter with canals (dating back to the Medici era) crossing the all district, small bridges and boats that reminds one of the city in Northern Italy. It is situated in the historical center near the New Fortress and every Summer - usually on early August - houses one of the most important Summer events of the region, the Effetto Venezia. Music, theatre and cultural performances, food and entertainment for both children and adults give a special touch to the quarter that come alive until late night for a few days.
If you visit Livorno with kids, one of the attractions you should see is the Aquarium, with colorful fishes, turtles and many others: a funny break from the city seightseeings that your kids will surely appreciate. But one of most suggestive places is the Terrazza Mascagni, a great chessboard-style terrace made of many white and black tiles located along Viale Italia, separated from the sea by an elegant parapet with columns. The ideal venue for a romantic evening!
If you head to this Tuscan port city, you must try out its great seafood, there are many restaurants both in the historical center and along the lungomare that stretches south to the city, where rocks make space for a bit of beaches. Especially there, you'll find many nice and delicious places to eat at, which are informal and familiar and, above all, have reasonable prices.
( Livorno - Italy ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Livorno . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Livorno - Italy
Join us for more :
On the Carnival Breeze, Leaving the Port of Livorno, Italy
We head back to the ship and say goodbye to Livorno. There was some minor drama involving missing and sick passengers, but thankfully it was all sorted out before we disembarked. Next up, Rome and the Vatican!
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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
Livorno Italy (evening) as seen from Cruise Ship by jonfromqueens