Piazza Venezia, Rome, Italy
Piazza Venezia, Roma, Italy-Piazza Venezia is the central hub of Rome, Italy, in which several thoroughfares intersect, including the Via dei Fori Imperiali and the Via del Corso. It takes its name from the Palazzo Venezia, built by the Venetian Cardinal, Pietro Barbo (later Pope Paul II) alongside the church of Saint Mark, the patron saint of Venice. The Palazzo Venezia served as the embassy of the Republic of Venice in Rome.
One side of the Piazza is the site of Italy's Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in the Altare della Patria, part of the imposing Monument to Vittorio Emanuele II, first king of Italy.
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Piazza Venezia, Rome, Italy
Piazza dell'Unità d'Italia - Trieste, Italy
Piazza dell'Unità d'Italia a Trieste - Friuli Venezia Giulia
4 marzo 2019
Piazza dell'Unità d'Italia e lungomare - Trieste, Italy
Piazza dell'Unità d'Italia e lungomare - Trieste, Friuli Venezia Giulia
4 marzo 2019
4 novembre: il via alle celebrazioni da Piazza Venezia, Roma
Sono iniziate a piazza Venezia, intorno alle 8.45, le celebrazioni per il 4 novembre, giorno dell’Unità nazionale e delle Forze Armate. Mattarella poi a Trieste sottolinea l'importanza delle missioni di pace italiane dispiegate all'estero.…
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Europe Trip 2015 - Trieste to Venice, Italy - Day 1
The final leg of our trip to Europe. We took a bus from Rijeka, Croatia to Trieste, Italy, and finally a train from Trieste to Venice, Italy. Here is what I saw.
Video Series: Took a family trip to Europe in June of 2015. Got to go to Istanbul, few places in Croatia, and Venice. This is the video from Venice, Italy.
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Eric Clarks Travel Videos - Trieste Italy - Wall Street of Trieste. Amazing Piazza della Borsa
Eric Clarks Travel Videos - Trieste Italy - Wall Street of Trieste. Piazza della Borsa.
From Wikipedia
Piazza della Borsa is one of Trieste's main squares. Also known as the second good citizen lounge, the square was the economic center of the city throughout the 19th century .
It is the square immediately adjacent to Piazza Unità d'Italia and, shrinking, continues until the beginning of Corso Italia, an important city artery. The place where the square stands was in ancient times just outside the city walls. In fact, at the point where the passage with Piazza Unità is located was the Vienna gate and the houses that surround the square towards the mountain follow the line of the ancient walls towards the tower of Riborgo.
The square was initially called Piazza della Dogana, from the name of the building that stood in the place of the current Tergesteo. Its current name derives from an obvious toponym due to the palace built in 1806 by the Maceratese architect Antonio Mollari to house the activities of the stock exchange traders. This building, which distinguishes the square and is one of the most significant examples of Trieste's neoclassical monuments, is currently the seat of the Chamber of Commerce, Industry, Crafts and Agriculture of Trieste, and is also called Borsa Vecchia , as the Exchange has moved first in 1844 at the Tergesteo, and then in 1928 in an adjacent palace (ex Palazzo Dreher) which is therefore also called Borsa nuova.
Next to this building was once the Canal Piccolo, still remembered today by the name of the street, which reached the center of the old city through the Portizza and via del Ponte. The canal was buried in 1816.
In the square there are numerous other buildings, nowadays used mostly as banking offices or shops. Interesting is the building in liberty style realized by the architect Max Fabiani in 1905 (Bartoli house). Also in the square is the ancient covered gallery of the Tergesteo palace (architect Buttazzoni - inaugurated in 1842), which creates a pedestrian connection to the square in front of the Giuseppe Verdi opera house . In the Tergesteo palace there are also some of Trieste's historic cafés .
In front of the Chamber of Commerce building a stone column supports the figure of an emperor. It is the column of Leopold I of Austria whose son, Charles VI , established the free port in Trieste. The column had been erected in 1660 in Piazza Pozzo del Mare and was moved to Piazza della Borsa in 1808.
On April 27, 2011 , the restored and upgraded Piazza della Borsa was inaugurated, with the complete pedestrianization and return of the Neptune fountain ( 1755 ) to its original location, from which it was removed in 1920. The fountain was present until the end of 2008 in Piazza Venezia , where, following a complete redevelopment, it was replaced by the statue of Maximilian of Austria .
Piazza della Borsa è una delle piazze principali di Trieste. Conosciuta anche come il secondo salotto buono cittadino la piazza è stata il centro economico della città per tutto il XIX secolo.
È la piazza immediatamente adiacente a piazza Unità d'Italia e, restringendosi, prosegue fino all'inizio di corso Italia, un'importante arteria cittadina. Il luogo ove sorge la piazza si trovava anticamente appena fuori dalle mura cittadine. Infatti nel punto dove si trova il passaggio con piazza Unità si trovava la porta di Vienna e le case che delimitano la piazza verso monte seguono la linea delle antiche mura verso la torre di Riborgo.
La piazza inizialmente si chiamava piazza della Dogana, dal nome dell'edificio che sorgeva al posto dell'attuale Tergesteo. Il suo nome attuale le deriva da un evidente toponimo dovuto al palazzo costruito nel 1806 dall'architetto maceratese Antonio Mollari per ospitare le attività dei commercianti di Borsa. Tale edificio, che contraddistingue la piazza e che costituisce uno degli esempi più rilevanti dei monumenti neoclassici triestini, è attualmente sede della Camera di commercio, industria, artigianato e agricoltura di Trieste, ed è chiamato anche Borsa vecchia, in quanto la Borsa si è spostata dapprima nel 1844 al Tergesteo, e quindi nel 1928 in un palazzo attiguo (ex palazzo Dreher) che viene perciò anche chiamato Borsa nuova.
A fianco di questo palazzo si trovava un tempo il Canal Piccolo, ancor oggi ricordato dal nome della via, che attraverso la Portizza e via del Ponte arrivava fino al centro della città vecchia. Il canale fu interrato nel 1816.
Nella piazza si affacciano numerosi altri palazzi, oggi adibiti per lo più a sedi bancarie o a negozi. Interessante è l'edificio in stile liberty realizzato dall'architetto Max Fabiani nel 1905 (casa Bartoli). Sempre nella piazza si affaccia l'antica galleria coperta del palazzo Tergesteo (architetto Buttazzoni - inaugurato nel 1842), che crea un collegamento pedonale fino alla piazza antistante il teatro lirico Giuseppe Verdi.
Pantegane sfacciate in piazza Venezia, a Trieste
Nel video dei ratti escono dai cespugli di piazza Venezia, nel centro di Trieste, per nutrirsi di rifiuti. Sono passate da poco le 19 di giovedì 20 settembre, la piazza e le strade vicine sono piene di gente. Ciononostante le pantegane paiono non essere molto interessate alla fervente attività umana, e pasteggiano un po' guardinghe ma in tutta tranquillità.
Unity of Italy Square, Trieste, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Italy, Europe
Piazza Unità d'Italia is the main square in Trieste, a seaport city in northeast Italy. Located at the foot of the hill with the castle of San Giusto, the square faces the Adriatic Sea. It is often said to be Europe's largest square located next to the sea. The square was built during the period when Trieste was the most important seaport of the Austrian-Hungarian Empire and includes the city's municipal buildings and other important palaces. Before 1919 it was known as Piazza Grande, or Great Square. The local Slovenes still refer to it as Veliki trg (Great Square), both in daily speech and in the media. In the last decade, the term Trg zedinjenja (Unity Square) or Trg zedinjenja Italije (Unity of Italy Square) has also become popular, especially in official documents. The square itself has occasionally been used as a concert venue, with Green Day using the square as a venue for a show on their 99 Revolutions Tour in 2013. The attendeance was of 12,000 people. In 2016, it was used by heavy metal band Iron Maiden as a concert venue: the concert was sold out with over 15,000 fans. The square is also occasionally used for visits of foreign heads of state and meetings. In November 2013 President of Russia Vladimir Putin met Italian Prime Minister Enrico Letta there for bilateral talks. In July 2017 a trilateral meeting attended by Angela Merkel, Emmanuel Macron, and Paolo Gentiloni was held there, as well as the fourth Western Balkans Summit.
One day in Trieste, Italy (what to visit)
One day in Trieste, Italy (what to visit)
The Province of Trieste is situated towards the end of a narrow strip of land in southeast Friuli Venezia Giulia, between the Adriatic Sea and Italy's border with Slovenia. This is an extraordinary destination for its historic treasures, artworks and its middle-European character. Off Trieste's coast is its broad Gulf, with numerous tiny bays, small harbors and breathtaking reefs; and of course Miramare Castle is accompanied by the splendid blue of the sea.The area of Trieste is characterized by the steep karstic landscape continually revealing different, amazing and charming features. Close to the coast is a rocky moor with Mediterranean vegetation, where the Bora wind blows, while inland are hills with hollows and scrubs. Protected areas include the Val Rosandra Nature Reserve; the Marine Reserve of Miramare, within a coastal sea landscape of sharp rocks and a wide variety of underwater flora and fauna; and the Falesie di Duino Nature Reserve, with white cliffs overhanging the sea. The charm of the area resides not only in its natural traits, but also in the elegant city of Trieste, where the Habsburg influence is noticeable; the inland small towns with their longstanding traditions; and other quaint touristic draws on the coast - countless gems set within this tiny strip of land.
10. Top Tourist Attractions in #Trieste:
1. Harbor, 2. Piazza dell'Unità d'Italia, 3. Canale Grande, 4. Teatro Romano (Roman Theater), 5. Colle San Giusto (San Giusto hill), 6. Castello di San Giusto, 7. Cattedrale di San Giusto, 8. Molo Audace, 9. Piazza della Borsa and the Jewish ghetto, 10. City Aquarium.
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Trst (Italija) - Trieste (Italia) - Trieste (Italy)
Centar Trsta u septembru 2008.
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Roma, girotondo a Piazza Venezia: l'inseguimento della polizia diventa virale
Un inseguimento nel pieno centro di Roma, a Piazza Venezia. Un'automobile della polizia segue a breve distanza e con le sirene accese un'auto scura, che però non si ferma e continua a girare in tondo nella rotonda della piazza. Dopo più di due minuti di inseguimento l'auto scura ha svoltato verso piazza del Colosseo dove è stata speronata e fermata da un'altra volante. Alla guida, secondo una prima ricostruzione, ci sarebbe stata una donna sotto l'effetto di stupefacenti. La scena, ripresa da alcuni passanti, è diventata in breve tempo virale sui social network
90seconds - Piazza Unità d'Italia (Trieste, Italy)
Nowadays Trieste is a city and a seaport in northeastern Italy. Just in front of the sea, Piazza Unità d'Italia (Unity Square in English) appears as the most notable place in the city and it is said to be Europe's largest square located next to the sea. Throughtout its history, many empires and cultures have left its print around this place in the city's municipal buildings and other important palaces.
Museo Revoltella - Trieste [ENG]
The 'Museo Revoltella' is an important modern art gallery, created in 1872 to fulfil the wishes of Baron Pasquale Revoltella (1795-1869) who bequeathed his palazzo and his art collection to the city of Trieste. He also left the museum a conspicuous annuity, which allowed it to expand year after year, thus creating, in a short space of time, a considerable art collection. Towards the end of the 19th century this already included famous Italian artists such as Hayez, Morelli, Favretto, Nono, Palizzi and Previati, as well as many foreign ones. Thanks to acquisitions from the Venice Biennale, the collections were further augmented, with works of great value, such as the famous painting Lady with a Dog (1878) by De Nittis.
Throughout the 20th century the Museo Revoltella continued to develop, becoming an increasingly prestigious cultural institution and a point of reference for modern and contemporary art. This was possible as the result of additional important acquisitions, including almost all of the most significant 20th-century Italian artists, such as Casorati, Sironi, Carrà, Morandi, De Chirico, Manzù, Marini, Fontana and Burri. A series of major exhibitions further consolidated the museum's reputation with important contributions to the study and understanding of the art of the last two centuries.
At the same time, the museum also expanded its premises, acquiring the nearby Palazzo Brunner where new exhibition spaces were created, thanks to a lengthy renovation project designed by Carlo Scarpa in 1968 and completed in 1991, after many interruptions. Currently the museum occupies three adjacent buildings, making up one whole block, surrounded by Piazza Venezia on one side, and by Via Diaz, Via Cadorna and Via San Giorgio on the other three. The palazzina Basevi, facing Via San Giorgio, houses the administrative headquarters.
Comune di Trieste
Video by TCD
With the contribution of Friuli Venezia Giulia
TRIESTE ITALY Drone 4K || ITALIA Trier Trst Ultra HD
Trieste is a city in the North of Italy at the coast of the Adriatic Sea. The city has approximately 200,000 citizens. Trieste is the capital of the autonomous region Friuli-Venezia Giulia. The city lies at the crossroad of Latin, Germanic and Slavic cultures and trade routes. Trieste is located at the border of Slovenia and only 30 km from the border of Croatia. Also Austria is very near.
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40 FINGERS - LIVE in Trieste (Italy)
Live in Piazza Verdi (Trieste, Italy)
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40 Fingers are Matteo Brenci, Emanuele Grafitti, Marco Steffè, Andrea Vittori.
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Video Production by Giulio Ladini
Audio Production by Matteo Brenci
PIAZZA VENEZIA AND COMPLESSO DEL VITTORIANO MONUMENT
PIAZZA VENEZIA AND COMPLESSO DEL VITTORIANO MONUMENT
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TIP...... Take the panoramic elevator to the roof for spectacular views of the city
Complesso del Vittoriano (Vittoriano Museum Complex) is an exhibition space in the eastern wing of Il Vittoriano, the monument built for Vittorio Emanuele II, the first King of Italy.
It regularly hosts exhibitions of international stature.
Il Vittoriano celebrates the Father of the Nation and the unification of Italy in 1861, and is intended as a space open to the public.
It was inaugurated in 1911 by Vittorio Emanuele III at the fiftieth anniversary of united Italy.
The monument is known under different names, like Altare della Patria (Altar of the Fatherland) and Monumento Nazionale a Vittorio Emanuele II (National Monument to Victor Emmanuel II), but also under more informal and descriptive names like the typewriter and the wedding cake.
It is located at the large Piazza Venezia, only short walk from the Roman Forum and the Colosseum
A panoramic elevator takes you to the roof of the monument, offering great views of the city. Inside the monument there is the museum of Italian Unification.
Palace of Lloyd Triestino, Trieste, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Italy, Europe
Trieste's Lloyd Triestino building is an important construction of the city. The main entrance is in Piazza dell'Unità d'Italia, but the building also faces Via dell'Orologio, the bank of the Mandracchio and Via del Mercato Vecchio. Formerly the headquarters of the shipping company Lloyd Triestino di Navigazione, then Lloyd Triestino, it has been renovated several times, and now houses the offices of the Presidency and the junta of the Autonomous Region of Friuli Venezia Giulia. The Lloyd Triestino, established in 1833, had its first headquarters in Piazza Tommaseo, then in Piazza della Borsa. In 1878 it began to identify the areas for the construction of a new building. In 1880 the fund of the Pescheria was purchased and a competition was held for the design of the Lloyd's building, in which architects from Vienna and Trieste took part. Seven projects were presented, but none of these met the needs of the Lloyd Council, so it was decided to entrust the construction to the top building advisor Heinrich von Ferstel. He opted for the shallow, shallow foundation system, considering the muddy nature of the landfill. For the same reason, the erection of a tower, originally planned on the sea side, was not recommended. The first stone was laid on 6 December 1880 and the construction was completed in 1883. The building, with simple but articulated forms, is adorned with allegorical statues on the ground floor and on the gable, by the sculptors Joseph Pokorny and Hugo Härdtl of Vienna. In 1899, engineer Geiringer built a large covered room in the courtyard for office use. On May 1, 1945, the palace was seriously damaged by artillery shots fired by the Germans. During the two-year period from 1966 to 1967, the building underwent a radical restoration, consolidation and expansion, with the interior floor raised towards the courtyard. Since 1991, the building has been the seat of the Presidency of the Regional Council of the Autonomous Region of Friuli Venezia Giulia.
Dirottata da Venezia a Trieste la Msc Sinfonia
Causa maltempo, non meno di 13 mila crocieristi graviteranno tra oggi, sabato 23, e domani, 24 novembre sulle Rive triestine. Sarà la replica di quanto accaduto lo scorso fine settimana, con il tris costituito da Sinfonia, Magnifica (entrambe della flotta Msc) e Costa Deliziosa della Costa Crociere. Nel video di Massimo Silvano, l'approdo della Sinfonia, sul lato di piazza Unità, che ha sbarcato duemila passeggeri per imbarcarne altrettanti, mentre i transiti dovrebbero superare le 200 unità. La ripartenza è fissata per le 19. Domenica mattina, sempre entro le 8, arriveranno alla Marittima la Magnifica (lato piazza Unità) e la Costa Deliziosa, con ripartenza anche in questo caso attorno alle 19. L'ARTICOLO
Trieste Piazza dell'Unita d'Italia, Friuli Italy
The elegant Piazza dell'Unita d'Italia features many neoclassical buildings and grandly opens to the waterfront. It hosts important events and is a gathering place for the people. Background music is Retreat by Jason Farnham.
Places to see in ( Trieste - Italy )
Places to see in ( Trieste - Italy )
Trieste is the capital city of the Friuli Venezia Giulia region in northeast Italy. A port city, it occupies a thin strip of land between the Adriatic coast and Slovenia’s border on the limestone-dominated Karst Plateau. Italian, Austro-Hungarian and Slovenian influences are all evident in its layout, which encompasses a medieval old city and a neoclassical Austrian quarter.
Trieste, as travel writer Jan Morris once opined, 'offers no unforgettable landmark, no universally familiar melody, no unmistakable cuisine', yet it's a city that enchants, its 'prickly grace' inspiring a cult-like roll-call of writers, exiles and misfits.
Tumbling down to the Adriatic from a wild, karstic plateau and almost entirely surrounded by Slovenia, the city is physically isolated from the rest of the Italian peninsula. From as long ago as the 1300s, Trieste has indeed faced east, later becoming a free port under Austrian rule.
The city blossomed under the 18th- and 19th-century Habsburgs; Vienna's seaside salon was also a fluid borderland where Italian, Slavic, Jewish, Germanic and even Greek culture intermingled. Devotees come to think of its glistening belle époque cafes, dark congenial bars and buffets and even its maddening Bora wind as their own; it’s also a great base for striking out into the surrounding Carso and Collio wine country.
Trieste is the capital of the autonomous region of Friuli Venezia Giulia and has 201,261 inhabitants. It is situated on the crossroads of several commercial and cultural flows: German middle Europe to the north, Slavic masses and the Balkans to the east, Italy and then Latin countries to the west and the Mediterranean Sea to the south.
Its artistic and cultural heritage is linked to its singular border town location. You can find some old Roman architecture (a small theater near the sea, a nice arch into old city and an interesting Roman museum), Austrian empire architecture across the city centre (similar to stuff you can find in Vienna) and a nice atmosphere of metissage of Mediterranean styles, as Trieste was a very important port during the 18th century.
Trieste has always been a very cosmopolitan city. This can be seen in the cultural diversity and even in religion: there is a Greek Orthodox church, a Serbian Orthodox church, a Lutheran church, and a synagogue. There is a tourist office at the edge of Piazza Unità d'Italia, in the Lloyd Triestino building. Information is available in Italian, German, and English, as are tourist maps and brochures of information about attractions in and around the city.
The region of Friuli Venezia Giulia is officially quadrilingual (Italian, Slovene, Friulian or Eastern Ladin and German). Signs are often only italian in Trieste, as the city itself is generally Italian speaking and the local dialect (a form of the Venetian language) is called Triestine. Surrounding villages and towns are often inhabited by mostly Slovene speakers. Residents, and those working in the city, can easily find free courses to learn Italian or Slovene or German or English and many other languages.
Trieste boasts an extensive old town: there are many very narrow and crooked streets with typical medieval houses. Nearly the entire area is closed to traffic. Half of the city was built under Austrian-Hungarian dominion, so there is present a very large number of palaces that resemble Vienna. An iconic place of this quarter is the majestic Piazza Unità (Unity Square), which is Europe's largest sea-front square.
Museo Revoltella was donated to the city in 1869 by Baron Pasquale Revoltella, a great patron of the arts who liked to surround himself with precious and avant-garde works. Museo di Storia, Arte e Orto Lapidario (Museum of History and Art and Lapidary Garden) Archaeological, historical and art collections.
The Roman Theatre - Trieste or Tergeste, which probably dates back to the protohistoric period, was enclosed by walls built in 33-32 BC on Emperor Octavius’s orders. Il Faro della Vittoria (Victory Lighthouse) - The Lighthouse of the Victory, an impressive work of the Triestine architect Arduino Berlam.
( Trieste - Italy ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Trieste . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Trieste - Italy
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