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Books
Category:
Geography, Travel guides
Year:
1855
¬A¬ handbook for travellers in Southern Germany : being a guide to Würtemberg, Bavaria, Austria, Tyrol, Salzburg, Styria, ecc., the Austrian and Bavarian Alps, and the Danube from Ulm to the Black Sea
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Page 451 of 598
Place: London
Publisher: Murray
Physical description: XII, 573 S. : Kt.. - 7. ed., corr. and enlarged
Language: Englisch
Notations: Nebent.: Murray's hand-book southern Germany. - Hand -Book southern Germany
Subject heading: g.Süddeutschland ; z.Geschichte 1855 ; f.Führer
Location mark: I 124.216
Intern ID: 37775
t , own t0 notice was he Cathedral m the Piazza, a rather handsome building. The surrounding country appeared very stony and barren; from the irregularity and varied outline of the hills and the sea* shore would be beautiful, did it not lack the essential ornament o' About 4 or 5 hrs, distant benico are tie Falls of the Kerka, above Scar,Iona: among the finest in Europe early in the year, but in late summer and autumn almost without water. - V le ,- eSS - of the male peasants a rntri? f consisting

of ton t 1 i 1 ft ull ' ca fr flattened at the wi P th LS 6 ’ 61 « 115 J " cket ornamented with braiding, & c . of various coloarc and sometimes another jacket hung columns remaining. The columns of] tight H aSd ** ^ the peristyle are also granite. Phe style ’ ■' K -- '' 1 nu of tbe temple and of the portico round the piazza is Corinthian, though not by any means in all its purity, being of a late and debased period. On the op posite side of the piazza to the temple of Jupiter stood the temple

tico of the chief entrance to the palace, and behind it are the remains of a circular building, probably the vesti- bulura of the palace. On one side of this piazza a flight of steps leads up to the temple of Jupiter, now the Cathe dral. The steps- 'pass- under an arch, upon which is built the modern tower. The temple remains nearly entire ; It is octagonal, and surrounded by a peri style,. 'which rises to about half the height of the body of the building. Internally it is vaulted with a kind

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Books
Category:
Geography, Travel guides
Year:
1896
Through the Dolomites from Venice to Toblach
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Page 72 of 306
Author: Robertson, Alexander / Alexander Robertson
Place: London
Publisher: Allen
Physical description: XII, 264 S. : Ill.
Language: Englisch
Subject heading: g.Dolomiten;f.Führer
Location mark: I 226.632
Intern ID: 388298
88 THROUGH THE DOLOMITES of the old castle. It has, like most of the Cadore villages, a substantial, well-to-do look. Its houses are large square stone dwellings, with broad overhanging eaves. They are called palazzi (palaces), which term is applied in Italy to any large self-contained building. Roughly speaking, the village is triangular in form, and the space enclosed, which serves as a village market square, is called the Piazza Tiziano, so named after the great painter who was born here

in 1477. As every thing and everybody in the place seems to have a connec tion with Titian, it is well to begin with him in our exami nation of the little town. Looking round the Piazza one sees the name Vecellio everywhere. The chief grocer is a Vecellio, so is the baker, the butcher, and the cobbler. The papers nailed to the Town-Hall door are signed 'Vecellio, Sindaco.' Here is a Tipografia 1'iziano, there an Albergo Tiziano, and yonder a caffè and reading-room, also called Tiziano. The striking

resemblance of the late handsome 'landlord of the albergo to his illustrious forebear struck all who saw him. In the centre of the Piazza is Titian's monument, a large bronze statue, set on a lofty stone pedestal, representing him with brush and palette in hand in the act of painting. Affixed to the pedestal are bronze medallions with the names of his chief works, and the arms of Venice and Cadore. The monument was only erected in 1880, and is the work of his fellow-countryman, Antonio dal Zotto, who

modelled it ; the brothers De Poli, the famous bell-makers of Ceneda, who cast it ; and of Giuseppe Ghedina of Cortina, who designed the pedestal. From the foot of the monu ment can be seen a granite tablet, let into the wall of an old house that abuts on the Piazza del Arsenale (where an Arsenal, supplementary to the Venice one, used to be) at the top of the Sottocastello road, on which are the words, ' Cadore segna agli ospiti questa casa dove naque e crebbe Tiziano ' (Cadore points out to its guests

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Books
Category:
Geography, Travel guides
Year:
1896
Through the Dolomites from Venice to Toblach
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Page 137 of 306
Author: Robertson, Alexander / Alexander Robertson
Place: London
Publisher: Allen
Physical description: XII, 264 S. : Ill.
Language: Englisch
Subject heading: g.Dolomiten;f.Führer
Location mark: I 226.632
Intern ID: 388298
VALLE Dl CADORE 137 in all directions, marks the spot where, up till 1830, stood the church of the Santo Spirito to which the Council of Cadore adjourned to seek Divine guidance in 1420, which resulted in their offering themselves as allies to the ' good Venetians.' The church, unfortunately, was taken down in order to allow room for the present highway. Facing the piazza on the north side stands the old palazzo of Count Piloni, round the curved facade of which runs the road. It was the founder

storeys being tenanted by poor families. Vestiges of its former glory were seen in two old oil por traits hanging in the atrium, and in a room now used as a kitchen, with a good wooden panelled ceiling. Crossing the piazza and following the village as it runs down the steep hill-side, we noticed a small house with a fine balustrade of wrought iron to its balcony. It was a part of the palace of Costantini Lancia. It is an historic house, but contains little to tell of its past splendour, but a few bits

. We had seen a flagstone built into the piazza fountain bearing his name, and now we learned that it was his tombstone. He was buried in the now demolished

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Books
Category:
Geography, Travel guides
Year:
1875
Italian Alps : sketches in the mountains of Ticino, Lombardy, the Trentino, and Venetia
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Page 162 of 425
Author: Freshfield, Douglas William / by Douglas W. Freshfield
Place: London
Publisher: Logmans
Physical description: XVI, 385 S. : Ill., Kt.
Language: Englisch
Subject heading: g.Italienische Alpen;f.Reisebericht ; <br>g.Trentino-Südtirol;f.Reisebericht
Location mark: II 173.701
Intern ID: 206418
140 PIAZZA. world of other most delectable objects.' But be bas not an imaginative mind, and a few days is a sbort time in wbich to develop an intelligent taste for mountain scenery. He is at a loss in tbe Alps from want of familiarity. His feeling towards them may be fairly illustrated by his attitude iu matters of art. He is equally embarrassed by the glorious Tintorettos of the ducal palace. These he can only note down, he cannot appreciate. What he really could understand and admire comes

out naively elsewhere. He saw in a ' painter's shop,' near San Marco, two things which ' I did not a little admire, a picture of a binder quarter of veal —the rarest invention that ever I saw before,' and ' the picture of a Gentlewoman whose eyes were contrived that they moved up and down of themselves, not after a seeming manner but truly and indeed.' The neighbouring village of Olmo produced a car riage. A short drive through an open valley brought us to Piazza, the market-town and centre of the

, having ever before his eyes the nearest large town as a model. Even in the mountains he likes his native place to boast a ' piazza,' and perhaps even a ' Corso,' a name which can be easily stuck on to the first quarter

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Books
Category:
Geography, Travel guides
Year:
1832
Travelling Sketches : in the North of Italy, the Tyrol, and on the Rhine.- (Heath's picturesque annual ; 1832)
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Page 203 of 317
Author: Leitch, Ritchie / Leitch Ritchie
Place: London
Publisher: Longman [u.a.]
Physical description: IV, 256 S. : Ill.
Language: Englisch
Notations: mit 26 Stahlstichen
Subject heading: g.Oberitalien;f.Reisebericht ; <br>g.Tirol;f.Reisebericht
Location mark: II 185.432
Intern ID: 240277
170 TRAVELLING SKETCHES. satisfied if we can convey to the indulgent reader a general idea of places and peculiarities, and pro duce, for his delectation, some refraction, however faint, of the pleasure we ourselves experienced in our journeyings. To do this, as regards Venice, and to blend in the picture we shall present some of its moral as well as physical attributes, we must be allowed to transport him to the Piazza di San Marco, what time the shades of evening begin to steal over the bosom

of the lagoon. If the said reader belongs to the communion of the Kirk of Scotland, let him not enquire for which evening of the week the invitation is given. Let him come forth with a smooth brow and an unsuspecting eye, saying to himself—or singing (to shew the absence of all manner of guilty knowledge)— ' If ignorance is bliss, 'tis folly to be wise.' The Piazza di San Marco is an oblong, rectan gular area, elongated from east to west, of about eight hundred feet in length, by three hundred and

fifty in breadth. As you enter, by the west end, the first coup d'ceil is astounding. You imagine that the whole mass of marble before you is a single building. This effect is produced by the deep and lofty arcade which runs round three sides of the Piazza, and the uniform character of the archi tecture. Presently, however, you discover that each side, although uniform in itself, differs widely from the others. On the south is the Procuratorie Nuove, a range of buildings which formerly served

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