Guides > Europe > Italy

Italy

Europe's kinky over-the-knee boot has it all: popes, painters, polenta, paramours, poets, political puerility and potentates. Its dreamy light and sumptuous landscapes seem made for romance, and its three millennia of history, culture and cuisine seduces just about everyone.

Read More...

ADVERTISEMENT

Things to See in Italy


Leaning Tower of Pisa
Piazza dei Miracoli Pisa at the end of Via Santa Maria from the river

Welcome to the world's greatest architectural cockup. Its creator, Bonanno Pisan, was in trouble three tiers in when the tower began to list badly to the south. Things got worse at the rate of about 1mm a year, but at least it gave Galileo a chance to throw rocks from the bell tower to test his theory of gravity. Today it's 4.1m (13.5ft) off the perpendicular.

Colosseum
Piazza del Colosseo Rome Campitelli

Although its size conjures up the Empire that ruled through intimidation, brutality and down-turned thumbs, the Colosseum has been a little humbled. The Christian-eating lions have been reduced to stray kitty cats (who will eat anything regardless of religious affiliation), and weeds sprout among the 50,000 seats.

Basilica di San Francesco
Piazza di San Francesco Assisi

This basilica saw heavy damage and four deaths during a series of earthquakes in 1997. Years of painstaking restoration - including piecing together frescoes from crumbled bits, some not much larger than a grain of sand - will probably go on until at least 2010.

Grand Canal
starts at Bacino di San Marco Venice

Venice's Grand Canal is the artery along which courses the city's lifeblood. To ply its length time and again, on each occasion making new discoveries, is a pleasure only the most insensitive souls could tire of.

Pompeii
enter through Porta Marina Via Marina Old Pompeii

Victim of the world's most famous volcano disaster, 2.3 million visitors annually make Pompeii's magnificent ruins seem as crowded as the ancient streets must once have been. Ever since Pliny the Younger described the eruption of Vesuvius in AD 79, the city has been the stuff of books, scholarly and frivolous, and a perfect subject for the big screen.

Mt Etna
between Taormina and Catania, Sicily East Sicily

Dominating the landscape in eastern Sicily, Mt Etna (3350m/12730ft) is Europe's largest live volcano and one of the world's most active. Eruptions occur frequently, and visitors should be aware that excursions are at the mercy of volcanic activity. People are no longer allowed to climb to the craters.

Valley of the Temples
archaeological park 1km S of town centre Sicily Agrigento

Via dei Templi runs through the middle of the archaeological park, dividing it into two sections, with the most spectacular temples to the right. The Temple of Hercules is the oldest of the five temples contained within the park, all of which are atmospherically illuminated at night. There is also a museum in the complex which houses a collection of artefacts.

Cenacolo Vinciano
Santa Maria delle Grazie 2 Corso Magenta Milan

One of the world's most famous art images, Leonardo da Vinci's wonderful mural depicting the Last Supper decorates a wall of the Cenacolo Vinciano, the refectory adjoining Chiesa di Santa Maria delle Grazie. Painted between 1495 and 1498, the work captures the moment when Jesus uttered the words 'One of you will betray me'. It has been extensively restored.

Cappella degli Scrovegni
Padua Giardini dell'Arena

Art lovers visit Padua just to see the lively Giotto frescoes in this chapel. These fine examples of the master's art are on the cusp between the two-dimensional art of his contemporaries and the remarkable explosion of new creativity that was still decades away. Booking ahead is necessary, and the admission ticket is also valid for the adjacent museum.

The Uffizi
Piazza degli Uffizi 6 Florence centre

To enter the Uffizi, which qualifies as the world's oldest gallery, is to be thrust head reeling, heart pumping and mouth watering into the core of the Italian Renaissance and the greatest concentration of Florentine and Italian art on the planet.

Associazione Italiana Alberghi per la Gioventù (AIG)
Via Cavour 44 Rome

Ostelli per la gioventù (youth hostels) are run by the Associazione Italiana Alberghi per la Gioventù (AIG), which is affiliated to Hostelling International (HI; www.iyhf.org). A valid HI card is required in all associated youth hostels in Italy. You can get this in your home country or at the youth hostel in Rome.

Cambridge School
Via Rosmini 6 Verona

The Cambridge School is a major employer of English teachers.

Cuendet & Cie Spa
Strada di Strove 17 Monteriggioni Siena

One of the major accommodation companies in Italy with villas in Tuscany, Umbria, the Veneto, Rome, Marche, the Amalfi Coast, Puglia, Sicily and Sardinia.

Australian Embassy
Via Borgogna 2 Milan 3rd flr

National Tourist Office
Via Marghera 2 Rome

Consorzio Cooperative Integrate (COIN)
Via degli Zingari 59

Based in Rome, COIN is the best reference point for disabled travellers. It provides information on Rome (including transport and access) and is happy to share its contacts throughout Italy. It publishes a mulitilingual guide, Roma Accessibile, which lists facilities at museums, shops and theatres. It's available by mail order and from some tourist offices.

Youth Info Centre
Corso Porto Borsari 17 Verona

Finds local employment for travellers.

Associazione Italiana Assistenza Spastici
Via S Barnaba 29 Milan

The Associazione Italiana Assistenza Spastici operates an information service for disabled travellers called the Sportello Vacanze Disabili.

ARCI-GAY & ARCI-Lesbica
Piazza di Porta Saragozza 2 Bologna

National organisations for gay men and lesbians.

US Embassy
Via Vittorio Veneto 119a-121 Rome

MarketPlace



Copyright © 2008 Yahoo! Pty Limited. All rights reserved.
Advertise with Us - Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Help