Why is verona famous




















Once in Venice, take a Vaporetto ride, visit the market to see and, to smell! It is pure magic. Just 30 minutes by car is the Valpolicella wine region making it a natural for our things to do in Verona list. I mean, you gotta drink, right!? My solo trip to Italy in included a trip to Verona just to explore the wines of the Valpolicella — specifically Amarone. Romeo and Juliet Guide offers Valpolicella wine tours and we visited a producer as part of our day with them. A driver picked us up in Verona, then we headed into the hillside with stops at some historical winemaking locations.

Valpolicella Wineries — full day tour by Romeo and Juliet Guide check the Romeo and Juliet site for other wine tour options. Why is Verona so famous?

All rights belongs to Valerie Quintanilla. Here are a few ideas to get you started! Start with a Verona city tour The city of Verona dates back to 4th and 3rd century B.

Take walks Sigh. Aperitivo and the Arena Seriously, that view! Just add wine. Answer letters to Juliet Letters to Juliet is really a thing to do in Verona. Taste wine at the Bottega del Vino Of course, wine tasting is among our favorite things to do in Verona. Search for:. Filter by Category News 62 Wine Contact us. This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish.

Hi there, I am looking to move from London to Verona. Could you give me some areas in and around Verona that would be worth considering in terms of living? Hi, We arrive in Venice and are going to Florence and Verona. We are in Italy for 12 days not counting air travel. My wife wants a leisure trip. What do you think.

Would we be able to see all the sights in these cities or would this schedule be to hectic. Ciao Brian, we think 12 days should be enough to visit all the cities on your list as you usually only need a day or two to visit Verona, Bologna and Milan. Let us know if you have any questions!

Hi i will bi in venice for 3 days and would wish and go to see verona for a whole day cause its beaifull by seeing your sight.

Could you please tell me if there is day trips excursions to verona and which train is best to catch from venice and which station should i stop in verona to see most places. Venice and Florence are great, but Montova and Verona should be experienced. The Verona Marathon was run today, so the city is packed with young people. So many sights to see, but the best part is mixing with the friendly people.

Hi Guys. My sister and I will be visiting Italy next year as part of our tour of Europe. We are travelling by car and will be staying overnight in Ravenna. Would it be worthwhile to visit Verona on our way to Venice? We would only have about 2 or 3 hours to stop and visit. If we did, where would be the best place to leave the car? Planning on going to Verona from Venice and then onto Lago Garda…. First: at the central train station in Verona, is there a place to leave my luggage for the day?

Second: I believe there is a bus from Verona to Lago di Garda…. If so, do you know from where it departs? Or, you can take the train! It takes from 20 to 40 minutes. Have a great trip! Looking for itinerary and cost for one day tour in Verona for 4 adults. Thank you. Unfortunately, we are not currently offering any services in Verona at this time. However, we have many day tours here for you during your stay in Venice.

Otherwise, hit the soothing hot springs in the pretty village of Sirmione, or hike gently rolling vineyards hemming in Bardolino. Top tip: boats sail from Sirmione to Riva del Garda on the northern shore of the lake. Rome might be the Italian superstar of Roman ruins, but Verona gives the capital a run for its money with its littering of pink-hued Roman relics built between the third century BCE and first century CE.

Admire remnants of Porta Leoni and Porta Borsari — gates in the defensive walls originally ensnaring two sides of the riverside city — and tour the Arena di Verona.

Complete the story at the Museo Archeologico, squirrelled away in a second Roman theatre, just north of the city centre. A Medieval fortress built in the 14th century, bombed during World War II and famously reinvented by modern architect Carlo Scarpa in the s is the majestic setting for the fine arts museum in Verona.

As much a lesson in modern museography as in gothic, Renaissance and 16th- to 18th-century Italian art, the museum juxtaposes raw concrete and steel with masterpieces by Giovanni Bellini, Andrea Mantegna, Tintoretto, Rubens and others. History aficionados, get ready to swoon over the unexpected beauty of an open-air amphitheatre — a superbly preserved, tiered arena hewn in local pink limestone from Valpolicella in 30CE.

In its Roman heyday, 30,odd wildly excited spectators watched gladiator games at the Verona Arena. In , the arena will host the closing ceremony of the Milano-Cortina Winter Olympics. As every opera connoisseur will tell you, this is one of the finest places in the world to enjoy opera. Find the perfect place for your trip to Verona by booking one of the best hotels in the city now through Culture Trip. After a long day of sightseeing, spend an evening dining at one of the best restaurants in Verona.

Extend your Italian adventure by visiting not-so-far-away Venice. Book a beautiful boutique hotel and explore the best of what the floating city has to offer. In the courtyard you can admire the magnificent bronze statue of Juliet by Nereo Costantini that became the symbol of Verona.

After Juliet's house you should visit her beloved's home, located in a secluded alley in Verona's historic center, not far from the Scaliger Tombs. This rustic brick castle - said to have been that of Romeo - belonged to the Montecchi family; it features the typical Ghibelline swallowtail battlements.

Currently the building is privately owned, but can still be seen from the outside. This characteristic architecture is testament to the struggles between the Guelphs and Ghibellines, and the need for the inhabitants of the city center to build towers and private fortifications in their defense. These defenses were reinforcements to the already-existing barriers of the River Adige and the walls surrounding Verona.

Our tour of the legendary sites as narrated by Shakespeare will end at the famous Scaliger Tombs, a masterpiece of the Italian Gothic. The second part of our tour follows the Medieval walls that surround the city of Verona, begun during the Middle Ages under the bloody tyranny of Ezzelino Romano. Along the walls you can see the gates of Bra, the city's main entrance at the time that our star-crossed lovers would have lived.

Alongside these ancient gates is a bronze bust of William Shakespeare, and a plaque citing Romeo's famous pre-exile speech.

The last stop of this romantic tour in the city of Romeo and Juliet is the fairer lover's tomb, identified as being inside the Monastery of San Francesco in Corso.



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