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The Palazzo Barbarigo Minotto (also called Palazzo Minotto Barbarigo) is a 15th-century palace on the Grand Canal in Venice, northern Italy, next to the much larger Palazzo Corner. [1] Built in the Venetian Gothic style, it was originally two palaces, Palazzo Barbarigo and Palazzo Minotto, later joined together.
The palaces in Venice are the following: Royal Palace (Venice) Ca' da Mosto; Ca' d'Oro; Ca' Farsetti; Ca' Loredan; Ca' Pesaro; Ca' Rezzonico; Ca' Vendramin Calergi; Ca' Zenobio degli Armeni; Palazzo Adoldo; Palazzo Ariani; Palazzo Barbarigo; Palazzo Barbarigo Nani Mocenigo; Palazzi Barbaro; Palazzo Barbaro Wolkoff; Palazzo Bernardo Nani ...
The facade on the Canal Grande. The Lion of St Mark on the facade. Palazzo dei Dieci Savi is a palace on the Canal Grande, Venice, northern Italy.It is included in the sestiere (quarter) of San Polo and is not far from the Rialto Bridge, on the opposite side from the Palazzo dei Camerlenghi.
Palazzo Corner. Palazzo Corner della Ca' Granda, also called Ca' Corner della Ca' Granda or simply Palazzo Corner or Palazzo Cornaro, is a Renaissance-style palace located between the Casina delle Rose and the Rio di San Maurizio (Venice), across the Grand Canal from the Palazzo Venier dei Leoni (Peggy Guggenheim Collection), in the city of Venice, Italy.
Palazzo Labia is a baroque palace in Venice, Italy. Built in the 17th–18th century, it is one of the last great palazzi of Venice. Little known outside of Italy, it is most notable for the remarkable frescoed ballroom painted 1746–47 by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo, with decorative works in trompe-l'œil by Gerolamo Mengozzi-Colonna.
Palazzo Correr Contarini Zorzi is a Renaissance palace in Venice, Italy, overlooking the Grand Canal and locating in the Cannaregio district between Palazzo Querini Papozze and Palazzo Gritti. The palazzo is also known as Ca' dei Cuori, a family whose wrought iron coats of arms is present on the façade. [1]
Palazzo Mocenigo on the Grand Canal in Venice. The Palazzo Mocenigo detto "il Nero" is a palazzo on the Grand Canal in Venice, Italy. Other Palazzi Mocenigo on each side include the Palazzo Mocenigo Casa Nuova and the Palazzo Mocenigo Casa Vecchia. The palazzo is located between the Rialto Bridge and St Mark's Square. [1]
The palace was built by the Flangini family, a Greek Cypriot family in Venice. One of their members, Thomas Flanginis , in 1626 was the patron for the Flanginian school , a Greek school in Venice. The last of the family to own the palace was the cardinal Luigi or Ludovico Flangini (died 1804). [ 1 ]