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  2. Venetian Gothic architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venetian_Gothic_architecture

    The main city was already very largely built up, with buildings tightly packed in the centre; this is shown clearly by Jacopo de' Barbari's huge woodcut View of Venice with an elevated view of the city in 1500. Because buildings were tightly packed, Venice was even more prone than other Italian city centres to fires, creating the need for many ...

  3. View of Venice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/View_of_Venice

    View of Venice, first state, 1500, Minneapolis Institute of Art. View of Venice, also known as the de' Barbari Map, is a monumental woodcut print showing a bird's-eye view of the city of Venice from the southwest. It bears the title and date "VENETIE MD" ("Venice 1500").

  4. Venetian Lagoon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venetian_Lagoon

    The most extreme are the spring tides known as the acqua alta (Italian for "high water"), which regularly flood much of Venice. The nearby Marano-Grado Lagoon, with a surface area of around 160 square kilometres (62 square miles), is the northernmost lagoon in the Adriatic Sea and is sometimes called the "twin sister of the Venice lagoon".

  5. Palazzo Contarini del Bovolo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palazzo_Contarini_del_Bovolo

    View of the famous staircase. The Palazzo Contarini del Bovolo (also called the Palazzo Contarini Minelli dal Bovolo) is a small palazzo in Venice, Italy, best known for its external multi-arch spiral staircase known as the Scala Contarini del Bovolo (literally, "of the snail").

  6. Acqua alta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acqua_alta

    In Friends in High Places (2000), book 9, the residence of a bureaucrat who died mysteriously has a "high step the residents no doubt hoped would raise their front hall about the level of acqua alta", and inside, "There was a small entrance, little more than a metre wide, up from which rose two steps, further evidence of the Venetians' eternal ...

  7. Venetian Renaissance architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venetian_Renaissance...

    The main city was already very largely built up, with buildings tightly packed in the centre; this is shown clearly by Jacopo de' Barbari's huge woodcut View of Venice with an elevated view of the city in 1500. [13] Most of the grander Renaissance buildings were replacements, which had to fit in to the existing site boundaries.