Doge's Palace in Venice


Ducal Palace
 The venue and the history
 A masterpiece of Gothic art, the Doge's Palace in Venice is structured in a grandiose stratification of constructive and ornamental elements: from the ancient foundations to the fourteenth-fifteenth-century structure of the whole, to the conspicuous Renaissance inserts, to the sumptuous mannerist signs.  It consists of three large buildings that have incorporated and unified previous constructions: the wing facing the San Marco Basin (which contains the Sala del Maggior Consiglio) and which is the oldest, rebuilt starting in 1340;  the wing facing the Piazza (formerly the Palazzo di Giustizia) with the Sala dello Scrutinio, whose construction in its present form begins in 1424;  on the opposite side, the Renaissance wing, with the Doge's residence and many government offices, rebuilt between 1483 and 1565. The public entrance to Palazzo Ducale is the Porta del Frumento (so called because it was located next to it  the "Ufficio delle Biade"), which opens under the portico of the fourteenth-century façade facing the San Marco Basin.

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  Accommodation must be booked by 10 April, while travel must end by 30 September at the latest.

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