Venice - translation to spanish
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Venice - translation to spanish

CAPITAL CITY OF VENETO, ITALY
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  • [[Ca' Foscari University of Venice]]
  • [[Cruise ship]]s access the [[port of Venice]] through the [[Giudecca Canal]].
  • [[Cruise ship]]s at the passenger terminal in the [[Port of Venice]] (''Venezia Terminal Passeggeri'')
  • archive-date=20 September 2014}}</ref>
  • ''[[Acqua alta]]'' ("high water") in Venice, 2008
  • [[Marco Polo International Airport]] (''Aeroporto di Venezia [[Marco Polo]]'')
  • [[Tomaso Albinoni]]
  • Naval Historical Museum]].
  • Monument to [[Bartolomeo Colleoni]] (1400–1475), captain-general of the [[Republic of Venice]] from 1455 to 1475
  • [[Claudio Monteverdi]], ca. 1630
  • 50x50px
  • The [[Baroque]] [[Ca' Rezzonico]]
  • ''The Morning Chocolate'', by [[Pietro Longhi]]. Hot chocolate was a fashionable drink in Venice during the 1770s and 1780s.
  • The [[Ca' d'Oro]]
  • An 18th-century view of Venice by Venetian artist [[Canaletto]]
  • Cleaning of canals in the late 1990s
  • Cruise ship and gondolas in the Bacino San Marco
  • Dorina Vaccaroni, 1986
  • The [[Fra Mauro Map]] of the world. The map was made around 1450 and depicts [[Asia]], [[Africa]] and [[Europe]].
  • View of [[San Marco basin]] in 1697
  • [[Giudecca Canal]]. View from [[St Mark's Campanile]].
  • Gondoliers on the Grand Canal
  • [[Gondola]]s share the waterway with other types of craft (including the vaporetti).
  • Venice Guggenheim Museum]]
  • [[Palazzo Dandolo]]
  • [[La Fenice]] opera house in the city
  • [[Murano glass]] [[chandelier]] [[Ca'&nbsp;Rezzonico]]
  • ''[[The Travels of Marco Polo]]''
  • 240px
  • P & O]] steamer, circa 1870
  • Grand Canal]].
  • BEIC]].
  • Venetian School]].
  • columns]] of the ''[[Lion of Venice]]'' and St. Theodore in the centre
  • The beach of [[Lido di Venezia]]
  • The [[Republic of Venice]] and its colonial empire ''[[Stato da Màr]]''
  • [[Rialto Bridge]]
  • Luxury shops and boutiques along the [[Rialto Bridge]]
  • San Giorgio Maggiore Island]] from St Mark's Campanile
  • [[St Mark's Basilica]] houses the relics of [[St Mark the Evangelist]].
  • [[Piazza San Marco]] in Venice, with [[St Mark's Campanile]]
  • Sebastian Cabot]] by Hans Holbein, 1824
  • ''Sestieri''
  • Venice viewed from the [[International Space Station]]
  • [[Tintoretto]], self portrait, 1588
  • Like Murano, Burano, is also a tourist destination, usually reached via vaporetto.
  • Vaporetti on the Grand Canal
  • A [[Venetian glass]] [[goblet]]
  • The [[Doge's Palace]], the former residence of the [[Doge]] of Venice
  • Venice Santa Lucia station]]
  • Terra]]. The picture is oriented with North at the top.
  • Aerial view of Venice including the ''[[Ponte della Libertà]]'' bridge to the mainland
  • The [[Santa Maria della Salute]]
  • [[Bridge of Sighs]], one of the most visited sites in the city

Venice         
Venecia
Venice         
= Venecia
Ex: These official records demonstrate the impact of ducal ceremony on architectural design in Venice.
the Merchant of Venice         
  • Sir [[Herbert Beerbohm Tree]] as Shylock, painted by [[Charles Buchel]] (1895–1935)
  • The playbill from a 1741 production at the Theatre Royal of Drury Lane
  • A print of [[Edmund Kean]] as Shylock in an early 19th-century performance
  • Gilbert's ''[[Shylock]] After the Trial'', an illustration to ''The Merchant of Venice''
  • The title page from a 1565 printing of Giovanni Fiorentino's 14th-century tale ''Il Pecorone''
  • ''Shylock and Jessica'' (1876) by [[Maurycy Gottlieb]]
  • ''Shylock and Portia'' (1835) by [[Thomas Sully]]
  • The first page of ''The Merchant of Venice'', printed in the Second Folio of 1632
  • A depiction of Jessica, from ''The Graphic Gallery of Shakespeare's Heroines''
PLAY BY SHAKESPEARE SET IN THE REPUBLIC OF VENICE
Merchant of Venice; A Merchant of Venice; Merchant Of Venice; The Merchant Of Venice; Gratiano; Merchant of venice; TMOV; Lancelot Gobbo; Tubal (character); The merchant of vencie; Prince of Arragon; Old Gobbo; The Jew of Venice; El Mercader de Venecia; The most excellent Historie of the Merchant of Venice; The comicall Historie of the Merchant of Venice; The moſt excellent Hiſtorie of the Merchant of Venice; Lorenzo (Merchant of Venice); Nerissa (Merchant of Venice); The merchant of Venice; Themes in The Merchant of Venice
El Comerciante de Venecia (comedia famosa de Shakespeare)

Definition

vaporetto
[?vap?'r?t??]
¦ noun (plural vaporetti -ti or vaporettos) (in Venice) a canal boat used for public transport.
Origin
Ital., dimin. of vapore 'steam', from L. vapor.

Wikipedia

Venice

Venice ( VEH-niss; Italian: Venezia [veˈnɛttsja] (listen); Venetian: Venesia or Venexia [veˈnɛsja]) is a city in northeastern Italy and the capital of the Veneto region. It is built on a group of 118 small islands that are separated by canals and linked by over 400 bridges. The islands are in the shallow Venetian Lagoon, an enclosed bay lying between the mouths of the Po and the Piave rivers (more exactly between the Brenta and the Sile). In 2020, around 258,685 people resided in greater Venice or the Comune di Venezia, of whom around 55,000 live in the historical island city of Venice (centro storico) and the rest on the mainland (terraferma). Together with the cities of Padua and Treviso, Venice is included in the Padua-Treviso-Venice Metropolitan Area (PATREVE), which is considered a statistical metropolitan area, with a total population of 2.6 million.

The name is derived from the ancient Veneti people who inhabited the region by the 10th century BC. The city was historically the capital of the Republic of Venice for over a millennium, from 697 to 1797. It was a major financial and maritime power during the Middle Ages and Renaissance, and a staging area for the Crusades and the Battle of Lepanto, as well as an important centre of commerce—especially silk, grain, and spice, and of art from the 13th century to the end of the 17th. The city-state of Venice is considered to have been the first real international financial centre, emerging in the 9th century and reaching its greatest prominence in the 14th century. This made Venice a wealthy city throughout most of its history. For centuries Venice possessed numerous territories along the Adriatic Sea and within the Italian peninsula, leaving a significant impact on the architecture and culture that can still be seen today. The sovereignty of Venice came to an end in 1797, at the hands of Napoleon. Subsequently, in 1866, the city became part of the Kingdom of Italy.

Venice has been known as "La Dominante", "La Serenissima", "Queen of the Adriatic", "City of Water", "City of Masks", "City of Bridges", "The Floating City", and "City of Canals". The lagoon and the historic parts of the city within the lagoon were inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1987, covering an area of 70,176.4 hectares (173,410 acres). In view of the fact that Venice and its lagoon are under constant threat in terms of their ecology and the safeguarding of the cultural heritage, Venice's UNESCO listing has been under constant examination by UNESCO. Parts of Venice are renowned for the beauty of their settings, their architecture, and artwork. Venice is known for several important artistic movements—especially during the Renaissance period—and has played an important role in the history of instrumental and operatic music, and is the birthplace of Baroque composers Tomaso Albinoni and Antonio Vivaldi.

In the 21st century, Venice remains a very popular tourist destination, a major cultural centre, and has been ranked many times the most beautiful city in the world. The city faces challenges including an excessive number of tourists in the centro storico as well as problems caused by pollution, tide peaks and cruise ships sailing too close to buildings. It has been described by The Times as one of Europe's most romantic cities and by The New York Times as "undoubtedly the most beautiful city built by man".

Examples of use of Venice
1. The Venice daily "The New Venice and Mestre" featured a phot...
2. Venice persists as the watering hole for the wandering art herd only because, well, it‘s Venice.
3. Venice, by contrast, is gradually being submerged.
4. "Even with the Mose project there will be flooding in Venice," comments Professor Paolo Pirazzoli, a prominent geographer born in Venice.
5. You can collect one from Choggia, a little village known as ‘small Venice‘, moor in Venice itself and spend nights docked on islands such as Murano or Burano.