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Teatro Malibran
The Malibran Theater rises above the ancient site of Marco Polo's residence, Ca 'Milion, which was destroyed by a fire around the end of the sixteenth century.
Teatro Junghans
The Junghans has a triangular stage and a reduced capacity of the audience (150 seats), therefore it lends itself well to particular performances, less suitable for traditional Italian theaters.
Teatro Santi Giovanni e Paolo
The Santi Giovanni e Paolo theater was considered, in the seventeenth century, the most beautiful and comfortable of the Venetian theaters. Built by the Grimani family, it played a crucial role in spreading the Opera in Venice.
Teatro di San Moisè (Minerva)
The theater, built at the behest of the Giustinian family, inaugurated in 1640, near Palazzo Giustinian and the church of San Moisé.
Teatro la Fenice
The theater, commissioned by the noble Venetian society, was inaugurated on May 16, 1792. For the occasion, the drama I giuochi d’Agrigento by Giovanni Paisiello and the ballet Amore e Psiche by Onorato Viganò were staged.
Teatrino di Villa Groggia
Inserted within the public park of the same name, this building has recently been restored and used as a place of entertainment for the citizens, as well as the seat of the District Council of Cannaregio.
Schiavone Andrea
Andrea Meldola or Meldolla, renamed Schiavone because he was born in Dalmatia, had the undisputed merit of inventing a new style of Venetian Renaissance painting that saw many admirers among his colleagues, in particular he was a point of referenc
Church of St. John of Malta (or of the Friulians)
The name of the church was always linked to the votive saint (San Giovanni Battista), however the remaining denomination has varied over the course of history depending on the owners.
The sixteenth-century Fontego dei Tedeschi
The Council of Ten in February 1505 entrusted the task of reconstruction to Giorgio Spavento, proto of the Basilica of San Marco and to Francesco Garzoni, Provveditor al Sal, the specific administrative supervision of the works.
The Fontego dei Tedeschi from the nineteenth century to the present day
In 1806, in the Napoleonic era, the Fontego lost its function as a building dedicated to commercial activities and the property was transferred to the state property.
The Fontego dei Tedeschi in the Gothic period
The complete refurbishment of the building took place in 1341.
The Fontego dei Tedeschi: the thirteenth-century factory
The first Fontego dei Tedeschi was probably built by the Republic between 1222 and 1225 in the area of San Bartolomeo overlooking the Grand Canal.
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