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-   -   What's your favorite church in Venice....excluding St. Mark's? (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/whats-your-favorite-church-in-venice-excluding-st-marks-678894/)

travelfan1 Feb 11th, 2007 02:42 PM

What's your favorite church in Venice....excluding St. Mark's?
 
DH reluctantly agreeing to Venice...I know, but we won't go there. ;) Anyway, he loves wandering through churches so I would like to know what your favorites are. Thanks!

milliebest Feb 11th, 2007 02:48 PM

We went to a Mass on the island of San Maria Maggiore. The monks were so friendly. They even invited us to coffee after Mass. It was beautiful.

Aramis Feb 11th, 2007 02:48 PM

The Church that is Venice

RufusTFirefly Feb 11th, 2007 02:59 PM

And many of the churches in Venice contain some of Italy's greatest works of art--viewable for free or a very low fee.

Viajero2 Feb 11th, 2007 03:33 PM

The one church I am making a beeline for the next time in Venice is the Church of Angelo Raffaele in Campo Angelo Raffaele (Dorsoduro). This is the church in a book I loved, "Miss Garnet's Angel". This book, based in Venice, was a sleeper hit in England and then came over to the US. It is the story of a retired teacher who decides to spend six months in Venice and befriends a couple of twins restoring this church. The descriptions of Venice are so unique. This church contains a number of paintings of the Guardi brothers, depicting the story of the Angel Tobias, which plays a big part in the book. Have fun!! By the way the Angel Raphael is associated so much with Venice because it is believed that the Black Death (the plague) came from the East to Europe via Venice; Raphael is the anfgel associated with healing.

DejaVu Feb 11th, 2007 03:52 PM

Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari. Titian's Assumption of the Virgin (over the main altar) will take your breath away. Go in the morning on a sunny day to get the full effect of light streaming through the apse windows around the painting. Sigh.

Dog_Mother Feb 11th, 2007 04:04 PM

I haven't been to all that many churches in Venice, but we really love Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari, too. We would not think of going to Venice without going back to see the wonders of it.

annw Feb 11th, 2007 05:31 PM

San Maria Maggiore, San Zacharia...there are so many wonderful churches! We've been in at least 20. I think there are about 125 or more in Venice.

Holly_uncasdewar Feb 11th, 2007 07:37 PM

I agree with La Salute, and also the Scalzi (don't know if that's the proper name of it) next to the train station.

LoveItaly Feb 11th, 2007 09:02 PM

Hi Holly, I immediately thought of the church next to the train station also.
The complete name of it is Santa Maria di Nazareth degli Scalzi. I double checked on my map. For me it is a very special church.

franco Feb 12th, 2007 04:54 PM

Santa Maria dei Miracoli, S. Giovanni Decollato, S. Salvatore, S. Maria Formosa, S. Sebastiano... if I were to choose only one single church, it would be S. Maria dei Miracoli.

Btw, nobody alive has attended mass at Santa Maria Maggiore in Venice, nor is it on any island. S. Maria Maggiore has been closed down in the 19th century (maybe even by the Napoleonic occupants, I don't recall exactly) and is today part of the prison of Venice, but not as the prison chapel - it's some kind of storage room. Did you perhaps want to say S. Giorgio Maggiore?

Traviata Feb 12th, 2007 06:26 PM

travelfan,

I answered a similar question several months ago by saying:
Santa Maria dei Miracoli because this tiny chapel buried in the back streets of Venice really captivated me with its beauty, especially the ceiling, which is a gilded barrel vault, and beautifully decorated..it is in some ways very simple, just a single middle aisle, but there is a hush and an intimacy that is wonderful...it is like a little jewel box..


baby2 Feb 12th, 2007 06:47 PM

bookmarking

annw Feb 12th, 2007 07:31 PM

S. Giorgio Maggiore

Yes Franco thank you!

travelfan1 Feb 13th, 2007 03:10 AM

Thank you all for your input...I will have a list/directions ready for DH when we arrive. And I know he'll just have to peek in any we pass along the way! :D

VeeBee Feb 13th, 2007 03:38 AM

can i tag on with a question - What is the best place to attend Sunday morning mass in Venice (we're staying in Dorsoduro)?? Is there Mass on Sun morning at St Mark's open to public?
Thanks!

wanderful Feb 13th, 2007 04:50 AM

I highly recommend the lovely and off-the-beaten-track Church of the Madonna dell’Orto, in the Cannaregio district: You’ll find several major paintings by Tintoretto. The painter’s ashes, along with those of his son and daughter, are buried in a chapel on the right of the apse.

missypie Feb 13th, 2007 05:57 AM

Both Titian and Monteverde are interred within Iglesia de Santa María Gloriosa dei Frari, if that interests you.

Lorac1127 Feb 13th, 2007 06:17 AM

We came across the church of Santi Giovanni e Paolo in the Cannaregio by accident one day and found it to be a truly amazing church where many of the Doges are burried.


franco Feb 13th, 2007 06:18 AM

Sorry, but while SS. Giovanni e Paolo (better known by its Venetian dialect name Zanipolo) is located on the border with Cannaregio, it's actually in Castello.

jjkbrook Feb 13th, 2007 10:22 AM

There are some incredible churches in Venice - unfortunately, too many of them were "modernized" in the renaissance and many dont have much religious life in them any more because of the reduced number of venetians. lot of good reccs above - we particularly like S. Sebastiano in Dorsoduro, with its incredible veroneses - madonna del orto in canneregio with its tintorettos, the carmine church (dorsoduro also and San Francesco della Vigna (in a backwater way out in Castello toward the Fondamenta Nuove, has a nice cloister. There's another interesting church farther out in Canneregio with a nun's gallery. Many of these are still active parish churches which gives them a different quality than, say the Frari or Miracoli. Oh, and the Gesuiti nr Fondamenta Nuova (not the church with the similar name on the Zattere) with its walls carved to look like curtains. The churches that provide the great views from San Marco (San Giorgio, the Salute, Redentore, etc. are also really fine to visit.

HappyTrvlr Feb 13th, 2007 10:38 AM

Madonna all Orta (sp?) on the northshore of Cannaregio.

missypie Feb 13th, 2007 11:06 AM

The cool thing about SS. Giovanni e Paolo is that courtyard/area around the church appears to be a neighborhood gathering spot, so you are likely to see kids with scooters, hoola hoops, etc. and their moms on benches watching them. It's nice to see even a tiny slice of "real life" in Venice.

krix Feb 13th, 2007 02:15 PM

VeeBee:

I won't say that St Mark's is "the best" place to celebrate mass (it's all in the eye of the beholder) but I prefer going there. I believe they hold it on Sundays on the hour from 7AM to Noon. Enter from the side door facing the Piazzetta dei Leoni (facing the front of the Basilica it's to the left.)


artstuff Feb 13th, 2007 02:51 PM

San Barnaba Church - just around the corner from the Ca Rezzonica vaporetto stop. They used the outside for images in Indiana Jones & the Last Crusade. It was the library where Indy found out that "X marks the spot" (the inside library shots were filmed in a studio). I don't know if the church is open to the public. It was closed when we were there. I can't say it's my favorite church, but no one else mentioned it, so I thought I would throw it in there.

HOLLY & LOVEITALY - My husband and I have very fond memories of the church near the train station, although we never knew the name. It was Sunday morning and we had 15-20 minutes to spare to catch a train. We heard singing coming from the church and decided to check it out. It was a very moving experience for both of us.

Enjoy your time in Venice. Peace, Robyn :)>-

franco Feb 13th, 2007 05:56 PM

S. Barnaba is open on workday mornings, till noon. It's - Indiana Jones apart, of course - less than memorable, though, as a piece of architecture.

The reference to "Gesuiti" on Zattere brings another amazing little church to my mind: S. Maria della Visitazione aka S. Girolamo dei Gesuati - a virtually unknown little jewel, though it's standing smack on busy Zattere, to the left of the big (and frankly: ugly) baroque church of Gesuati aka S. Maria del Rosario that seems to get all the attention. The nomenclature is really, really confusing here - on Zattere, it's the Gesuati, NOT Gesuiti (they're in Cannaregio, as mentioned above). The Gesuati were another religious order that had already been liquidated when the (nowadays much more famous) Gesuiti, the Jesuits, were founded. The original church of the Gesuati was S. Girolamo, later rebaptized S. Maria della Visitazione - a forlorn example of purest Tuscan/Umbrian early Renaissance in the middle of Venice, unparalleled anywhere in this region of Italy. THIS was originally the church whose name used to be shortened to "the Gesuati" in Venice. When the baroque monster beside was built, it was named S. Maria del Rosario, but the popular name was S. Maria ai Gesuati (i.e. near the Gesuati). And later again, the short name "Gesuati" was transferred to the big church, and the small one seems to be forgotten even by the Venetians, who get on and off the vaporetto right in front of it every day, Zattere being one of the main stops...

franco Feb 14th, 2007 04:32 AM

Btw, pardon the spelling error: must read Gesuitti, not Gesuiti (BUT Gesuati!).

Traviata Feb 14th, 2007 04:59 AM


Hi franco,

"amazing little church" is like a magnet to me. I will find Rosario and look to the left....any information on open hours???

franco Feb 14th, 2007 06:06 AM

Hi Traviata,

I've always found it open during normal Italian church hours, and no place in Venice is easier to find: just get out of the vaporetto at the Zattere stop, and there they are, the baroque church to the right, the Renaissance jewel to the left, immediately in front of you, directly on Zattere (the quai along Canale della Giudecca, I suppose you know).

Traviata Feb 14th, 2007 06:15 AM


Thank you franco....again!!

I will find it and I know it will be special.

linawood Feb 14th, 2007 02:11 PM

bookmarking


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