Fr. 41.90

Visitors to Verona - Lovers, Gentlemen and Adventurers

English · Paperback / Softback

New edition in preparation, currently unavailable

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Zusatztext Visitors to Verona is a rich compendium of travellers' impressions of Verona in the 18th and 19th century. It is lively! amusing and extremely instructive as to the checkered history of the city [...] thus reminding us of how much Verona has endured. [...] Caroline Webb has done a service to the visitor who wants to appreciate more deeply all that Verona means and has meant to its citizens and guests. Informationen zum Autor Caroline Webb graduated in History from the University of London and read Italian and Art History in Cambridge and Verona. She has worked as a historical researcher and teacher and is co-author of The Earl and His Butler in Constantinople: The Secret Diary of an English Servant among the Ottomans (I.B.Tauris! 2008). Historical perspective on travel to Verona between the sixteenth and nineteenth centuries Zusammenfassung Even before the advent of mass tourism, Verona was a popular destination for travellers, including those undertaking the popular 'Grand Tour' across Europe. In this book, Caroline Webb compares the experiences of travellers from the era of Shakespeare to the years following the incorporation of the Veneto into the new kingdom of Italy in 1866. She considers their reasons for visiting Verona as well as their experiences and expectations once they arrived.The majority of English visitors between 1670 and 1760 were young members of the aristocracy, accompanied by tutors, who arrived on their way to or from Rome, as part of a 'Grand Tour' intended to 'finish' their classical education. With the Industrial Revolution in the second half of the eighteenth century, and the resultant increasing wealth of the upper middle classes, the number of visitors to Verona increased although this tourism was derailed once Napoleon invaded Italy in the late 1790s. After 1815 and the allied victory at Waterloo, there was a new flood of visitors previously deprived of the opportunity of continental travel during the Napoleonic wars.As the nineteenth century progressed, especially with the arrival of the railway, an increasing number of visitors appeared from across Europe and even from across the Atlantic, keen to explore the fabled city of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet . In comparing a myriad of varied accounts, this book provides an unrivalled perspective on the history of one of Italy's most seductive cities. Inhaltsverzeichnis Plan of VeronaPreface 1 The aims of travel 2 The practicalities of travel 3 Accommodation and food in the city 4 L’Arena di Verona 5 Travellers’ opinions of the city 6 The city’s civic architecture7 The Veronesi 8 The French occupation 9 The Austrian occupation 10 Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet 11 Scipione Maffei 12 Verona’s many churches 13 San Zeno Maggiore 14 Religion through tourists’ eyes 15 The Scaligeri monuments 16 Piazza Erbe 17 The Giusti gardens 18 Local artists and aristocratic ‘collections’ 19 Music and theatre 20 Matters of health 21 Visitors’ views on local agriculture and industry22 The dress of local people 23 How the English saw the ItaliansPostscript Appendix 1 A history time-line Appendix 2 Biographical notes EndnotesBibliography Index...

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