Piazza Bra

Piazza Bra, often shortened to Bra, is the largest piazza in Verona, Italy, with some claims that it is the largest in the country.[1] The piazza is lined with numerous cafés and restaurants, along with several notable buildings.[1] The Verona Arena, an amphitheatre built nearly 2000 years ago, is now a world-famous music venue with regular operatic and contemporary music performances. Verona's town hall, the Palazzo Barbieri, also looks out across the piazza.

Plan of Piazza Bra
1: Verona Arena
2: Palazzo Barbieri
3: Gran Guardia
The Bra from the Arena

Architecture

A garden within Bra is shaded by cedar and pine trees.[1] It surrounds the fountain of the Alps and a bronze statue of Victor Emmanuel II.[1][2] This monument to the first king of Italy, in which he is sat atop a horse, was inaugurated on 9 January 1883, five years to the day after his death.[3]

There are many significant buildings within and around Bra, with construction taking place over many centuries.

Verona Arena

The Verona Arena in 2008

The building itself was built in the first century AD on a site then beyond the city walls. The ludi (shows and games) staged there were so famous that spectators came from many other places, often far away, to witness them. While it can now host crowds of up to 22,000, the original amphitheatre could seat 30,000 spectators.[4] The arena has been used by many contemporary performers including Pink Floyd,[5] Rod Stewart,[6] Elton John,[7] and Muse. It has also hosted numerous operas,[1] including in 1946 Ponchielli's La Gioconda which saw the debut of Maria Callas.[8]

Gran Guardia

The Gran Guardia

Palazzo della Gran Guardia, was the first building erected on the southern edge of Bra. It was originally designed by Domenico Curtoni as a roof built from the existing wall out to several pillars. Leonardo Donato, 90th Doge of Venice, had requested an area for troops to shelter in poor weather. Work commenced in 1610 but stopped when there was a shortfall in available funds. Nearly 200 years later, in 1808, architect Giuseppe Barbieri was commissioned to design and complete the project but it was a further 45 years before it was finished.[3]

The building is now used as a venue for conferences, meetings, and exhibitions.[9]

Palazzo Barbieri

The Palazzo Barbieri in 2007

Palazzo Barbieri is Verona's town hall. Originally named Palazzo della Gran Guardia Nuova, it was designed by Giuseppe Barbieri and was later named in his honour.[2] Construction began in 1836 and was completed by 1848.[3]

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gollark: I mostly just try and keep software up to date, shove sandboxes on network-facing services, and hope vulnerability-scanning botnets or something don't catch up fast enough.
gollark: Probably high, especially since all of it's written in unsafe C for some reason.
gollark: I like to think I'm okay at Linux administration stuff (not really networking), but it's entirely possible my servers have been compromised or something and I haven't noticed, really.
gollark: But I don't know if that's very practical.

References

  1. Parks, Tim. Verona: Take the pulse in the piazza. The Telegraph. 5 January 2008. Accessed 28 September 2011.
  2. Bonechi, Casa Editrice. Verona. ISBN 88-476-1432-5. pp. 10–16.
  3. Lenotti, Tullio (1954). La Bra (in Italian). Verona: Edizioni di Vita Veronese. pp. 14, 16, 20, 29, 39.
  4. Priante, Giovanni (2006). L'Arena e Verona: 140 anni di storia (The Arena and Verona: 140 years of history) (in Italian). Verona: Athesis. p. 55.
  5. Fitch, Vernon. Pink Floyd Concert Appearances Archived 2009-06-20 at the Wayback Machine. The Pink Floyd Archives. Accessed 28 September 2011.
  6. Vagabond Tour 1991/92. Smiler. Accessed 28 September 2011.
  7. Bodoh, David. Elton John Concerts in 2009 Archived 2011-09-28 at the Wayback Machine. Eltonography.com. Accessed 30 September 2011.
  8. Ardoin, John; Gerald Fitzgerald (1974). Callas: The Art and the Life. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. ISBN 0-03-011486-1.
  9. 2011 (in Italian) Palazzo della Gran Guardia , Mostre a Verona (Exhibitions in Verona). Accessed 30 September 2011.

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