Guide to Venice: Castello district

 
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Venice’s six Sestieri: Castello
 

Castello is Venice's largest sestiere, extending from the Rialto to Sant'Elena at eastern trip of the city. Its name is believed to derive from a fortress on the island of San Pietro, one of the earliest inhabited sites in the lagoon. A sestiere of two very different halves, Castello's grander northern and western area, around Santi Giovanni e Paolo and San Zaccaria, was closely linked with the centres of San Marco Dorsoduro Castello San Polo Santa Croce Cannaregio

power, while the districts around the Arsenale to the east were home to Venice's most important industries. This was one of the earliest parts of Venice to be sttled (5th to 6th centuries).

Northern and western Castello
Campo Santi Giovanni e Paolo - VeniceThe Bridge of Sighs marks the border between the sestieri of San marco and Castello, so the quaint Museo Diocesano di Arte Sacra and stately San Zaccaria although closely associated with San marco, actually belong to Castello. But the true heart of northern adn western Castello lies inward from here: campo Santa Maria Formosa ('Shapely St Mary'), a large, bustling, irregular-shaped square on the road to just about everywhere. It has a fine church, a small market,a couple of bars and an undertaker's. Nearby is the quintessentially Venetian museum-cum-library of the Querini-Stampalia. Constantly buzzing with both Venetians and tourists, the square is surrounded by palazzi that range in style from the very grand to the very homely.It is, in fact, Castello in miniature.
Arsenale, Venice For grandeur, head north-east from here towards campo Santi Giovanni e Paolo. This square is second only to Piazza San Marco in monumental magnificence.

Not to be missed
Monument to Bartolomeo Colleoni
Museo Querini-Stampalia
Museo Diocesano di Arte Sacra
San Francesco della Vigna
Santa Maria Formosa
Santi Giovanni e Paolo (San Zanipolo)
San Zaccaria
Scuola Grande di San Marco

Southern and eastern Castello
If Venice's fair-tale charm is getting too much, head for eastern Castello. The low-rise, close-clustered buildings of this working-class area housed the employees of the Arsenale (Venice's Docklands) most of which now lies poignantly derelict.
Eastern Castello had its foreing communities, as local churches testify. There's San Giorgio dei Greci, with its adjoining museum of icons, and Scuola di San Giorgio degli Schiavoni, with its captivating cycle of paintings by Vittorio Carpaccio. Indeed, the great promenade along the lagoon (the Riva degli Schiavoni) was named after the same community.
Inland from the Riva is the quaint Gothic church of San Giovanni in Bragora and, further back in the warren of streets, the curch of Sant'Antonin.
Back on the Riva degli Schiavoni is the church of La Pietà, where Vivaldi was choir master; it is now frequently used for concerts.

Paola - Guide editor

Campo della Tana. In this Campo there was the entrance to extensive premises belonging to the Arsenale, in which rope was made. The hemp for the robes came from the Russian city of Tanai, from which the name 'Tana' is taken.
Ponte dell'Arsenale or Ponte del Paradiso. This probably relates to Dante's visit to the Arsenal. Next door, we in fact find 'ponte dell'Inferno' and 'ponte del Purgatorio', which refer to three books of the Divine Comedy ('Inferno', 'Purgatorio' and 'Paradiso').
Fondamenta dei Felzi. It was here that 'felzi' or cabins of the gondolas were made.
Calle de la Cavallerizza. "Cavallerizza dei Nobili" was the name of stable that existed from the seventeenth century until the end of the Venetian Republic.
 
 
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