Tag Archives: Venice

Campanile of Pisa, Florence and Venice

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One of the unique features of Italy are the free-standing towers called campanile. The Italian word campana means bell. I wonder how may tourists appreciate that the famous towers are always bell towers associated to churches or monasteries? What is unique about campanile in Italy is that they are built as works of art and architecture.

Tower of Pisa is the Campanile of the Basilica
Tower of Pisa is the Campanile of the Basilica

The Leaning Tower of Pisa is the campanile of the Cathedral of Pisa. The tower built in 1178 was already leaning due to the weight of marble on the unstable soil. But the soft soil also protected the tower from being toppled by four major earthquakes. Recent projects have decreased the lean from 5.5% to 4%.

The tower may look like classical architecture but it is not. The campanile was built in the Middle Ages using the popular Romanesque style, which was based on Roman classical architecture. The Leaning Tower is also famous for Galileo dropping two cannonballs with different weights to prove that mass does not affect the speed of descent.

We are fortunate that the Leaning Tower still exists. During World War II, a US Army Sargent refused to order an artillary barrage against the tower where Germans were firing.

The Florence Campanile

Giotto's Campanile of Duomo, Florence
Giotto’s Campanile of Duomo, Florence

The Duomo is the name of the Cathedral of Florence, the first dome raised since Ancient Rome. Even though this building was started in the Middle Ages, it is considered the birth of Renaissance architecture.

The Duomo Campanile (1334) was built by one of the most famous medieval painters, Giotto. The 84.7 m. (277.9 ft) tall tower is in Gothic style. However, instead of an austere design, Giotto incorporated white, green and orange-red marble inlay to match the style of the Duomo.

The famous tower near Basilica San Marco (1174) in Venezia is a campanile. It was frequently damaged by lightning and an earthquake in 1511. It totally collapsed in 1902 and was rebuilt. The 98 m. (323 ft) brick tower is on an unstable, waterlogged base and is under repair right now.

The Fall of Rome led to the Rise of Venice. Venice was the major European power other than Constantinople during the Middle Ages until the Renaissance. Venezia ruled the sea, controlled all trade between the Silk Routes and Western Europe, ruled the Adriatic as well as the Greek Islands in the Mediterranean.

The tower was copied in the Venetian colonies of Slovenia and Croatia. In fact, the tower has been copied by many countries on both sides of The Pond.

Liassidi Palace & San Giorgio dei Greci Campanile, Venice
Liassidi Palace & San Giorgio dei Greci Campanile, Venice

We never realized that Venice has its own leaning tower, the Campanile of San Giorgio dei Greci.

It is amazing how many famous painters were multi-talented artists, who also worked as architects, sculptors and even scientists. Artists were like rock stars and were often known, even today, by their first name alone. For instance, do you know the last names of Michaelangelo, Rafaello, Giotto, Galileo and Leonardo?

Glendalough Bell Tower, Ireland
Glendalough Bell Tower, Ireland

The bell tower tradition started around 400 AD in Italy and around the 9th century the idea spread to Ireland, whose towers are always round.

Many Round Towers are still standing because their round shape is gale-resistant and the section of the tower underneath the high up doorway is packed with soil and stones. The one at Glorious Glendalough is 30.5 m tall.

A more recent one was built in 1935 for the Church of the Four Masters in Donegal.

The following posts provide more details about Rome, Florence and Venice:

These posts answers questions such as:

  • When should I go?
  • What is the best season for travel?
  • Where should I go?
  • Can I see everything in a week?
  • How much time do I need?
  • Should I pay in Euros or my own currency? 
  • How safe is it?