Via: Difference between revisions
		
		
		
		Jump to navigation
		Jump to search
		
| No edit summary | No edit summary | ||
| Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
| [[File:Via_g.jpg|right|thumb|Via Giuseppe Garibaldi<ref>http://lonelyplanetimages.wordpress.com/2011/09/13/photographing-sunrise-and-sunset/</ref>|400px]] | [[File:Via_g.jpg|right|thumb|Via Giuseppe Garibaldi<ref>http://lonelyplanetimages.wordpress.com/2011/09/13/photographing-sunrise-and-sunset/</ref>|400px]] | ||
| ''Via'', with the exception of Venice, is what Italian towns and cities refer to as a general [[Street]].  | ''Via'', with the exception of Venice, is what Italian towns and cities refer to as a general [[Street]]. There are only 2 ''Via'' found in Venice, Via XXII Marzo and [[Via Giuseppe Garibaldi]]. Via Giuseppe Garibaldi is similar to [[Strada Nuova]] because it was constructed under Austrian rule and is a very wide and long street lined with shops on either side.<ref>Giulio Lorenzetti, ''Venice and its Lagoon'', (1994)</ref>   | ||
| == See Also == | == See Also == | ||
Latest revision as of 05:05, 13 October 2013
| Please help improve this article by expanding it. | 

Via, with the exception of Venice, is what Italian towns and cities refer to as a general Street. There are only 2 Via found in Venice, Via XXII Marzo and Via Giuseppe Garibaldi. Via Giuseppe Garibaldi is similar to Strada Nuova because it was constructed under Austrian rule and is a very wide and long street lined with shops on either side.[2]
See Also
| 
 | |||||
References
- ↑ http://lonelyplanetimages.wordpress.com/2011/09/13/photographing-sunrise-and-sunset/
- ↑ Giulio Lorenzetti, Venice and its Lagoon, (1994)
