Northeast Italy - Wikivoyage, the free collaborative travel and tourism guide - Italie du Nord-Est — Wikivoyage, le guide de voyage et de tourisme collaboratif gratuit

Northeast Italy
Information
Country
Location
45 ° 33 ′ 9 ″ N 11 ° 49 ′ 17 ″ E

TheNortheast Italy is a region ofItaly. Between steep mountains and green plains, Northeast Italy is endowed with a wide range of landscapes; but also in terms of history with which the regions are responsible (example: Venice, Bologna, Trieste, ...)

Regions

Map of Northeast Italy

Cities

  • 1 Bolzano Logo indicating a link to the websiteLogo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element – Bolzano or Bozen is a town in Alto Adige in the autonomous region of Trentino Alto Adige. Called Botzen before 1867, the city was part until 1918 of the Austrian Empire, then of Austria-Hungary (Cisleithanie after the compromise of 1867), capital of the district of the same name, one of the 21 Bezirkshauptmannschaften in the province of Tyrol. After World War I, Bolzano became a city in Italy.
  • 2 Bologna Logo indicating a link to the websiteLogo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element – Bologna (Italian: Bologna, pronounced / boˈloɲa /) is an Italian city located between the Po and the Apennines. It is the capital of the region of Emilia-Romagna and the province of the same name and one of the main cities of Italy. Bologna has approximately 390,000 inhabitants and its urban area includes 1,005,000 inhabitants. It is considered to be the seat of the oldest university in the western world since it was founded in 10883. More than 900 years after its founding, the university is still today the heart of the city since its 100,000 students constitute a quarter of its population.
  • 3 Ferrara Logo indicating a link to the websiteLogo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element – Located in the Po delta on the arm called "Pô de Volano", the current city dates back to the 14th century.e century, when it was ruled by the Este family. Its historic center is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • 4 Modena Logo indicating a link to the websiteLogo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element – Modena (in Italian: Modena) is the capital of the province of the same name located in Emilia-Romagna. With its 180,000 inhabitants, Modena is the 21st largest city in Italy in terms of population. Modena and its surroundings are often considered as pilgrimage sites of Italian gastronomy with many local specialties recognized at international level such as its balsamic vinegar, its tortellini, its Parmigiano Reggiano, etc. The city is also an important center of automobile passion, since in a small area around Modena are the companies Ferrari, Maserati, Lamborghini and Pagani. Modena has three monuments classified as a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1997, the Cathedral, the Torre Ghirlandina and the Piazza Grande.
  • 5 Ravenna Logo indicating a link to the websiteLogo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element – Ravenna (Italian: Ravenna / raˈvenna /, Romagna: Ravêna) is a city of over 150,000 inhabitants from the province of Ravenna in Emilia Romagna. It is considered the mosaic capital of the world.
  • 6 Padua Logo indicating a link to the websiteLogo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element – Padua (Italian: Padova, Venetian: Padoa) is a city in the Veneto region, located north of the peninsula in the Po plain, 40 kilometers from Venice, on the Bacchiglione river. Saint Anthony of Padua (1195-1231), originally from Lisbon, owes his name to this city.
  • 7 Parma Logo indicating a link to the websiteLogo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element – Parma (Parma in Italian, Pärma ['pɛʁma] in Parmesan dialect), is a city in the province of Parma, in the region of Emilia Romagna. Located between the Apennine chain and the Po plain, the city is divided in two by the Parma river, a tributary of the Po.
  • 8 Rimini Logo indicating a link to the websiteLogo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element – Rimini is the capital of the province of Rimini, in the Emilia-Romagna region. Located on the Adriatic coast, between the mouth of the Marecchia (the Ariminus of the Romans) and the Ausa (Aprusa in Latin), it is one of the largest seaside resorts in Europe, thanks to its few 15 km of sandy beach and its many hotels. It is an old Roman port, rich in Renaissance buildings.
  • 9 Thirty Logo indicating a link to the websiteLogo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element – Trento (in Italian Trento) is an Italian city of about 116,300 inhabitants, capital of the autonomous province of Trento and the region of Trentino-Alto Adige, in the Alps.
  • 10 Treviso Logo indicating a link to the websiteLogo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element – Treviso is located 28 km north of Venice, 50 km from Padua and close to the hills of Asolo and Conegliano, the Pre-Alps, the Dolomites and also the beaches of Veneto, on the Adriatic. The city, of Roman origin (Tarvisium), was independent from 1183 to 1339 then belonged to Venice. Occupied by the French in 1797 and capital, under Napoleon, of the Tagliamento department, it returned to Austria in 1814, then became Italian (1866).
  • 11 Trieste Logo indicating a link to the websiteLogo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element – Trieste (formerly Tergeste in Latin, Trst in Slovenian and Croatian, Triest in Friulian and German, Trieszt in Hungarian) is a city located at the foot of the Dinaric Alps on the Adriatic Sea on the edge of the Gulf of Trieste and the bay of Muggia , near the Italian-Slovenian border. It is the capital of the autonomous region of Friuli-Venezia Giulia and of the province of Trieste.
  • 12 Udine Logo indicating a link to the websiteLogo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element – Udine (Udin in Friulian) is a town of about 100,000 inhabitants, capital of the historical and geographical region of Friuli, located in the autonomous region of Friuli-Venezia Giulia. It is the capital of the province of Udine.
  • 13 Verona Logo indicating a link to the websiteLogo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element – Verona (in Italian Verona / ve'ro: na /) is a very ancient city in the Veneto region (Po Valley), on the banks of the Adige, near Lake Garda. Founded in the 1st century BC. AD, the historic city experienced periods of expansion in the 13th and 14th centuries.e century and under the Republic of Venice. A remarkable number of monuments from Antiquity, medieval times and the Renaissance are preserved there.
  • 14 Vicenza Logo indicating a link to the websiteLogo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element – Vicenza is the capital of the province of the same name in Veneto. It is known as the città del Palladio (that is to say the City of Palladio) - which produced many architectural works there - and a city of art whose importance is not limited to the Veneto, since 'it attracts cultural tourism from all over Italy but also from abroad. The exceptional architectural heritage left by Andrea Palladio in the city was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1994, two years before the Palladian Villas of Veneto.
  • 15 Venice Logo indicating a link to the websiteLogo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element – Venice (Italian: Venezia / veˈnɛtʦja /, Venetian: Venexia / veˈnɛˑsja /) is a port city on the shores of the Adriatic Sea. It extends over a set of 118 small islands separated by a network of canals and linked by bridges. Located off the Venetian lagoon, between the estuaries of the Po and the Piave, Venice is renowned for this peculiarity, as well as for its unique architecture and cultural heritage. Venice and its lagoon are listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

To go

By car

  • By highway: Autostrada A4 Italia.svg (Turin-Trieste); Autostrada A1 Italia.svg (Milan-Naples); Autostrada A23 Italia.svg (Austria-Palmanova)

By plane

  • 1 Treviso Airport Logo indicating a link to the website Via Noalese, 63E, 31100 Treviso Provincia di Treviso, Logo indicating a telephone number  39 0422 315111
  • 2 Friuli-Venezia Giulia Airport Logo indicating a link to the website Via Aquileia, 46, 34077 Ronchi dei Legionari Gorizia, Logo indicating a telephone number  39 0481 7731
  • 3 Venice Marco Polo Airport Logo indicating a link to the website Via Galileo Galilei, 30/1, Venezia, Logo indicating a telephone number  39 041 260 6111
  • 4 Bologna-Borgo Panigale Airport Logo indicating a link to the website Via del Triumvirato, 84, 40132 Bologna, Logo indicating a telephone number  39 051 647 9615
  • 5 Parma Airport Logo indicating a link to the website Via Licinio Ferretti, 50A, 43126 Parma, Logo indicating a telephone number  39 0521 951511

See

Make

  • Thermal baths

Buy

Eat

Have a drink / Go out

security

Around

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