Self-guided Sightseeing Tour #3 in Padua, Italy
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Tour Facts
7.4 km
88 m
Experience Padua in Italy in a whole new way with our self-guided sightseeing tour. This site not only offers you practical information and insider tips, but also a rich variety of activities and sights you shouldn't miss. Whether you love art and culture, want to explore historical sites or simply want to experience the vibrant atmosphere of a lively city - you'll find everything you need for your personal adventure here.
Activities in PaduaIndividual Sights in PaduaSight 1: Porta Ognissanti
The Porta Ognissanti is one of the gates that still exists within the sixteenth-century walls of Padua, built by the Serenissima Republic.
Sight 2: Museo della Fisica Giovanni Poleni
The Museum of the History of Physics is located at the Department of Physics and Astronomy "Galileo Galilei" of the University of Padua. The museum preserves a collection of ancient scientific instruments closely linked to the scientific past of the University of Padua, which since the eighteenth century has been characterized by innovation and experimental vocation.
Wikipedia: Museo di storia della fisica dell'Università di Padova (IT), Website
Sight 3: Chiesa di San Gaetano
The Church of San Gaetano is found in the central district of Padua, and its facade was designed by the late Renaissance architect Vincenzo Scamozzi.
Sight 4: Cappella Ovetari
The Ovetari Chapel is a chapel in the right arm of the Church of the Eremitani in Padua. It is renowned for a Renaissance fresco cycle by Andrea Mantegna and others, painted from 1448 to 1457. The cycle was destroyed by an Allied bombing in 1944: today, only two scenes and a few fragments survive, which have been restored in 2006. They are, however, known from black-and-white photographs.
Sight 5: Church of the Eremitani
Book Ticket*The Church of the Eremitani, or Church of the Hermits, is a former-Augustinian, 13th-century Gothic-style church in Padua, region of the Veneto, Italy. It is also now notable for being adjacent to the Cappella Scrovegni with Giotto frescoes and the municipal archeology and art gallery: the Musei Civici agli Eremitani, which is housed in the former Augustinian monastery located to the left of the entrance.
Sight 6: Scrovegni Chapel
Book Free Tour*The Scrovegni Chapel, also known as the Arena Chapel, is a small church, adjacent to the Augustinian monastery, the Monastero degli Eremitani in Padua, region of Veneto, Italy. The chapel and monastery are now part of the complex of the Musei Civici di Padova.
Sight 7: Palazzo Zuckermann
The Palazzo Zuckermann is a palace located on corso Garibaldi in Padua, Italy. The building now houses the collections of the Museo di arti applicate e decorative on the first floor and the Museo Bottacin on the second floor; these collections form part of the Civic Museum of Padua. It stands across the street from the Cappella degli Scrovegni and the Museo agli Eremitani; the latter houses the main art gallery of the civic Museum of Padua.
Sight 8: Museo Bottacin
The Palazzo Zuckermann is a palace located on corso Garibaldi in Padua, Italy. The building now houses the collections of the Museo di arti applicate e decorative on the first floor and the Museo Bottacin on the second floor; these collections form part of the Civic Museum of Padua. It stands across the street from the Cappella degli Scrovegni and the Museo agli Eremitani; the latter houses the main art gallery of the civic Museum of Padua.
Sight 9: Chiesa di San Fermo
The church of Saints Fermo and Rustico, better known as the church of San Fermo, is a religious building of early medieval origin that overlooks Via San Fermo in Padua. It is one of the oldest in the city. Formerly a parish, it became for a time subject to the parish of San Leonardo; it is now a subsidiary church to the Basilica of Mount Carmel, officiated on holy days by the Sri Lankan Catholic community. Currently, it is devoid of all the works and furnishings.
Sight 10: Oratorio San Rocco
The Oratory of San Rocco is a Renaissance style, Roman Catholic church located in the city center of Padua, region of Veneto, Italy. It arises adjacent to the church of Santa Lucia, and is notable for its collection of frescoes.
Sight 11: Santa Lucia
Santa Lucia, also called the Chiesa dell'Adorazione Perpetua is a Roman Catholic church located in the city of Padua, region of Veneto, Italy.
Sight 12: La Gatta
The Cat of St. Andrew, popularly called the Cat, is a monument of medieval origin that is located in the small churchyard of the church of Sant'Andrea in Padua. The monument, consisting of a stone sculpture depicting a lion placed on a Roman column, was demolished on 23 September 2013 by a manoeuvring means of transport and relocated on 19 March 2015.
Sight 13: Chiesa di Sant'Andrea
Sant'Andrea is a Roman Catholic church located on Via Sant'Andrea in Padua, region of Veneto, Italy. Founded by the 12th-century as a parish church, the present church was completed in the late 19th century.
Sight 14: Caffé Pedrocchi
The Pedrocchi Café is a café founded in the 18th century in central Padua, Italy. It has architectural prominence because its rooms were decorated in diverse styles, arranged in an eclectic ensemble by the architect Giuseppe Jappelli. The café has historical prominence because of its role in the 1848 riots against the Habsburg monarchy, as well as for being an attraction for artists over the last century from the French novelist Stendhal to Lord Byron to the Italian writer Dario Fo.
Sight 15: Chiesa di San Francesco
The church dedicated to saint Francis of Assisi, known for centuries as San Francesco Grande is a religious building on the Via San Francesco, previously overlooks the Contra porteghi high in Padua, Italy. Through the efforts of Baldo de Bonafarii and Sibilla de Cetto, the convent of the Friars Minor and the Hospital of Saint Francis, Major, operated until 1798.
Sight 16: Chiesa di Santa Margherita
The church of Santa Margherita is a religious building of medieval origin that overlooks Via San Francesco, in Padua.
Sight 17: Palazzo Zabarella
The Palazzo Zabarella is a medieval, fortress-like palace with a crenellated roof-line, and corner tower, located on Via San Francesco 27 in the center of Padua, Italy. The building now houses the Fondazione Bano, and serves as a locale for cultural events and exhibition.
Sight 18: Ponte San Lorenzo
The Ponte San Lorenzo is a Roman bridge over the river Bacchiglione in Padua, Italy. Constructed between 47 and 30 BC, it is one of the very earliest segmental arched bridges in the world. It is also notable for the slenderness of its piers, unsurpassed in antiquity.
Sight 19: Chiesa di Santa Maria dei Servi
Santa Maria dei Servi, or simply known as the Chiesa dei Servi, or more fully as the Church of the Nativity of the Servants of the Blessed Virgin Mary, is a 14th-century, Roman Catholic church that faces the Via Roma in Padua, region of the Veneto, Italy. This is a parish church in the vicariate of the Cathedral Basilica of Santa Maria Assunta governed by the Servite Order. The church contains outstanding works of art including a wooden crucifix by Donatello.
Sight 20: Sinagoga
The Italian Synagogue of Padua is the only synagogue still in use of the several that flourished in the university town of Padua from the Renaissance through World War II.
Sight 21: Chiesa di San Canziano
The church of San Canziano is a religious building of medieval origin that stands in the center of Padua, towards Piazza delle Erbe. Currently, it is a rectory entrusted to the Legionary priests of Christ. At this time, it is officially the only church in the diocese of Padua where Mass is celebrated on Sundays and holy days of obligation in the traditional form of the Roman rite.
Sight 22: The Kiss (Kenny Random)
Kenny Random, pseudonym of Andrea Coppo, is an Italian artist and writer.
Sight 23: Chiesa di San Clemente
San Clemente, or St Clement, is a Baroque-style Roman Catholic church that overlooks the Piazza dei Signori in Padua, Italy. It is currently a dependent of the Cathedral Basilica of Santa Maria Assunta.
Sight 24: Chiesa di San Nicolò
San Nicolò is a Romanesque and Gothic-style, Roman Catholic church in Padua, region of Veneto, Italy. It stands in front of a homonymous piazza, and is adjacent to the Palazzo Meschini and Palazzo Brunelli-Bonetti.
Sight 25: Battistero
The Padua Baptistery, dedicated to St. John the Baptist, is a baptistery on the Piazza del Duomo next to the cathedral in Padua, Italy. Preserved inside is one of the most important fresco cycles of the 14th century, a masterpiece by Giusto de' Menabuoi.
Sight 26: Duomo di Padova
Padua Cathedral, or Basilica Cathedral of Saint Mary of the Assumption, is a Catholic church and minor basilica located on the east end of Piazza Duomo, adjacent to the bishop's palace in Padua, Veneto, Italy.
Sight 27: Castello Carrarese
The Castelvecchio, formerly called Castello della Torlonga but today also known as Castello di Ezzelino, or Castello Carrarese or Castello di Padova, is a fortification of early medieval origin located on the bifurcation of the Bacchiglione where it divides into Tronco Maestro and Naviglio interno. It owes its current characteristics to the Da Carrara lordship. During the nineteenth and twentieth centuries it was largely used as a state prison, while the keep, the Torlonga, has been the city's observatory since the eighteenth century.
Sight 28: San Tomaso Becket
The church of San Tomaso Cantuariense, also known as the church of San Tomaso or Tommaso is a religious building that overlooks the "strà di San Tomaso" now Via San Tomaso in the district of Castel Vecchio in Padua. The building, named after Thomas Becket, was once a parish entrusted to the Philippine Fathers, now it is a parish run by secular clergy belonging to the Vicariate of the Cathedral. Inside the church there is an important collection of relics including the heart of St. Philip Neri and a portrait of him that sweated 27 times in 1632. The rich interior furnishings include works by seventeenth- and eighteenth-century authors such as Pietro Liberi, Francesco Maffei, Onofrio Gabrieli.
Sight 29: San Prosdocimo
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