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Coordinates: 45°25′41″N 12°20′37″E / 45.42806°N 12.34361°E / 45.42806; 12.34361
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* Guida d’Italia del Touring Club Italiano – Venezia. 3° ed. ISBN 978-88-365-4347-2
* Guida d’Italia del Touring Club Italiano – Venezia. 3° ed. ISBN 978-88-365-4347-2
* S. Vianello (a cura di) Le chiese di Venezia. Electa, 1993 ISBN 88-435-4048-3
* S. Vianello (a cura di) Le chiese di Venezia. Electa, 1993 ISBN 88-435-4048-3
{|
|[[File:Veneto Venezia13 tango7174.jpg|thumb|left|upright=2.8|<center>Panorama at dusk</center>]]
|[[Image:SanGiorgioMaggioreAtDawn.jpg|thumb|left|upright=0.8|''San Giorgio Maggiore at Dawn'' by [[J.M.W. Turner]], 1819]]
|}


==See also==
==See also==
[[Image:SanGiorgioMaggioreAtDawn.jpg|150px|thumb|right|''San Giorgio Maggiore at Dawn'' by [[J.M.W. Turner]], 1819]]
*[[San Giorgio Monastery]]
*[[San Giorgio Monastery]]
*[[Church of San Giorgio Maggiore]]
*[[Church of San Giorgio Maggiore]]

Revision as of 14:08, 21 February 2010

San Giorgio Maggiore shown within Venice.
View of San Giorgio Maggiore.
San Giorgio Maggiore from the main island.

San Giorgio Maggiore is one of the islands of Venice, lying east of the Giudecca and south of the main island group. The isle is surrounded by Canale della Grazia, Canale della Giudecca, Saint Mark Basin, Canale di San Marco and the southern lagoon. It forms part of the San Marco sestiere.

The island was probably occupied in the Roman period; after the foundation of Venice it was called Insula Memmia after the Memmo family who owned it. By 829 it had a church consecrated to St George; thus it was designated as San Giorgio Maggiore to be distinguished from San Giorgio in Alga.

The Benedictine Monastery of San Giorgio was established in 982, when the doge Tribuno Memmo donated the whole island to a monk, Giovanni Morosini. The monks drained the island's marshes next to the church to get the ground for building.

San Giorgio is now best known for the Church of San Giorgio Maggiore, designed by Palladio and begun in 1566.

In the early nineteenth century, after the Republic fell, the monastery was almost suppressed and the island became a free port with a new harbour built in 1812. It became the home of Venice's artillery.

It is now the headquarters of the Cini Foundation arts centre, known for its library and is also home to the Teatro Verde open-air theatre.

Panorama of San Giorgio Maggiore viewed from the main island

References

  • Guida d’Italia del Touring Club Italiano – Venezia. 3° ed. ISBN 978-88-365-4347-2
  • S. Vianello (a cura di) Le chiese di Venezia. Electa, 1993 ISBN 88-435-4048-3
Panorama at dusk
File:SanGiorgioMaggioreAtDawn.jpg
San Giorgio Maggiore at Dawn by J.M.W. Turner, 1819

See also

45°25′41″N 12°20′37″E / 45.42806°N 12.34361°E / 45.42806; 12.34361