Articles and Reviews

  • WHAT TO SEE IN VENICE: TIPS for a great visit

    WHAT TO SEE IN VENICE: TIPS for a great visit

    Venice offers a huge wealth of museums, churches, architecture and other sights to see and visit.  Here, by district (โ€œsestiereโ€) are the highlights selected in Blue Guide Venice, the definitive guide to the Most Serene City: 1. SESTIERE OF SAN MARCO Some highlights of the sestiere of San Marco. For much more detail…

  • Blue Guide Rome: Award yourself a doctorate in Roman Studies

    Blue Guide Rome: Award yourself a doctorate in Roman Studies

    “Exuberantly impractical” may be overstating it, but we are happy that Liam Callanan (author of When in Rome) in a round-up of great books on Rome (in the Week, here ยป) sees Blue Guide Rome at the detailed and scholarly end of the range. โ€œThis is a regularly updated guidebook…

  • Alexandria: The City that Changed the Word by Islam Issa: A Review

    Alexandria: The City that Changed the Word by Islam Issa: A Review

    Islam Issa: Alexandria: The City that Changed the World. Sceptre Books, 2023 Islam Issa, the author of this expansive history of Alexandria, spent his childhood in his native city. His Alexandrian descent through the male line was unequalled. His fatherโ€™s โ€œancestry test revealed a staggering 97.5 percent near to the…

  • The key dates in Sicilyโ€™s extraordinary history

    The key dates in Sicilyโ€™s extraordinary history

    The drama of Sicilyโ€™s history โ€“ frequently fabulously prosperous, sometimes desperately poor, devastated by earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, overrun by Ancient Greeks, invaded by Romans, Byzantines, Moors and Normans, then shuffled between powerful powerful European dynastic interests: Swabian, Angevin, Aragonese, Savoyard, Bourbon โ€“ risks overshadowing appreciation of the peace, prosperity…

  • The Roads to Rome by Catherine Fletcher: A Review

    The Roads to Rome by Catherine Fletcher: A Review

    Catherine Fletcher: The Roads to Rome, A History, The Bodley Head, London, 2024, reviewed by Charles Freeman Simone Quilici, one of my former pupils (when I taught the International Baccalaureate History programme), is now director of the Via Appia, which stretches in its original paved state outside Rome. I was…

  • Blue Guide New York – Update

    Blue Guide New York – Update

    Carol von Pressentin Wrightโ€™s classic Blue Guide to New York City, relied on by tour guides, residents and visitors alike since its first edition in 1983, is available in a special reprint edition from Amazon in the UK and US. You might not guess it, Amazon make the correct edition almost impossible…

  • Now You See Us at Tate Britain: A Review

    Now You See Us at Tate Britain: A Review

    โ€œNow you see usโ€ is the title of an exhibition running at Tate Britain until October. It aims to place before us the output of British women artists over the course of half a millennium, from 1520 to 1920. Along the way, it plucks many names from oblivion and it…

  • Medieval Horizons

    Medieval Horizons

    Ian Mortimer, Medieval Horizons: Why the Middle Ages Matter, The Bodley Head, 2023. Reviewed by Charles Freeman When do the Middle Ages begin and end? I think AD 500 is a good starting point, following the collapse of the Western Roman Empire in 476. Many studies do not get going…

  • Artists of the Pustertal

    Artists of the Pustertal

    The Pustertal (in Italian, Val Pusteria) is a valley in the mountainous South Tyrol region of Northern Italy, the region on the border of Italy and Austria and known in Italian as Alto Adige. Until the end of the First World War, this was territory that belonged to the Empire…

  • The playwright Ferenc Molnรกr, by his grandson

    The playwright Ferenc Molnรกr, by his grandson

    The latest title in the Blue Danube imprint, which focuses on literature, history and travel in Central Europe, is Venetian Angel, a short novel by Ferenc Molnรกr, now translated into English for the first time.  Molnรกr was a famous pre-war dramatist whose many plays included one on which the Rodgers…

  • The Blessed Josef Mayr-Nusser

    The Blessed Josef Mayr-Nusser

    The life of Josef Mayr-Nusser (1910-1945) is a chapter in the complicated story of South Tyrol.  Born in Bolzano Bozen, he was an active German speaking Catholic, contributor to the subversive young Catholic newssheet Tiroler Jugendwacht (subversive because the Italian government banned use of the German word Jugendwacht โ€“ literally…

  • Venice attempts to stem the tide

    Venice attempts to stem the tide

    (and some news from Rome and Florence) by Alta Macadam The long-discussed entrance restrictions to Venice are finally to become operational on 25th April. The system is designed to limit the numbers of day-trippers, who come to the city for just a few hours (often as part of a tour…

  • Bolzano Bozen – Italian or German?

    Bolzano Bozen – Italian or German?

    Historically Bolzano was a semi-independent merchant city state and sometimes part of the Trento prince-bishopric, with its allegiance more to the (Germanic, Habsburg) Holy Roman Empire โ€“ in the person of the (Austrian) counts of Tyrol โ€“ across the Alps to the north than to the papacy and principalities and…

  • Tired of London?

    Tired of London?

    Samuel Johnson (1709-1784), the great lexicographer, journalist, conversationalist, inveterate London pub-goer and general good egg, famously remarked that if a man is tired of London, he is tired of life. Another quote of his on London is less well known: โ€œSir, if you wish to have a just notion of…

  • Most rare in marble portraits

    Most rare in marble portraits

    The above title is a quote from Giorgio Vasari. They are the words he used, in his famous Lives of the Artists, to describe Alessandro Vittoria (1525โ€“1608), a man who became one of the greatest Italian sculptors of his age. Vittoria was born in Trento, a city in the far…

  • Tour of the Seven Churches on Turkeyโ€™s Aegean coast

    Tour of the Seven Churches on Turkeyโ€™s Aegean coast

    The Book of Revelation, the last book in the New Testament, is traditionally held to have been written by St John (variously the apostle, the divine, the evangelist) while exiled to the island of Patmos from Ephesus on the mainland. It is prefaced by letters to seven churches* on the…

  • Lying in state

    Lying in state

    Paola Pugsley explores the history of this now established custom When faced with a crisis like the death of a much beloved sovereign, human beings tend to seek comfort in ritual. One of these is the tradition of the lying in state, when the deceased is laid in his or…

  • Eleanor of Toledo, Duchess of Florence

    Eleanor of Toledo, Duchess of Florence

    The colour always favoured by Eleanor was red, and the entrance to this exhibition devoted to her life and patronage, which has just closed at Palazzo Pitti, was hung with a sumptuous crimson curtain. Beyond it, the visitor was at once confronted by what at first glance seemed to be…

  • Perugino: Italyโ€™s best maestro

    Perugino: Italyโ€™s best maestro

    Pietro Vannucci, the artist always known as Perugino, after Perugia, the chief city of his native Umbria, was born c. 1450. A superb new exhibition, which celebrates the 500th anniversary of his death in 1523, is currently on show at the Galleria Nazionale dellโ€™Umbria. It was probably in Umbria that…

  • Blue Guides: Now in colour

    Blue Guides: Now in colour

    Blue Guide Venice (ed. 10) is now in full colour, the first of a new look for the core series. Since 1918, when the first Blue Guide appeared, the books have been through a number of redesigns but the quality of the text remains completely unchanged. The detailed focus on…

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