Carnival season in Venice was the must have invite
By the 18th century, the Carnival of Venice became one of the most popular tourist attractions and attracted people from all over Europe and the world. The celebrations continued for six months of the year and shaped life in Venice. The festivities stimulated the carnivalesque spirit, and it seemed that the city never slept. Music and dancing continued almost non-stop, and Venice could have been compared to modern-day Las Vegas because gambling was also a significant activity of society and an essential part of the carnival. Some believe that playing cards were invented in Venice, which is most likely not the case, but the Venetians certainly had a monopoly on manufacturing the cards. The ridotti was the first public gambling house in Venice and became the casino prototype of Europe. Not to mention the bull-fights and bull-runs in the streets, the firework displays, rope-walkers, fortune-tellers and of course, the dressed-up Venetians throwing eggs filled with rose-scented water into the crowds. This chapter in Venetian history is also associated with the Venetian painter Francesco Guardi and the famous Venetian adventurer and ‘womaniser’ Giacomo Casanova. Classical Italian with a hint of “viceland”.
Venice makes the grand tour
By mid 18th century, Venice became a refuge to Victorians who wanted to escape the industrialism and mundane existence of England’s upper class. These new kinds of pilgrims weren’t after religious absolution but were seeking art and history, and of course, a little fun. Venice’s rich past provided historical nostalgia: the pilgrimage ended here with gondola ride(s), flocks of pigeons, countless open-air establishments in St. Mark Square and the view of the St Mark’s Basilica. Venice has tried to re-establish some of its fame as an influential cultural centre point by hosting various contemporary art festivals. The Venice La Biennale was introduced in 1895, initially as an international art exhibition but over the years expanded to include modern music, theatre, film, dance and architecture. It has blossomed noteworthy in recent years and nowadays welcomes more than 300,000 visitors each year. It is a feature of the city’s well-established tourism culture – showing the city’s determination to present itself in art and culture in a new and contemporary light.
Party is over, for a while
The fall of the Republic of Venice was a series of events that came to an end on 12 May 1797 and prompted the dissolution and division of La Serenissima at the hands of Napoleon Bonaparte and Habsburg Austria. Sadly, the Venice Carnival dwindled after Napoleon signed the Treaty of Campo Formio, and Venice was under Austrian rule. On 18 January 1798, the Austrians established control of the entire city, and the carnival with its elaborate costumes, traditional masks, masked people and carnival celebrations almost disappeared for nearly two centuries. In the 1930s, the carnevale di Venezia was banned by the fascist government. The festivities were revived in the late 1970s on the island of Burano and then finally reintroduced in the 1980s in Venice. Its distinctive traditions and celebration make Venice one of the most loved Carnival destinations for tourists from all over the world.
Tourists are Venice, and Venice is tourism in its best form! It is still a working city but has earned a new character. From the humble beginnings as a lagoon community to the Golden City of the Venetian merchants transformed into a non-negotiable travel destination for any European group tour. Whether a traveller comes to Venice to follow the footsteps of the original pilgrims, see the cobblestone streets through Othello’s eyes or take a walking tour over the Rialto Bridge into the heart of the merchants’ quarters – it is all still there, unchanged hundreds of years later to marvel at.
Exploring Venice and its history
Odyssey offers small group tours for mature and senior couples or solo travellers to Venice and many other destinations in Italy. The guided Venice tour can be combined with a classic Italy tour visiting remarkable landmarks and magical places with a tour company specialised in small group tours: Southern Italy, Cinque Terre, Amalfi Coast, Tuscany, Lake Como, Sicily, Lake Garda, Milan, Pompeii, Central Italy and sites of Ancient Rome. Prosecco will be flowing too!
Odyssey started in 1983 as a collaboration between the Universities of Australia and New Zealand in the continuing adult education market, so it is almost 40 years old. The company has been stewarding fellow travellers on an ever-expanding collection of diverse and curious small group tours. Tours are supported by a great group of leaders who are typically retired academics and schoolteachers with a passion for continuing to be curious and sharing knowledge with you.
Small is Beautiful – Economics as if People Mattered is a collection of essays by E F Schumacher published in 1973. He sets out the case for the community, not corporations, as the model for economic success. It influences us in all we do. For Odyssey Travellers, the term small is beautiful, captures the essence of the experience offered. We endeavour:
- to provide touring programs that stimulate the mind, ideally changing perspectives and perceptions through travel and shared knowledge,
- to offer small groups for like-minded people to explore,
- to foster a collegiate, open touring platform encouraging friendships to be made and journeys shared,
- to tread softly in the places we visit and not overwhelm the art galleries, museums, environment, or accommodation we use.
As a small team, we are orientated to learning about you the traveller, ensuring you are treated the way you wish to be treated, following the adage “treating others how you wish to be treated yourself”. When you travel with us, you may be part of a small group, typically 8-14 people, and be part of a small business group that averages some 40 people per week travelling with us all around the world. Our scale of operation and our tours anywhere in the world are orientated for the selective few, not the many.
By travelling with us, you assist us in supporting, each year, at least one academically bright University student who might be struggling financially to continue their studies, with a scholarship to underpin those studies for at least one year.