Isola di San Michele
The island viewed from a vaporetto | |
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Geography | |
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Coordinates | 45°26′49″N 12°20′49″E / 45.447°N 12.347°ECoordinates: 45°26′49″N 12°20′49″E / 45.447°N 12.347°E |
Adjacent bodies of water | Venetian Lagoon |
Country | |
Region | Veneto |
Province | Province of Venice |
San Michele is an island in the Venetian Lagoon, northern Italy. It is associated with the sestiere of Cannaregio, from which it lies a short distance northeast.
History
Along with neighbouring San Cristoforo della Pace, the island was a popular place for local travellers and fishermen to land. Mauro Codussi's Chiesa di San Michele in Isola of 1469, the first Renaissance church in Venice, and a monastery lie on the island, which also served for a time as a prison.
San Cristoforo was selected to become a cemetery in 1807, designed by Gian Antonio Selva, when under French occupation it was decreed that burial on the mainland (or on the main Venetian islands) was unsanitary. The canal that separated the two islands was filled in during 1836, and subsequently the larger island became known as San Michele. Bodies were carried to the island on special funeral gondolas. Among those buried there are Igor Stravinsky, Joseph Brodsky, Jean Schlumberger, Christian Doppler, Frederick Rolfe, Horatio Brown, Sergei Diaghilev, Ezra Pound, Luigi Nono, Catherine Bagration, Franco Basaglia, Zoran Mušič, Helenio Herrera, Emilio Vedova, and Salvador de Iturbide y Marzán. The cemetery is still in use today.
Today
The cemetery contains 7 war graves from World War I of officers and seaman of the British merchant and Royal Navy.[1]
Aspasia Manos was initially interred at the cemetery of Isola di San Michele. Her remains were later transferred to the Royal Cemetery Plot in the park of Tatoi Palace.
Other attractions include the Cappella Emiliana chapel.
Gallery
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Walls of San Michele
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Chapel of San Rocco
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San Cristoforo
References
- ↑ CWGC Cemetery Report.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cimitero di San Michele (Venice). |
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