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Time

(June 18-22, 2009)

Jürgen Matern

24 Hours Have Passed

Isaac Martinez

Clock Tower at St. Mark's Square

Piazza San Marco, Venezia, Italy - A World Heritage Site

June 22, 2009, 2:30 pm

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© 2009 Isaac Martinez, Some Rights Reserved. Creative Commons License

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Caption
Clock Tower - 1496-1506

The Moors’ Clock Tower is one of the most famous architectural landmarks in Venice, standing over an arch that leads into what is the main shopping street of the city, the old Merceria. It marks both a juncture and a division between the various architectural components of St. Mark’s Square, which was not only the seat of political and religious power but also a public space and an area of economic activity, a zone that looked out towards the sea and also played a functional role as a hub for the entire layout of the city.

In short, the Tower and its large Astronomical Clock, a masterpiece of technology and engineering, form an essential part of the very image of Venice. For more than five hundred years, they have measured out the flow of life and history within the city.

The central part was designed in 1496 by Mauro Codussi and houses the clock (whose face shows the phases of the Moon and Sun as well as the signs of the zodiac). Also adorned with a Lion of St. Mark and a niche for a statue of the Madonna, this part of the structure is surmounted by the famous Two Moors Bell. The side wings were added in 1506, and then raised higher in 1755 (to designs by the architect Giorgio Massari)

The clock tower can be visited by appointment.
To see other spherical panorama of Piazza San Marco visit http://isaacmartinez.com/sanmarco
Location

Europe / Italy

Lat: 45° 26' 4.42" N
Long: 12° 20' 20.21" E

Elevation: 1 m. above sea level

→ maps.google.com [EXT]

Precision is: High. Pinpoints the exact spot.

Equipment
Nodal Ninja 3 MK II, R-D8 Rotator, Nikon D300 with Nikkor 10.5mm, PTGui Pro 8.1.2, Photoshop CS4, CubicConverter, Nikon Capture 4.
Comentario en Español
La Torre del Reloj [dell’Orologio, en italiano] está en el lado norte de la plaza, encima del pasaje con forma de arco por el que se va a las Mercerías, la calle comercial más importante de Venecia. Fue realizada entre 1496 y 1506, y encima del arco se puede admirar un enorme reloj esmaltado de azul y dorado que marca las horas, las fases de la luna y el zodiaco. Servía de referencia para los navegantes, que podían saber los movimientos de las mareas y cuáles eran los mejores meses para emprender un viaje por el mar. Más arriba, hay un nicho con una Virgen, y a los lados están las dos puertas de las que, los días de la Epifanía y de la semana de la Ascensión, salen los Magos para tocar las horas y, junto a un ángel, se inclinan delante de la Virgen.

En el punto más alto de la torre hay dos estatuas de bronce, conocidas como los “moros”, por la pátina oscura, que, gracias a un mecanismo complejo, marcan las horas tocando la campana. Si se encuentran enfrente de la torre, a la derecha se ve Piazzetta dei Leoncini, que se llama así por los dos leones de mármol del siglo XVIII.

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