Destinations

Africa
America
Asia
Europe
Oceania

Main events

Italy
Europe

Warning!!!

Africa
America
Asia
Europe
Oceania

Google
Livorno
Livorno (archaic English: Leghorn) is a port city on the Tyrrhenian Sea on the western edge of Tuscany.

History

Livorno was defined as an "ideal town" during the Renaissance. Nowadays it reveals its history through its neighbourhoods, crossed by canals and surrounded by fortified town-walls, through the tangle of its streets, which embroider the town's Venice district, and through the Medici Port characteristically overlooked by towers and fortresses leading to the town centre.
Designed by the architect Bernardo Buontalenti at the end of the 16th century, Livorno underwent a period of great town planning expansion at the end of the 17th century. Near the defensive pile of the Old Fortress, a new fortress, together with the town-walls and the system of navigable canals, was then built.
Nowadays the Venice district preserves most of its original town planning and architectural features such as the bridges, the narrow lanes, the noblemen's houses and a dense network of canals which once linked the port to its storehouses. In the 18th and 19th centuries Livorno, by then grown up and open to the world, had a lively appearance marked by neo-classical buildings, town parks housing important museums and cultural institutions, Liberty villas with sea views, the market.
Some Moriscos (Muslim Spaniards forcibly converted to Catholicism) moved from Spain to Livorno in 1700 century.

Main monuments

Quattro mori
Quattro mori Livorno Tuscany tourism

The "Monumento dei quattro mori" ("Monument of the Four Turks"), dedicated to Grand Duke Ferdinando II de' Medici of Tuscany, is one of the most important monuments of Livorno.

 
Fortezza Nuova
Fortezza Nuova Livorno Tuscany tourism

 

Fortezza Vecchia
Fortezza Vecchia Livorno Tuscany tourism