Museo Correr
Museo Correr gives you Venice's full story from the Republic's founding to Napoleon's takeover, all housed in the grand Procuratie Nuove overlooking St.
About Museo Correr
Museo Correr gives you Venice's full story from the Republic's founding to Napoleon's takeover, all housed in the grand Procuratie Nuove overlooking St. Mark's Square. You'll walk through rooms filled with original maps showing Venice's trading empire, ceremonial armor worn by doges, and the famous platform shoes (chopines) that Venetian noblewomen used to tower over crowds. The upper galleries showcase masterpieces by Bellini and Carpaccio that most tourists rush past on their way to the Doge's Palace.
The museum flows through Napoleon's neoclassical apartments, where each room offers different perspectives over St. Mark's Square through tall windows. The Ballroom is particularly striking with its coffered ceiling and marble columns, while the library rooms contain globes and nautical instruments that reveal Venice's maritime dominance. You'll feel the weight of centuries as you move from medieval artifacts to Renaissance paintings, with the lagoon views constantly reminding you why this location mattered so much.
Most guides treat Correr as a quick stop before the Doge's Palace, but that's a mistake. The combined ticket costs €25 and includes both museums plus St. Mark's Campanile. Skip the coin collection on the ground floor completely, it's deadly boring. Focus your time on the historical rooms and the painting galleries upstairs, especially Carpaccio's "Two Venetian Ladies" which captures the city's peculiar mix of luxury and confinement. The views from the Napoleon rooms are actually better than many paid viewpoints in the city.
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