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Pisa Travel Guide

Pisa is best known for the world famous Leaning Tower, but those who come here with their mind already made up that the Tower is the only thing to see here may miss the other architectural and artistic marvels of this beautiful city.

About Pisa

Pisa covers an area of 71 sq. miles (185 square Km) and is estimated to have a population of 150.000 people being the capital city of the Province of Pisa. The city lies on the right bank of the Arno River on the Ligurian Sea.

Pisa City Guide

Pisa is a charming city in Tuscany.  Best known for the famous “LeaningTower,” Pisa offers the traveler many other wonderful marvels as well.

Lying at the junction of two rivers in central Italy, Pisa is a safe tourist destination with thriving arts and culture. The Campo dei Miracoli (“Field of Miracles”) hosts many important structures and is also the site of the Duomo Cathedral and the Camposanto cemetery.

Pisa is most famous for its leaning campanile, yet its other equally notable coups include its long maritime legacy dating to 1000 BC, its prized university and its status as the birthplace of the world’s greatest physicist and astronomer, Galileo Galilei.

The Pisans also created one of the most beautiful squares in the world in the Campo dei Miracoli (Field of Miracles). Its key component is the famous Leaning Tower, whose layers of heavy marble were constructed on a shifting subsoil foundation that has been the bane of Pisan engineers for more than 800 years.

It seems that the tremulous soil underneath the Field of Miracles has exacted its price on the other buildings too, most notably San Michele dei Scalzi.

Other attractions of interest in Pisa include the Museo delle Sinopie, a museum containing a display of sketches from the frescoed cycle that decorated the walls of the Campo Santo cemetery and the Museo dell’Opera del Duomo in which exhibits of arabesque panels and Corinthian capitals reveal the influences of Rome and Islam on Pisan architects.

The Museo Nazionale di San Matteo displays a range of Florentine art from the 12th through to the 17th centuries.

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