Why Venice is Europe’s Worst Placed City

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Published 2021-11-16

All Comments (21)
  • What a lot of people don’t realize is Venice was one of the largest cities in Europe up until the start of he 19th Century. It’s not just a tony tourist destination but the capital of one of Europe’s greatest Republics and Empires in history. It lasted for a thousand years until Napoleon.
  • @lo8393
    Side note: Venice itself (the islands) only has 55k inhabitants. The other 200k live in the mainland (which counts as the same municipality), where tourists don't go
  • I "love" how in every single "italian/greek related" videos from abroad there's always the same "totally unrelated" to the whole culture theme song with lute/mandolin.
  • 7:59 Correction: Vasco da Gama didn't discover the Cape of good hope. It was discovered long ago and a main obstacle for the Portuguese for some time. It was known as the Cape of torments. Eventually Bartolomeu Dias managed to cross it and it became the Cape of Good Hope, opening the way for Vasco da Gama who was the first european to reach India by boat.
  • @ShortHax
    When you spawn on an island with a single tree
  • @jtgd
    “Why Venice’s geography sucks” Becomes wealthiest city on the continent due to geography
  • @batosato
    I recently visited Venice. The current population is around 50k while the rest lives in mainland. A lot of families are leaving Venice due to rising rents. One tourist guide even told me that seeing kids playing on the streets of Venice is very rare.
  • @Nikioko
    In fact, Venice is brilliantly placed, which is the reason why it became a major naval power and one of the richtest countries in Europe. During the Age of Migration, Germanic tribes pillaged the Italian cities many times. Thanks to its location within a swamp, Venice was easy to defend and was never sacked.
  • @daandanx
    Still waiting for the "Why Prague is the most normal city in the world" video
  • It's ironic how Venice was once great at keeping people who didn't live there out for strategic reasons but now one of its biggest problems is too many foreign visitors coming in at a time
  • Hello from New Orleans! I can certainly sympathize with chronic flooding. My childhood subdivision was built on "reclaimed" land and as time progressed the pumps would be more frequently out-paced and the roads were getting more prone to turning into a shallow river. The swamp reclaims all.
  • @chrishoo2
    La Sereníssima was supremely well positioned to be at the western end of the Silk Road & bring luxury goods into the center of Europe. Another plus was that Venice was the cleanest city in Europe because its sewerage was flushed out to sea twice a day with the tides. They did suffer harshly from being the natural entry point of the plagues.
  • @peabody1976
    The irony: Venice used to actually raise its buildings every few decades, but about 400 years ago the buildings became "culturally significant" and so that process stopped. Once the buildings were no longer being lifted, it sealed the cycle of flooding that was then made worse by other factors/decisions.
  • @drd9490
    Actually, the 260k population figure is quite misleading. It represents the population of the whole Venice metropolitan area, much of which is actually built on the mainland, with regular streets and cars (source: I live there). The population of the historic city is less than 60k people, ever decreasing because of insanely high rents and the difficulties of living in such a peculiar place. Even people who would like to continue living there are often forced to move on the mainland because they just cannot afford otherwise. So all the percentages quoted in the videos are 4x higher, which is even more impressive.
  • I was in Venice during those 4 of the worst 10 floods ever in November 2019. It was really tragic watching the local stores loosing their stock and cleaning out their shops four times in a week.
  • @0lorenzo0
    I live close to Venice, after the first lockdown in March 2020 i decided to visit the city. It was all empty, not even a single boat on Canal Grande. A bit sad but magical! I will never see Venice like that again.
  • @ModernWhoFan5B
    This whole "Cities your grandkids probably won't see" series is kinda depressing.
  • "Except for moving it somewhere else" "Hi, is this Reallifelore?" "No, this is Patrick."
  • @Nikioko
    Venice became rich because of its monopoly for Silk Road trade. That's why Portugal and Spain tried to bypass that monopoly by finding alternative trade routes with India and China.
  • @Tillhony
    Been learning so much from this Youtube. Thank you sir