If you are looking for a European tourist destination, consider the Friuli-Venezia Giuli region of northeastern Italy, bordering on Austria and Slovenia. For simplicity's sake we abbreviate the region's full name to Friuli. Depending on your interests, Friuli may be an ideal vacation spot. You can get classic Italian food and other specialties, and wash it down with fine local wine. While Friuli is not exactly undiscovered by tourists you usually won't be fighting crowds to see what you want. Like most regions of Italy, it has belonged to many nations over the years. Unlike most regions of Italy it remains multicultural, an exceptional mixture of Italian, Austrian, and Slavic influences. This article explores Trieste, Friuli's capital. A companion article examines several other attractions in this beautiful region.
Trieste with a population of some two hundred thousand is the largest city of the Friuli region. Like so many other Italian cities, Trieste was originally settled thousands of years ago. Like so many other cities in Italy, Trieste went from one occupier to another changing rulers over the centuries. Unlike any other Italian city, Trieste was definitely part and parcel of Mittleleuropa (Central Europe). It was the major port of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. And unlike any other Italy city, Trieste only joined Italy in 1954 putting an end to the short-lived Free Territory of Trieste founded in 1947. The 1975 Treaty of Osimo dealt with the question of ethnic minorities and the border with Yugoslavia. Slovenia became independent in 1991 and in 1992 declared that it would recognize this treaty. One can well imagine that with such a unique history Trieste would be a unique place to visit. It is.
As soon as you get to Trieste you'll notice its ubiquitous coffee houses. Some of them have been in business for hundreds of years. Among the best is the Antico Caffe San Marco, as old world as you can get. See if you can wow the regulars; ask for a Bicerin, which is coffee served in a glass. As you hang around one of Trieste's alternatives to Starbuck's your thoughts might turn to Trieste's most famous expatriate, James Joyce, who resided here from 1904 to 1915 and from 1919 to 1920. It was in Trieste that he finished Dubliners and A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man and began his masterpiece Ulysses. You might try to track down the 45 plaques on buildings associated with his life in Trieste.
As befits its internationality, Trieste is home to a variety of historic religious buildings representing many faiths. The Serbian-Orthodox church of the Holy Trinity and Saint Spyridion was built in the mid-Nineteenth Century and shows a strong Byzantine influence. Be sure to go inside to view its beautiful frescoes and icons. The Israelite Temple of Trieste was built slightly more than a century ago. Its exterior style is said to be late Roman of a type found in Fourth Century Syria. The building was closed in 1942 because of the Italian Fascist race laws but reopened after World War II. It is the largest synagogue in Italy.
The Trieste Cathedral is dedicated to its patron saint, San Guisto (Saint Justus), martyred at the beginning of the Fourth Century. It was constructed in the Sixth Century over Roman ruins. Shortly after it opened for worship a Lombard invasion destroyed the Cathedral. Then in the Ninth and Eleventh Centuries two basilicas were constructed on the ruins. In the Fourteenth Century these basilicas were joined and in a sense the Cathedral was rebuilt. Excavations carried out during the 1930s revealed the remains of a Roman forum and other buildings. The Cathedral is adjacent to a castle of the same name. Walk on its ramparts for a great view of the city and its surroundings.
Other Trieste churches of interest include the Eleventh Century Roman-Gothic Basilica of San Silvestro constructed on the site of the oldest church in Trieste, the Seventeenth Century Church of Santa Maria Maggiore and the Chapel of Madonna della Salute (Madonna of Health) with a Seventeenth Century Sculpture that some believe to have saved Trieste from a cholera epidemic in 1849. This church is next door to the Protestant Church of Saint Sylvester.
There's one great characteristic that Trieste shares with other Italian cities; demolitions often unearth hidden treasures. For example in 1938 during a routine excavation the Teatro Romano (Roman Amphitheater) emerged from the rubble so to speak. This amphitheater is nestled in the middle of the central business district, near the foot San Giusti hill and is very well preserved. Make sure that you see the Arco di Riccardo (Arch of Richard), named for King Richard the Lionhearted. This Augustan gate built in the Roman walls approximately two thousand years ago is located in Trieste's old town.
Like other international historic cities, Trieste boasts a fine collection of museums. Here are some of them. The Civico Museo di Storia ed Arte (City Museum of History and Art) contains Egyptian, Greek, and Italian antiquities including art and artifacts from the Roman Amphitheater. Make sure to see the museum's Orto Lapidario (Lapidary Gardens.) The Civico Museo Revoltella e Galleria d'Arte Moderna (Revoltella City Museum and Modern Art Gallery) started with the personal collection of Baron Revoltella, one of the guys who constructed the Suez Canal (not with his own hands). It focuses on Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Italian artists. For a change of pace visit the Museo del Mare (Museum of the Sea), one of the best such museums in the Mediterranean.
The Castle of Miramar, about four miles (seven kilometers) northwest of Trieste is quite recent, dating from the 1850s. It was built for the Austrian Archduke Maximilian and his Belgian wife Charlotte and includes beautiful extensive gardens and a greenhouse featuring tropical plants and butterflies. The chapel includes a cross constructed from Novara, the flagship on which Maximilian set sail to become Emperor of Mexico.
Trieste is an international academic and research center. Its internationally-known institutions include the Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP), the International School for Advanced Studies also specializing in physics, the National Institute of Nuclear Physics, and the International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology.
The Gratta Gigante (Giant Cave) about 9 miles (15 kilometers) north of Trieste is the world's largest tourist cave. Its main room is over 160 feet (100 meters) high, almost three times as long, and about 100 feet (65 meters) wide. It's big enough to contain Saint Peter's Cathedral in Rome, the largest religious building in the world. The lighting of the cave's stalactites and stalagmites is spectacular. You'll find a Speleological Museum at the entrance to the cave. There are an estimated 1500 caves in the Trieste area.
Carso DOC is a red or white dry white wine raised in the small region between the Isonzo River and the city of Trieste on the Slovenian border. Carso is produced in a dozen styles, sometimes from international grape varieties and sometimes from local ones. Some parts of its growing area are subject to a vigorous winter, while others near the sea have a Mediterranean climate. Surprisingly enough these zones may be separated by only a few hundred meters. Look for the red Carso Terrano and the white Carso Malvasia.