Pellestrina
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2009) |
Native name: Pellestrina | |
---|---|
Geography | |
Location | Italy |
Coordinates | 45°16′24″N 12°18′04″E / 45.27333°N 12.30111°E |
Archipelago | Venetian Lagoon |
Length | 12 km (7.5 mi) |
Width | 5–500 m (16–1,640 ft) |
Administration | |
Italy | |
Region | Veneto |
Province | Province of Venice |
Largest settlement | Pellestrina |
Demographics | |
Population | About 5000 |
Pellestrina is an
The island is 11 kilometres (7 miles) long and has since the eighteenth century been bounded to its seaward side by large
The main industries of the island are
In fiction
Donna Leon's crime fiction novel A Sea of Troubles (2001)[2] takes place on Pellestrina. The protagonist, Commissario Guido Brunetti of the Venice police, must solve the murders of two clam fishermen off the shore of Pellestrina and encounters great difficulty conducting an investigation when faced with the island's close-knit community, bound together by a code of loyalty and a suspicion of outsiders. Though a native of Venice, which is a short boat ride away, to the islanders he is a foreigner.
Cenzo Vianelli, the hero of The Girl from Venice (2016), a novel written by Martin Cruz Smith, lives and works as a fisherman in Pellestrina in 1945.
Gallery
-
View of the wall
-
Pellestrina view from the boat dock
-
Aerial view of a part of the island
-
Landing stage of Santa Maria del Mare (Pellestrina) seen from the ferry leaving for the Lido
-
The Casa dell'Ospitalità at the northern point of Pellestrina Island
See also
References
- ^ "Nature: Alberoni Dunes and Ca' Roman". Venice and Its Lagoon. 12 July 2016.
- ^ Jakubowski, Maxim (May 4, 2001). "Reviews: Crime Fiction: Big in Crime". The Guardian.