portego

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See also: pòrtego

English[edit]

The portego of Palazzo Morosini Sagredo terminates with the monumental staircase designed by Andrea Tirali.

Etymology[edit]

From Venetian pòrtego. Doublet of porch, portico, and porticus.

Noun[edit]

portego (plural portegos)

  1. A characteristic compositional element of the Venetian civil buildings built during the years of the Republic of Venice, similar to a reception hall but having peculiar features.
    • 1895, [Theodor] Gsell-Fels, translated by J. Albert Swallow, Venice (Bruckmann’s Illustrated Guides; 2–5), Munich: A. Bruckmann, [], page 12:
      The arrangement of the middle windows is a transferring, as it were, of the mediæval portegos into the artistic conditions of the Renaissance.
    • 1998, Jonathan Buckley, Hilary Robinson, The Rough Guide to Venice, Rough Guides, →ISBN, page 114:
      In the portego of the second floor are the only two canal views by Canaletto on show in public galleries in Venice.
    • 2002, Paula Weideger, Venetian Dreaming, New York, N.Y.: Washington Square Press, Atria Books, →ISBN, page 146:
      Gilded console tables were set against the long, side walls of the portego.

Further reading[edit]

Italian[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Venetian pòrtego. Doublet of portico.

Noun[edit]

portego m (plural porteghi)

  1. (Venice) porch; entrance hall

Derived terms[edit]