Pisa trip planner

A vacation guide to Pisa—the Leaning Tower, the Field of Miracles, and more

Pisa information
Pisa tourist information office
Most convenient location:
Piazza Arcivescovado 8 (in the Museo del Duomo, just behind the Leaning Tower)
tel. +39-334-641-9408

Main location:
Piazza Vittorio Emanuele II 16 (two blocks north of the main train station)
tel. +39-050-42-291

Other locations:
• At the aiport
• Near Ponte di Mezzo (Lungarno Galilei at Piazza XX Settembre)

www.pisaunicaterra.it
www.pisaturismo.it






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The Leaning Tower of Pisa
The Leaning Tower of Pisa (with the Cathedral behind it).
When Pisa was a world trading power riding high on its maritime empire in the 11th to 13th centuries, it used its wealth to commission a new religious core for the city.

This Campo dei Miracoli, or "Field of Miracles," is a collection of marble-clad buildings beautiful in their simplicity and crafted in a Eastern-influenced style that became known as the Pisan Romanesque.

The fact that the campanile, or bell tower, of this group is a little off kilter attracts hordes of the curious to Pisa all year to pose for snapshots of them holding up the Leaning Tower.

Pisa's Field of Miracles

Pisa's Campo dei Miracoli, or "Field of Miracles" (aka the Piazza del Duomo).
Pisa's Campo dei Miracoli, or "Field of Miracles" (aka the Piazza del Duomo).
The Campo dei Miracoli, a huge grassy lawn studded with gleaming white-and-gray striped Romanesque and Gothic buildings, is one of the most beautiful squares in all of Italy.

It would likely be famous for the sheer beauty of its structures even if the soft, sandy subsoil hasn't given most of its buildings a jaunty, drunken tilt— the cathedral facade leans out, the baptistery lurches quietly to one side, and there's one more thing I'm forgetting... Ah, yes the bell tower slants a full 15 feet out of vertical (you may have seen a reproduction of it on a pizza delivery box).

For info on all of these sights (and to book an entry time for the Leaning Tower at least two weeks in advance—which I highly recommend): www.opapisa.it.

Here is more detailed information on and descriptions of the major sights around the square:

La Torre Pendente★★★ The Leaning Tower of Pisa - The cathedral bell tower would draw crowds even if it didn't have such horrible posture. Its long cylinder of white marble threaded with the lithe arches of stacked colonnades make it one of the prettiest towers you'll ever see—albeit one titling crazily out of plumb. The climb up is odd and thrilling... » more

The Pisa Duomo★★ The Cattedrale - Pisa's cathedral is a massive Romanesque structure with blind arcades running down the side and a facade of stacked colonnades with mosaics by Cimabue and a pulpit by Giovanni Pisano inside... » more

The Pisa baptistery★★ The Battistero - If you liked the Pisano pulpit in the Duomo, check out the one his pop Nicola Pisano sculpted in 1255-60 in the baptistery, a massive drum-like structure with a Gothic skullcap of a roof and brilliant acoustics inside... » more

Il Camposanto di Pisa The Camposanto - Pisa's "Holy Ground" is a kind of cloister-cum-mausoleum whose halls are stuffed with ancient sarcophagi and Renaissance tombs. Allied firebombs in World War II destroyed most of the dazzling medieval frescoes that once covered the walls, but they have slowly and painstaking been being restored as best they can and reattached to the walls... » more

PIsa's Museo delle Sinopie Museo delle Sinopie - Across the square from the Camposanto, the Museo delle Sinopie contains the sinopie, or preparatory drawings, of the Camposanto's destroyed frescoes. It's actually pretty fascinating (especially when you compare the intended sketches with reproduced etchings of what the finished frescoes looked like)... » more

Pisa's Museo del DuomoMuseo dell'Opera del Duomo - Behind the Leaning Tower is a small museum containing many of the statues and other works removed from the outside surfaces of the Duomo group for safekeeping, among them the original Romanesque bronze doors from the cathedral and an 11th-century Islamic bronze griffin, part of Pisan war booty during the Crusades. There are also lovely views of the Leaning Tower beyond the grassy little courtyard framed by tall cypress trees... » more

Planning a trip to Pisa

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This material was last updated February 2011. All information was accurate at the time.

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