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Thursday, December 18, 2014

Where to Spend Christmas in Italy and German

visiting Italy during the Christmas season offers two bonuses – you’ll avoid the high summer season tourist crowds, and you’ll get to see the country decked out in all its holiday finery.
December 25th isn’t the biggest holiday of the winter season in Italy (that’s Epiphany, in early January), but it’s still a great time to go – and you’ll find a festive atmosphere in every corner of the country. There are a few areas, however, that seem to take the holidays to another level.
Here are a few suggestions for where to spend Christmas in Italy.


Rome & Vatican City

Christmas in Rome
Christmas in Rome. Photo credit: Victoria Reay via Flickr.
Heading for Rome over Christmas is probably the most obvious choice, and with good reason. In addition to the festivities in Rome itself, you also have Vatican City’s celebrations – it’s like getting two cities’ worth of holiday in one spot.
At the Vatican, the Pope delivers a Christmas Eve midnight mass (book tickets well in advance if you want to sit in St. Peter’s), there’s a huge Christmas tree in St. Peter’s Square, and a life-sized Nativity scene in front of the basilica. In Rome, the Piazza del Popolo fills with over 100 Nativities, the Piazza Navona turns into a Christmas market, and Christmas Eve mass is held in historic churches throughout the city – including the Pantheon, where you’ll hear Gregorian chants.
Book a Rome Christmas Day Walking Tour and read more about Christmas in Rome and Vatican City

Venice

Christmas in Venice
Christmas ornaments in Murano. Photo credit: Juliette Gibert via Flickr.
While winter in Venice can be cold and damp, Christmas can also be a magical time to visit.
Even if you’re not lucky enough to witness snow falling on the canals and gondolas, Venetians know how to ward off the chill with hot spiced wine and other holiday treats, sold in the Christmas markets. No matter your age, you’re bound to be charmed by the figure of Father Christmas arriving by gondola to distribute goodies, and Christmas Eve mass held in St. Mark’s Basilica is enough to make any trip to Venice worth it.
Keep in mind that many restaurants and hotels do close in the winter, so do your homework beforehand to find out what will be open.
Read more about having a Venetian Christmas

Naples

Naples Christmas
Figurines on Via San Gregorio Armeno. Photo credit: acetosa888 via Flickr.
Naples is home to a street that can rightfully be called “Christmas Alley” year-round. This city is the epicenter of Italy’s Nativity scene tradition, and the shops along Via San Gregorio Armeno that make both the detailed structures and the myriad figurines that inhabit them work (and sell) all year long.
The figurines range from the expected (holy family and shepherds) to the regional (pizza makers) to the topical (current political or sports personalities). They come in all different sizes, including some that are more than a foot tall for larger Nativity scenes in shop windows and churches. It’s an interesting stop in any season, but kicked into high gear over the Christmas holidays it all makes a little more sense.

Sicily

Christmas in Sicily
Christmas in Sicily. Photo credit: Leandro Neumann Ciuffo 

For a location with loads of Italian Christmas traditions but (likely) much milder weather, head south to Sicily.
Second only to the Neapolitans in terms of their affection for the Nativity scene, Sicilians erect elaborate Nativities everywhere (from public squares to churches to private homes), including a living Nativity in a cave near Trapani – in other words, locals dress up and re-enact the Nativity daily from Christmas Eve through the Epiphany.
On Christmas Eve, you’ll also see big bonfires in many towns, and this is also the night that marks the start of the holiday feasting. It won’t be balmy enough to hang out on Sicily’s gorgeous beaches, but you’ll get all the festive atmosphere and avoid most of the cold, damp weather found on the mainland.

Trentino-Alto Adige

Trentino-Alto Adige
Trentino-Alto Adige at Christmastime. 

Germany is known worldwide for its fabulous Christmas markets, so it stands to reason that the heavily Germanic regions in northeast Italy would have inherited some of those traditions – and they have.
Spend Christmas in the Trentino-Alto Adige and you’ll have snowy winter scenery straight out of a postcard (the nearby Dolomites provide a pretty stunning backdrop) while you sip mulled wine in the market squares.
This area is also a good base if you want to take day-trips into Venice or Verona without staying in either one the whole time, or if your idea of the perfect Christmas vacation includes access to world-class skiing.
Read more about Christmas Markets in Italy

Abruzzo & Molise

Zampognari
Zampognari. 

Along with the Christmas markets and feasts that go along with the holidays throughout Italy, the Abruzzo and Molise regions are home to an older tradition you won’t find in the main tourist centers.
Nine days before Christmas, the bagpipe-playing zampognari come down from the hills into the towns (dressed in period costumes), symbolizing the shepherds who visited Jesus upon his birth. The added bonus of heading for these rural regions of central Italy is that you’re more likely to be sharing the holiday with other Italians rather than foreign visitors.

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