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1788 – 1824: Living in exile in Venice, the disgraced Lord Byron revels in the freedoms of the city
1788 – 1824: Living in exile in Venice, the disgraced Lord Byron revels in the freedoms of the city
Living in exile in Venice, the disgraced Lord Byron revels in the freedoms of the city
But when he is associated with the deaths of local women, found with wounds to their throats, and then a novel called The Vampyre is published under his name, rumours begin to spread that Byron may be the murderer…
As events escalate and tensions rise – and his own life is endangered, as well as those he holds most dear – Byron is forced to play detective, to discover who is really behind these heinous crimes. Meanwhile, the scandals of his own infamous past come back to haunt him…
Venice
Rich in gothic atmosphere and drawing on real events and characters from Byron’s life
Mary Shelley and Polidori
Mary Shelley produced what would become Frankenstein and Polidori produced The Vampyre, The Vampyre was inspired by a fragmentary story of Byron, “A Fragment”.
Byron and San Lazzaro degli Armeni in Venice,
In 1816, Byron visited San Lazzaro degli Armeni in Venice, where he acquainted himself with Armenian culture with the help of the monks belonging to the Mechitarist Order. This is the place in Venice most associated with Byron and its where he lived with a small community of monks. He learned Armenian here and participated in the publication of an English-Armenian dictionary.
Bridge of Sighs
This is the bridge which connects DogesPalace to the prisons. Whilst crossing the bridge he invented the name that made it famous all over the world, the bridge of Sighs, because of the sighs that those condemned would release on seeing Venice and freedom for the last time.
Destination/location: Venice, Island of San Lazzaro degli Armeni Author/guide: Essie Fox Departure Time: 1788 – 1824
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