Arena di Verona

Arena di Verona
Arena di Verona · via Wikimedia Commons

Arena di Verona

The Arena di Verona is a Roman amphitheatre in the heart of Verona, completed around AD 30 and among the best-preserved Roman structures in the world. Capable of seating approximately 22,000 spectators, it is today the setting for one of the world’s largest open-air opera festivals, held every summer since 1913.

History

Built during the reign of Emperor Augustus, the Arena originally hosted gladiatorial combat and public spectacles. Its elliptical form — 138 by 109 metres — and four-storey exterior arcade (of which only a fragment survives, the so-called Ala) place it in the same tradition as the Colosseum in Rome, though the Verona structure predates it. After centuries of use for public executions and medieval tournaments, the Arena was repurposed for opera in 1913, when Aida was staged to mark the centenary of Giuseppe Verdi’s birth.

What to See

The interior preserves 44 tiers of pink and white limestone seating, almost entirely original. The stage area is vast: summer opera productions use full-scale scenography, including live elephants for Aida. The exterior Ala fragment, two arches of the original outer wall, stands as a symbol of Verona in the Piazza Bra. The Roman Theatre Museum across the river Adige offers additional context for Verona’s classical heritage.

Getting There

Verona is on the Milan–Venice high-speed rail line (45 min from Milan, 1h from Venice). The Arena stands on Piazza Bra, 10 minutes’ walk from Verona Porta Nuova station. Opera tickets must be booked well in advance for summer performances; the amphitheatre is also open for daytime visits outside the opera season.

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