+ Villa Barbarigo at Valsanzibio “The small Versailles”, “The Pearl of the Euganee Hills” The Monumental Garden of Valsanzibio–Villa Barbarigo Pizzoni Ardemani.
+ Villa dei Vescovi at Luvigliano Harmoniously incorporated into a hilly setting, it stands as a perfect union between Renaissance elegance and Roman classicism.
+ Catajo Castle at Battaglia Terme The Catajo Castle was built between 1570 and 1573, at the foot of Montenuovo, at the behest of the leader of the Republic of Venice Pius Aeneas I degli Obizzi.
+ San Pelagio Castle at Due Carrare The San Pelagio Castle is also called Villa Zaborra after the Earls of Zaborra who have owned it since the 1700s.
+ Villa Papafava at Frassanelle The Villa is located in an ancient place which has, since the 13° century, belonged to the Counts Papafava Antonini dei Carraresi, descendents of the illustrious family of Da Carrara.
+ Venetian Villas Play of light, contrasting facades, lawns, groves and gardens blend into the surrounding countryside to create natural settings. Discover the renowned Venetian Villas...
+ Villa Draghi at Montegrotto Terme Along with its neo-Gothic style and the great romantic park, it represents the ultimate testimony to the civilization of the Venetian villa.
+ Villa Contarini at Piazzola sul Brenta Villa Contarini stands on the ruins of an ancient castle built by the Dente family around the year 1000.
+ Casa del Petrarca at Arquà Petrarca Petrarca's House, where the famous poet Francesco Petrarca lived.
+ Villa Mocenigo Randi at Gorgo Work building the Villa Mocenigo Randi began in 1500, by the Mocenigo family on a flat area near to Padua, along the Cagnola canal.
+ Casa Strozzi at Arquà Petrarca Casa Strozzi, which used to belong to the Florentine Strozzi family, is now an art gallery.
+ Villa Alessi at Arquà Petrarca In the eighteenth century this was the summer holiday residence of the bishops of Padua (like Gregorio Barbarigo and Benedetto XIII).
+ Villa Pacchierotti at Limena Erected in the 17th century on the area of ancient stronghold, Villa Pacchierotti Trieste De Benedetti is characterized by a rather unusal facade with a pronao arranged in three tiers.
+ Villa Emo at Rivella The sixteenth century Villa Emo, attributed to Vincenzo Scamozzi, stands at the foot of the Euganean Hills not far from Monselice.
+ Villa Da Rio Soranzo at Rovolon The Villa da Rio Soranzo, today Schiavinato, is from the XVI century. It is a grand building located in a position with a beautiful view overlooking the northern part of the slope.
+ Villa Barbaro at Rovolon Villa Barbaro, today completely rebuilt after a fire, apart from the oratory later added in 1757, is located in Via Ca’ Marchesa at Rovolon, on the provincial road that leads to Nanto.
+ Villa La Civrana at Galzignano Terme Villa Civrana is a simple square building next to a little church. Inside it has a spiral staircase in the Palladian style and paintings of the 17th century.
+ Villa Callas at Montegrotto Terme Villa Meneghini, also known as Villa Callas, as GiovanBattista Meneghini, the owner in the mid 1900s, was also married to Maria Callas.
+ Villa Trevisan Savioli at Abano Terme Villa Trevisan Savioli at Abano Terme, built in the 17th century and extended in the following centuries, houses the extraordinary Amleto e Donato Sartori International Mask Museum.
+ Villa Cornaro at Piombino Dese This piece of architecture marks a quality leap of Palladio’s clients...
+ Villa Pisani at Montagnana The Villa Pisani lies in the countryside of the Medieval village Montagnana, not far from the border between the provinces of Verona (50 km), Vicenza (40 km) and Padua (45 km).
+ Villa Mocenigo Mainardi at Abano Terme Villa Mocenigo Mainardi: this complex, where Giacomo Casanova also resided in 1779, includes a small oratory facing over the road.
+ Villa Foscolo at Abano Terme Villa Foscolo (also known as the “Cittadella Vigodarzere”), at Feriole, known to have hosted Ugo Foscolo when he was writing “The last letters of Jacopo Ortis” (1796).
+ Villa Selvatico Treves at Abano Terme Villa Selvatico Treves, built in the 16th century but completely renovated in the 19th century in line with the rules of architectural Eclecticism.
+ Villa Sette at Abano Terme Villa Sette (late 17th century with some early 19th century modifications).
+ Villa Beatrice d’Este at Baone Villa Beatrice d'Este stands on Mount Gemola, in the heart of the Euganean hills, on the remains of an ancient Benedictine monastery.
+ Villa Contarini Giovanelli Venier at Vo’ Vecchio Villa Contarini Giovanelli Venier is set in the center of the borough of Vo’ Vecchio, the ancient municipal seat, that later became a hamlet of the municipality of Vo’ Euganeo.
+ Villa Bembiana at Abano Terme The villa was home to the poet, historian and philologist Pietro Bembo (15th – 16th century).
+ Villa Gussoni Verson at Torreglia Also known as the “Tauriliano”, it embodies the place of inspiration for the famous man of letters Giuseppe Barbieri.
+ Villa Pollini at Luvigliano Villa Pollini si trova nel borgo di Luvigliano, frazione di Torreglia, e prende il nome dal suo primo illustre proprietario, il pianista Cesare Pollini (1858-1912).
+ Villa Tolomei at Torreglia Villa Tolomei is set on the top of hill Mirabello, a hummock halfway between the center of Torreglia and the hamlet of Luvigliano.
+ Villa Pisani at Vescovana Villa Pisani was erected in the first half of the 1500s, commissioned by Cardinal Francesco Pisani, Venetian patrician, bishop of Padova.
+ Villa Nani Loredan at Sant’Urbano Villa Nani Loredan was built in the late sixteenth century by the family Nani, since nell'Estimo of 1666 appears for three-quarters of Bernardo Nani for a quarter of Francesco Loredan.
+ Villa Rova at Arquà Petrarca This fifteenth-century villa once belonged to the Pisani family and resembles the architectural style of Villa Pisani in Strà.
+ Villa Ca’ Marcello at Levada The area where Villa Ca' Marcello stands just outside Levada was known back in 1400 for the enormous woods and swamps around the Sile, Dese and Zero Rivers.
+ Villa Baglioni at Massanzago The land estates of the Venetian family Lombardo in Massanzago were extended in 1672, when Alvise Lombardo bought some adjacent land to build a larger residence.
+ Villa Vigna Contarena at Este Back in the 16th century, the Contarini family owned various properties standing in an isolated position near to the centre of Este.
+ Villa Valmarana at Saonara On the southern borders of Saonara, on the lower Padua plain, the Cittadella Vigodarzere complex (now Villa Valmarana) stands.
+ Villa Emo Capodilista at La Montecchia The origins of the 16th century villa that dominates the plain around Montecchia from the top of a hill and all its outbuildings are very old.
+ Villa Giovanelli at Noventa Padovana The villa was perhaps designed by Antonio Gaspari, student of Baldassare Longhena, and was ordered by the brothers Giovanelli around the last quarter of the 17th century.
+ Villa Miari De Cumani at Sant’Elena The De Cumani family is recorded in SantElena way back in time and was closely tied to local history, where, back in 1300 a large residence stood.
+ Villa Molin at Mandria The site chosen by the Venetian Ambassador, Nicolò Molin at the end of the 18th century for his villa is just a short way from Padua, along the banks of the Battaglia Canal.
+ Villa Duodo at Monselice Villa Duodo stands halfway up Rocca di Monselice hill, where the old Castle of St. George used to stand, one of the lower defences in the fortification system of the fortress.
+ Villa Grimani Valmarana at Noventa Padovana The villa was recently renovated, which recovered part of the frescoes and the oldest foundation walls.
+ Villa Da Ponte at Cadoneghe Villa da Ponte (now Vergerio) within Cadoneghe takes its name from the Venetian noble family which already since 1600 possessed vast tenements.
+ Villa Ruzzini at Villanova A noble home in the old Roman town of Villanova was recorded back in the late 16th century.
+ Villa Selvatico at Codiverno Like any typical Venetian palazzo, the ground floor and piano nobile are both run through by a long passing hall with a wooden ceiling.
+ Villa Sceriman at Boccon Unlike the majority of villas with double façades over the road and the garden (and perhaps due to the original layout of the site and its connecting roads).
+ Villa Widmann Borletti at Bagnoli di Sopra The year after, Bagnoli was bought by the rich Widmann family who thus were elevated to the ranks of Venetian nobles.
+ Villa Rana at Loreggia This was the home of the Da Mosto noble family built in the late sixteenth century.
+ Villa Querini at Camposampiero Villa from the 1500s, today the home of the Federation of Municipalities of the Camposampiere area.
+ Villa Egizia at Battaglia Terme The Villa Egizia, built during the seventeenth Century, belonged during the centuries to various families of the Venetian aristocracy.
+ Villa Priuli Fogazzaro Maruffa at Lovolo Villa Priuli Fogazzaro Maruffa is an elegant building of the end of the 1600s, with an interesting façade with an arc at the entrance and two rows of overlapping porticos.
+ Villa Ottavia at Rovolon A large imposing villa with an arcade on the first floor, with a loggia of six light columns from which five full scale arcs are formed.
+ Villa Erizzo at Abano Terme Villa Erizzo, dating back to the late 18th century, is located in the Euganean Hills, a renowned spa area, just 15 km from the centre of Padua.
+ Villa Albrizzi at Este Villa Albrizzi is a spectacular villa that dates back to 1666. Situated in a historic and picturesque town in the foothills of Veneto, not far from Venice, it has remained in the hands o
+ Villa Serenella at Montemerlo The complex, whose articulated conformation affected by continuous interventions succeeded over the centuries, is located at the southern foot of Montemrlo.
+ Villa Bassi Rathgeb at Abano Terme Villa Bassi Rathgeb, built in the 16th century and restored in the 1700s, belonged to the noble family Dondi dell’Orologio.
+ Villa Rigoni Savioli at Abano Terme Villa Rigoni Savioli (ex Malipiero) is a beautiful Palladian villa built in the 16th century.
+ Villa Ca’ Conti at Granze Villa Ca' Conti at Granze is an historical complex dating back to the 16th century.
+ Villa Breda at Ponte di Brenta The Villa Breda at Ponte di Brenta was bought by Vincenzo Stefano Breda, a trader from Padua, in 1859.
+ Villa Valcorba Duse Masin at Stroppare Villa Valcorba Duse Masin is a 19th-century Venetian Villa that has always been owned by the Duse Masin Counts.
+ Villa Dolfin at Due Carrare Villa Dolfin – Dal Martello, known as La Mincana, is a 16th century Venetian villa situated in Due Carrare, in the province of Padua.
+ Villa Foscarini Rossi at Stra The 17th century Villa Foscarini Rossi is situated in the small town of Stra, alongside the Brenta Riviera, which runs from Venice to nearby Padua.