Ponte delle Tette (Bridge of the Tits), Venice
The name of this modest little crossing, the Bridge of the Tits, is entirely literal. You’re standing in what was once Venice’s officially sanctioned red-light district of San Cassiano, where public morality and public display were managed with the same bureaucratic enthusiasm as trade or taxes. The bridge earned its reputation because prostitutes were encouraged-quite openly-to bare their chests here, using visual persuasion to attract clients and, more pointedly, to redirect men suspected of preferring other men.
The Venetian Republic, never shy about regulation, took this policy seriously. Prostitutes were permitted to use lanterns after dark to illuminate their breasts, turning the bridge into a kind of state-approved advertising platform. At times, authorities even paid women to line up across the bridge, topless, ensuring there was no ambiguity about who was on offer-and conveniently excluding transvestite sex workers in the process. It was social engineering, Venetian-style: pragmatic, intrusive, and oddly methodical...
Prostitution itself had been legalized and confined to specific districts by the early sixteenth century, making Venice one of the first European cities to regulate sex work at a civic level. Within that system, the Bridge of the Tits became both a boundary and a stage, where desire, control, and spectacle intersected in full view.
And yes-Casanova knew this bridge well. For him, it was not just a shortcut but a hunting ground, part of a city where seduction unfolded in plain sight and temptation was woven into daily life. Here, Venice drops all pretense: pleasure was managed, morality negotiated, and even vice had office hours...
The Venetian Republic, never shy about regulation, took this policy seriously. Prostitutes were permitted to use lanterns after dark to illuminate their breasts, turning the bridge into a kind of state-approved advertising platform. At times, authorities even paid women to line up across the bridge, topless, ensuring there was no ambiguity about who was on offer-and conveniently excluding transvestite sex workers in the process. It was social engineering, Venetian-style: pragmatic, intrusive, and oddly methodical...
Prostitution itself had been legalized and confined to specific districts by the early sixteenth century, making Venice one of the first European cities to regulate sex work at a civic level. Within that system, the Bridge of the Tits became both a boundary and a stage, where desire, control, and spectacle intersected in full view.
And yes-Casanova knew this bridge well. For him, it was not just a shortcut but a hunting ground, part of a city where seduction unfolded in plain sight and temptation was woven into daily life. Here, Venice drops all pretense: pleasure was managed, morality negotiated, and even vice had office hours...
Want to visit this sight? Check out these Self-Guided Walking Tours in Venice. Alternatively, you can download the mobile app "GPSmyCity: Walks in 1K+ Cities" from Apple App Store or Google Play Store. The app turns your mobile device to a personal tour guide and it works offline, so no data plan is needed when traveling abroad.
Ponte delle Tette (Bridge of the Tits) on Map
Sight Name: Ponte delle Tette (Bridge of the Tits)
Sight Location: Venice, Italy (See walking tours in Venice)
Sight Type: Attraction/Landmark
Guide(s) Containing This Sight:
Sight Location: Venice, Italy (See walking tours in Venice)
Sight Type: Attraction/Landmark
Guide(s) Containing This Sight:
Walking Tours in Venice, Italy
Create Your Own Walk in Venice
Creating your own self-guided walk in Venice is easy and fun. Choose the city attractions that you want to see and a walk route map will be created just for you. You can even set your hotel as the start point of the walk.
Dorsoduro Walking Tour
One of the six districts of Venice, Dorsoduro’s name translates as “hard bridge” due to the area's relatively high terrain. Home to some of the city’s highest spots, it also comprises some of Venice’s most picturesque canals, historic locations and cultural venues, including the Basilica di Santa Maria della Salute; the Gallerie dell’ Academia & the Ca’ Rezzonico – both... view more
Tour Duration: 1 Hour(s)
Travel Distance: 2.1 Km or 1.3 Miles
Tour Duration: 1 Hour(s)
Travel Distance: 2.1 Km or 1.3 Miles
Casanova's Venice
Giacomo Casanova is usually introduced as history’s most famous seducer-but that shorthand misses the point. Casanova didn’t simply charm his way through life, but was shaped by a very particular moment in Venetian history. He came of age in the eighteenth century, when the Republic of Venice was living on its reputation. The great maritime empire was fading, its political and commercial power... view more
Tour Duration: 2 Hour(s)
Travel Distance: 4.5 Km or 2.8 Miles
Tour Duration: 2 Hour(s)
Travel Distance: 4.5 Km or 2.8 Miles
Around Rialto Bridge
The Rialto district represents the earliest urban and commercial core of Venice that has shaped the city’s identity for centuries. Long before grand palaces lined the canals or empires were managed from marble halls, this was the practical heart of the lagoon. Its name comes from Rivo Alto, meaning “high bank,” a rare patch of ground that stayed relatively dry and therefore attracted... view more
Tour Duration: 1 Hour(s)
Travel Distance: 0.4 Km or 0.2 Miles
Tour Duration: 1 Hour(s)
Travel Distance: 0.4 Km or 0.2 Miles
Venice's Hidden Art Treasures
Among the first things springing to mind when talking about Venice, apart from the canals and gondolas, of course, is Art and Architecture. Indeed, Venice is one of the few cities in the world where Art and Architecture have merged in a stunning multiplicity of forms. The city is even renowned for its unique (Venetian) pictorial school famed by the likes of Tintoretto, Titian, Veronese, Castagno... view more
Tour Duration: 2 Hour(s)
Travel Distance: 3.6 Km or 2.2 Miles
Tour Duration: 2 Hour(s)
Travel Distance: 3.6 Km or 2.2 Miles
Jewish Ghetto Tour
Founded in 1516, the Jewish Ghetto of Venice earns its grim little footnote in European history as the first place officially designated as a “ghetto.” It began as a Venetian compromise with sharp edges: the Papacy urged to expel the Jews, while Venice-never one to waste a useful population-chose to confine them to a small island.
The word “ghetto” comes with competing origin stories.... view more
Tour Duration: 1 Hour(s)
Travel Distance: 0.4 Km or 0.2 Miles
The word “ghetto” comes with competing origin stories.... view more
Tour Duration: 1 Hour(s)
Travel Distance: 0.4 Km or 0.2 Miles
Venice Introduction Walking Tour
Venice is a city that learned early how to live with water-and, ultimately, how to profit from it. Built across hundreds of small islands in a shallow lagoon in the northern Adriatic, it runs without roads, relying solely on canals and bridges. Although the lagoon itself formed thousands of years ago, it was inhabited mainly by fishermen up until the 5th century AD, when waves of barbarian... view more
Tour Duration: 3 Hour(s)
Travel Distance: 4.1 Km or 2.5 Miles
Tour Duration: 3 Hour(s)
Travel Distance: 4.1 Km or 2.5 Miles
Useful Travel Guides for Planning Your Trip
15 Distinctively Italian Things to Buy in Venice
Venice has been a tourist mecca for over a century now, with millions of visitors flocking in every year to see this unique place on the face of the Earth. Many, if not all, of these people seek to obtain something memorable as a token of their stay in this city. By far, not all of them know which...









