(1849–1887) In
Venice the Campo Santo Stefano was a grass area for many centuries, apart from the stone
liston. This was the place where Venetians would stroll and meet, and the term for "take a walk" in the Venetian dialect is still
andare al liston. Later the term
liston was used for the
Piazza San Marco, described as "the general
rendezvous of the promenaders and ... the fashionable lounge of Venice". Writing of 18th century Venice, Giovanni Rossi (1776–1852) describes the
liston in the fashionable area near the
San Stefano Church. During the carnival young nobles strutted there like peacocks wearing tabàro capes and the "most civilized mask", the baùta. Although the common people could walk there, according to Rossi, "their education was such that commoners left the nobles their space in liberty."
Giacomo Favretto depicted
El Liston in 1884, showing figures in elegant costumes walking and meeting in the heart of Venice. ==Belluno==