Grand Canal with Santa Maria della Salute Basilica, Venice, Italy (© RudyBalasko/Getty Images)
Don your tricorn hat and gilded disguise, it's time to visit the Carnival of Venice, a centuries-old festival shrouded in mystique and beauty. This annual winter celebration combines revelry with anonymity, thanks to masks that often follow certain character archetypes such as the bauta, volto, Colombina and Zanni—the last two are borrowed from Italian commedia theatre. Over the course of the festivities, thousands of people take to the streets in elaborate costumes that imitate traditional 17th-century Venetian clothes. There are parades, parties and processions galore during the carnival, along with concerts and street performances, all of which last until Shrove Tuesday, which falls on February 13 this year. While revelling in the streets, you might pass by the Santa Maria della Salute, seen towards the back of today's image, a baroque basilica dedicated to the Virgin Mary, who was considered to be the protector of the Republic of Venice.