Many places recall the presence of Giuseppe Tartini and these represent ideal spaces to stop and listen to his music, or to discover the secrets of the musical instruments and history of his time.
Piran has opened his birthplace to the public, which has become a modern museum and study centre, and named its main square after him and in which the visitor makes their way around his statue. Padua has dedicated one of the monuments that embellish the ellipse of Prato della Valle to him while Trieste named its Conservatory of Music after him, in which precious Tartini artifacts are preserved. But in these cities there are also other evocative places in which the visitor can stop in the quiet to listen to the compositions of the musician of Piran or his students including the Botanical Garden of Padua, on the waterfront in Trieste, or in the Church of San Giorgio in Piran itself.
Along this path we also outline visits to important places for musical culture such as museums dedicated to the history of musical instruments as well as academies and music schools where their secrets can be discovered.
The stages of this and the other two routes lie both in Italy and in Slovenia.