Verona Train Station Rental Car with Hire Car Italy - Your best source for great value Car Rental in Italy!
We offer you 2 quotation engines to allow you to get the best price for your Hire Car in Italy. Just choose which one you want, and compare prices. Both of our engines offer many locations around Italy, and a full fleet of cars is available for hire, from 3 door economy models all the way up to Executive Sedans. We deal only with major, quality-assured hire car companies including Alamo, Budget, Europcar, National, Sixt and Thrifty.

We have 2 Verona Train Station Rental Car with Hire Car Italy Booking Systems for you to choose from! This will allow you to compare prices and choose the best deal! Simply Click the button for Engine #1 or Engine #2, and see which gives you the best deal!

PLEASE NOTE!
The rates shown are the special internet rates for self booking. There are no discounts available if you phone - you should use the booking form.
All Terms and Conditions, and inclusions are detailed in the engine - generate a quote, and you will be shown the details.
48 Hours Notice is REQUIRED for all bookings. We cannot book cars with less notice, or on the day. We at Hire Car Italy look forward to providing for all your car hire needs. We pride ourselves on an excellent level of service at a very competitive price. With a large variety of cars and locations to choose from, Hire Car Italy is an ideal choice for affordable car hire whether you are renting for business or pleasure. Our online services are quick and easy to use and will provide you with the best value Hire Car quotes from our suppliers. We have negotiated the best online prices from our suppliers.
To help you enjoy your hire car holiday we have some details about this area of Italy below and general Italian driving information is available on our Hire Car Italy Travel Information page.
Verona (population est. 260,000) is an ancient town, episcopal see and province in the Veneto, Northern Italy. The ancient town, and the centre of the modern city, is situated in a loop of the Adige River near Lake Garda. Verona was supposedly founded by Etruscans or by the Eugaei or Raeti tribes, but the first historical records are from the 4th century BC. It became a notable political and commercial center during Roman times. Verona was flooded in 1239 and largely rebuilt. The city reached the pinnacle of its political influence during the 14th century as the seat of power of the della Scala family (also known as the Scaligeri). Verona is famous for its Roman amphitheatre, the Arena where opera is now performed in the summer months. The Arena (whose shape and use immediately recall the Roman Colosseum) was built in the mid-1st century AD on a site which at the time was outside the city walls. The ludi (shows and games) played in it were so famous that spectators came to Verona for them from many other (sometimes very distant) places. The amphitheatre could host more than 30,000 spectators, and the most requested events were gladiators' fights (against lions too). The round façade was originally in white and pink limestone from Valpolicella, but during the Middle Ages the Arena was used as a sort of quarry for other buildings. The first interventions to recover its functionality as a theatre were started during the Renaissance. But other Roman monuments too are in the town, like the Roman theatre, built in the 1st century BC and retrieved in the 18th century thanks to Andrea Monga, a wealthy Veronese who bought all the houses that in time had been built over the theatre, demolished them and saved the monument. Verona hosts indeed one of the richest collections of Roman remains of all Northern Italy. The Arco dei Gavi (Gavi Arch), dedicated to the important Roman family of the Gavii, was built in the same 1st century AD, and is famous for having the name of the builder (architect Lucius Vitruvius Cordone) engraved on it, a really rare case in the architecture of the epoque. It had been demolished by the French troops in 1805 and was rebuilt in 1932.
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