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Esame - Simulazione

Be a Tour Guide

Listen to the Guide

Duration: 43.28 - Narrated in English

Becoming a Professional Guide in Italy

In Italy, the profession of Guida Turistica is regulated by law. It is not enough to love history; you must prove to the State that you are a qualified custodian of the national heritage.

1. The Legal Requirements

To sit for the national exam, you must generally meet these criteria:

  • Academic Degree: A three-year bachelor’s degree (Laurea) is mandatory. While degrees in Art History, Archaeology, or Languages are preferred, the requirement is often general, depending on the specific regional call (Bando).
  • Language Proficiency: You must demonstrate a C1 level (Common European Framework) in at least one foreign language and a native-level command of Italian.
  • Clean Record: Full civil and political rights and a clean criminal record.

2. The Examination Process

Exams are organized periodically by Regional authorities but grant a license valid throughout Italy. The exam usually consists of three phases:

Phase A: The Written Exam

A grueling series of multiple-choice and open-ended questions covering:

  • Art History & Archaeology: From the Etruscans to Contemporary Art.
  • Geography: Not just “where things are,” but the “Geography of Tourism”—infrastructure, protected parks, and climate.
  • Legislation: Knowledge of the laws governing cultural heritage (Codice dei Beni Culturali) and tourist protection.

Phase B: The Oral Exam

A face-to-face interview with a commission of university professors and art historians. They will test your ability to synthesize complex topics and your fluency in your chosen foreign languages.

Phase C: The Practical Simulation

The “Site Test.” You are taken to a monument or museum and asked to perform a 20-minute guided tour for the commission. They often play the role of “difficult tourists” to test your problem-solving and communication skills.

3. The “Deep Knowledge”: What a Guide Truly Is

In Italy, being a guide is about more than reciting dates. To be successful, your knowledge must go four layers deep:

  • The Horizontal Layer (Context): You must understand what was happening in France or China when a certain palace was built in Rome. History is a web, not a line.
  • The Vertical Layer (Stratigraphy): You must be able to explain why a Baroque church sits on top of a 4th-century crypt, which sits on top of a Roman house.
  • The Narrative Layer (Storytelling): You are a bridge. You must translate the “dry” academic facts into human emotions. You don’t just talk about the size of the Colosseum; you talk about the smell of the sand and the politics of the “Bread and Circuses.”
  • The Technical Layer: You must know where the clean toilets are, which museum entrances have the shortest lines at 2:00 PM, and which cobbler in Florence can still fix a broken heel on the spot.

Tourist Guide Pro Tips

Villa Quintili e S. Maria Nova

lazio

Palazzo Giustiniani

lazio

Pantheon

lazio

Luni

liguria

Crespi D'Adda

lombardia

Urbs Salvia

marche

Castel del Monte

puglia

Area Archeologica Roselle

toscana

Pienza

toscana

Galleria degli Uffizi

toscana

Necropoli del Crocifisso

umbria

Area Archeologica Altino

veneto

Orto Botanico Padova

veneto

Villa Pisani

veneto

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