The Museo Nazionale del Bargello, housed in a fortified 13th-century palace near Florenceโs Duomo, is one of Italyโs premier museums for Renaissance sculpture and decorative arts. Its courtyard and austere medieval architecture set a dramatic stage for an exceptional collection that includes masterpieces by Donatello (such as the celebrated bronze David), Michelangeloโs early sculptures and … Continue reading Museo Nazionale del Bargello
Category: Italy
Museo di Palazzo Davanzati
The Museo di Palazzo Davanzati occupies a medievalโRenaissance townhouse in Florence from the 14th century, reassembled and restored in the early 20th century to recreate a noble Florentine residence. Its faรงade and internal layoutโcourtyard, grand salon, private rooms, and service areasโshowcase period features like painted wooden ceilings, carved doorways, and an intimate scale unlike grand … Continue reading Museo di Palazzo Davanzati
Casa Buonarroti
Casa Buonarroti is a historic house-museum in Florence preserving the legacy of Michelangelo through the Buonarroti familyโs collections and early works. Housed in a 17th-century palazzo acquired by Michelangeloโs great-nephews, the museum showcases sculptural fragments and studies by the young Michelangelo alongside portraits, family archives, and furnishings. The rooms retain frescoed ceilings, period furniture, and … Continue reading Casa Buonarroti
Museo degli Innocenti
The Museo degli Innocenti sits within the historic Ospedale degli Innocenti complex in Florence, a seminal example of early Renaissance civic architecture designed by Filippo Brunelleschi in the early 15th century. Originally founded as a foundling hospital (ospedale) for abandoned children, the buildingโs graceful loggia with its repeating semicircular arches embodies Renaissance ideals of order … Continue reading Museo degli Innocenti
Basilica di San Lorenzo
The Basilica di San Lorenzo is one of Florenceโs oldest churches, originally founded in the 4th century and rebuilt in the 15th century as the parish church of the powerful Medici family; Filippo Brunelleschi and later designs by Michelangelo shaped its sober, unfinished faรงade and its Renaissance interior with a clear, columned nave and austere … Continue reading Basilica di San Lorenzo
Basilica di Santa Maria Novella
The Basilica of Santa Maria Novella in Florence is a landmark Dominican church whose current Gothic structure dates mainly from the 13thโ14th centuries. It features a striking marble faรงade completed in the 15th century by Leon Battista Alberti that harmonizes green and white Tuscan marble with classical proportions; inside, a spacious nave with pointed arches … Continue reading Basilica di Santa Maria Novella
Cappella Brancacci
The Cappella Brancacci, inside the Church of Santa Maria del Carmine in Florenceโs Oltrarno, is celebrated for its early Renaissance fresco cycle by Masaccio and Masolino (with later additions by Filippino Lippi). Painted mainly in the 1420s, the frescoesโespecially Masaccioโs scenes like the Tribute Money and the Expulsion of Adam and Eveโare landmark works for … Continue reading Cappella Brancacci
Battistero di San Giovanni
The Battistero di San Giovanni (Florence Baptistery) is an octagonal, Romanesque landmark standing before the cathedral with origins in the early medieval periodโits present form dates largely to the 11thโ12th centuries. Clad in white and green marble like the Duomo, the exterior is notable for its geometric marble patterns and three richly decorated bronze door … Continue reading Battistero di San Giovanni
Chiesa di Santa Maria Maggiore
Santa Maria Maggiore is a historic parish church in Florence, with medieval origins that were reshaped by Renaissance and later restorationsโits plain exterior gives way to an interior rich in layered history and devotional art. The nave and chapels contain works spanning several centuries, from fresco fragments and altarpieces to funerary monuments, reflecting the churchโs … Continue reading Chiesa di Santa Maria Maggiore
Basilica di Santa Croce
The Basilica of Santa Croce is Florenceโs principal Franciscan church, founded in the late 13th century, construction began in 1294 under Arnolfo di Cambio and continued through the 14th century, giving the building its expansive Gothic nave and chapels. Its striking white-and-green marble faรงade is a 19th-century neo-Gothic restoration that overlays the medieval structure. Santa … Continue reading Basilica di Santa Croce
You must be logged in to post a comment.