Lisbon Military Museum

Piazza delle Erbe

Piazza delle Erbe is Verona’s oldest square and its liveliest market hub, where history and everyday life mingle amid colorful stalls and elegant buildings. By day it buzzes with vendors selling everything from fresh produce and spices to souvenirs and handmade goods, while cafés and bars under the arcades offer shady spots to sit and … Continue reading Piazza delle Erbe

Lisbon Military Museum

Chiesa di San Nicolò all’Arena

Chiesa di San Nicolò all’Arena sits just a short walk from the Arena, its brick bell tower and simple façade giving it a quiet presence amid the surrounding streets. Inside, the space is bright and airy—Baroque and neoclassical touches mix with plain surfaces so the overall feel is unpretentious and welcoming rather than overly ornate. … Continue reading Chiesa di San Nicolò all’Arena

Lisbon Military Museum

Galleria degli Uffizi

The Uffizi Galleries are Florence’s art heavyweight — a long, elegant gallery lining the Arno and packed wall-to-wall with masterpieces from the Middle Ages through the Renaissance. Wander from room to room and you’ll pass Botticelli’s ethereal Birth of Venus and Primavera, Leonardo da Vinci’s early works, Titian’s sumptuous portraits, and Caravaggio’s dramatic chiaroscuro; the … Continue reading Galleria degli Uffizi

Lisbon Military Museum

Galleria dell’Accademia

Think of the Galleria dell’Accademia as Florence’s compact powerhouse of Renaissance art — small enough to explore in a couple of hours but packed with iconic works that keep visitors coming back. The headline attraction is, of course, Michelangelo’s David: the towering, impossibly detailed marble figure sits in its own room so you can walk … Continue reading Galleria dell’Accademia

Lisbon Military Museum

Museo di San Marco

Step into Museo di San Marco and you’ll feel like you’ve wandered into a peaceful time capsule where art and monastic life mingle. The former Dominican convent is full of airy cloisters and small, sunlit cells painted by Fra Angelico—his Annunciations and devotional scenes are delicate, luminous, and surprisingly immediate, the kind of paintings that … Continue reading Museo di San Marco

Lisbon Military Museum

Museo dell’Opera del Duomo

Think of the Museo dell'Opera del Duomo as the backstage pass to Florence’s cathedral complex — a compact, brilliantly arranged museum that gathers the original sculptures, reliefs, and models made for the Duomo, Baptistery, and Campanile. Instead of weathered stone high up on the façade, you get to see the actual works up close: Ghiberti’s … Continue reading Museo dell’Opera del Duomo

Lisbon Military Museum

Palazzo Medici Riccardi

Palazzo Medici Riccardi is the original Medici family palace in Florence — a gracious 15th‑century Renaissance residence designed by Michelozzo that set the template for Florentine private palaces with its rusticated stone façade, loggia, and orderly courtyard. Inside, the atmosphere shifts from restrained exterior to richly decorated interiors: the grand halls and chapels reveal the … Continue reading Palazzo Medici Riccardi

Lisbon Military Museum

Museo Stibbert

The Museo Stibbert occupies a lavish 19th-century villa on Florence’s slopes, created by the collector Frederick Stibbert to display his encyclopedic assembly of arms, armor, and decorative arts from Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. The museum preserves Stibbert’s original installation—rooms arranged like period settings and galleries crammed with helmets, mail, swords, and full suits … Continue reading Museo Stibbert

Lisbon Military Museum

Palazzo Pitti

Palazzo Pitti is a vast Renaissance palace on the south bank of the Arno that became the principal residence of the Medici grand dukes and later of the Lorraine and Savoy dynasties; its broad, rusticated façade and monumental scale mark a shift from civic palazzo to princely court, and the complex now houses several major … Continue reading Palazzo Pitti

Lisbon Military Museum

Museo Stefano Bardini

The Museo Stefano Bardini is housed in a dramatic, reassembled palazzo and gallery space in Florence created by the dealer and collector Stefano Bardini in the late 19th and early 20th centuries; Bardini arranged architectural elements, sculptures, and decorative objects into theatrical displays that blend authentic Renaissance pieces with restored and reconstructed settings. The result … Continue reading Museo Stefano Bardini