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Here are some articles that you might find useful during your stay in Florence. Feel free to also ask your guides about any of the attractions of Florence during your tour. |
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> April, 2020 |
The Old Palace,
the town hall of
Florence |
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The history of the Old
Palace
The Old Palace was designed by the architect Arnolfo
di Cambio who worked at the Florence
Cathedral and according to Vasari’s “The
Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors,
and Architects”, also at the
Basilica of the Holy Cross.
In 1299 the people of Florence decided to build
a palace that represented the city’s importance
as well as a secure building that was easy to
defend in case of riots or turbulences.
The construction of the Old Palace began upon
the ruins of two palaces that belonged to the
Uberti family: the Palazzo dei Fanti and the
Palazzo dell’Esecutore di Giustizia.
This choice wasn’t casual: the members of the
Uberti family were considered “rebels”
and by building a new palace upon the ruins of
their possessions had an important meaning for
the Florentine: their home would never be
rebuilt on the same location.
In May 1540 the duke Cosimo I de’ Medici moved
the official seat of the Signoria from the
Medici palazzo to the Old Palace, which acquired
this name when he removed the seat once again to
Palazzo Pitti.
In order to connect the two buildings, the duke
commissioned to Giorgio Vasari to build an
above-ground walkway, the so called “Vasari
corridor”, that links the Old Palace with
Palazzo Pitti, through the Uffizi and the Ponte
Vecchio.
From 1865 to 1871 the Old Palace gained new
importance as the seat of the united Italy’s
provisional government, when Florence was the
temporary capital of the new Kingdom of Italy.
The Old Palace remains the symbol and center of
local government: since 1872 it has housed the
office of the mayor of Florence and is the seat
of the City Council. The architecture of the Old
Palace and its clock tower
The Old Palace is a cubical building made of
solid rusticated stonework. It has two rows of
two-lighted Gothic windows with a trefoil arch.
The artist Michelozzo Michelozzi in the 15th
century added some bas-reliefs representing the
Florentine lily and a cross in the spandrels
between the trefoils.
On top of the Old Palace there is a crown made
of projecting crenellated battlement, supported
by corbels and small arches. Under these arches
there are 9 painted coats of arms of the
Florentine Republic that are repeated in series.
Some of the arches were used as embrasures fro
dropping rocks or heated liquids on invaders.
The Old Palace is enhanced by the tower (height
94m) with its clock, and according to some
documents the architect Arnolfo di Cambio
incorporated the ancient tower of the Foraboschi
family into the new tower’s façade.
This is the reason why the tower is not directly
centred in the building. The clock was
originally constructed in 1353 by the Florentine
artist Nicolò Bernardo, but in 1667 it was
replaced by a replica made by the German Georg
Lederle.
In the tower of the Old Palace there are two
small cells that imprisoned two important men:
in 1435 Cosimo de’ Medici (the Elder), the first
member of the Medici political dynasty, and in
1498 Girolamo Savonarola, the Dominican friar
who was executed in front of the Old Palace.
At the entrance of the Old Palace there is a
copy of the Michelangelo’s David, considered one
of the masterpieces of the Renaissance.
The original stood there from 1504 to 1873 when
it was moved to the Accademia Gallery. The
replica was realized in 1910 and is flanked by
Baccio Bandinelli’s Hercules and Cacus.
By joining one of the tours offered by the Free
Tour Florence – Another Florence, you
will be able to admire the stunning Florence’s
town hall, the Old Palace. . |
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