Italy
Florence
The Historic Centre of Florence is the birthplace of Renaissance art and architecture.
Florence became world-leading in the arts and trade in the 14th - 17th centuries, which is reflected in its prestigious buildings. The principles developed here exerted their influence all over Europe. It formed artists such as Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci. Guided by the banking family De Medici palazzi were built, the Uffizi artmuseum was founded and Brunelleschi finished the gigantic Duomo.
Community Perspective: “Even a packed 8-day schedule will not cover all worthwhile sights”, Els concludes after a study trip to the city. Florence can be overwhelming and the Duomo and the Uffizi are usually too crowded, but there is so much more: over 25 individual monuments are named in the OUV statement!
Site Info
Official Information
- Full Name
- Historic Centre of Florence (ID: 174)
- Country
- Italy
- Status
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Inscribed 1982
Site history
History of Florence
- 1982: Inscribed
- Inscribed
- WHS Type
- Cultural
- Criteria
- i
- ii
- iii
- iv
- vi
Links
- UNESCO
- whc.unesco.org
All Links
UNESCO.org
- whc.unesco.org — whc.unesco.org/
Related Resources
- bargellomusei.beniculturali.it — Orsanmichele
- museumsinflorence.com — Palazzo Vecchio
- museumflorence.com — Duomo
- sanminiatoalmonte.it — San Miniato al Monte
- florenceartmuseums.com — San Marco
- museumsinflorence.com — Santa Croce
- cappellemedicee.it — Capelle Medicee
- museicivicifiorentini.comune.fi.it — Santa Maria Novella
- bargellomusei.beniculturali.it — Bargello Museum
- uffizi.it — Uffizi Museum
- firenzeturismo.it — City of Florence Tourism
News Article
- Dec. 23, 2024 edition.cnn.com — Secret passageway Vasari Corridor in Florence opens to public for first time
- April 13, 2024 edition.cnn.com — Florence’s famed Ponte Vecchio to be restored to former glory with two-year makeover
- Oct. 19, 2017 independent.co.uk — Falling masonry kills Spanish visitor to Basilica di Santa Croce
- June 30, 2016 telegraph.co.uk — Bunfight in Florence over plans for a new McDonald's in the city's exquisite Piazza del Duomo
- Dec. 6, 2015 theguardian.com — Florence seeks a better class of tourist to share its besieged medieval treasures
- April 2, 2015 dailymail.co.uk — Japanese tourist charged by police after using make-up pencil to write name on Florence Cathedral
- Aug. 3, 2013 lagazzettadelmezzogiorno.it — Ponte Vecchio rented out to Ferrari
- Dec. 7, 2011 bbc.co.uk — 'Lost Da Vinci' prompts art row in Florence
- June 30, 2008 japundit.com — Students from Gifu City Women's College are in hot water for defacing the Cathedral Santa Maria del Fiore in Florence by writing the date, their names, and the names of their friends with an oil-based marker on the marble wall
Community Information
- Community Category
- Urban landscape: Post-medieval European
Travel Information
One million visitors or more
Exact locations inscribed twice (or more)
Undergoing Restoration or Repair
See edition.cnn.com
Recent Connections
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Perfect Inscriptions
1982 -
Fyodor Dostoevsky
Dostoevsky completed "The Idiot" in Flo… -
Napoleonic booty
"From March 1799, after Florence was oc…
Connections of Florence
- Individual People
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Hitler was here
Hitler visited Florence in May 1938 on a state visit. -
Geoffrey Chaucer
Visited in 1373 on "secret business" for Edward III - thought to be negotiations for loans with Florentine bankers. It is not known if he met e.g Boccaccio or Petrarch but the visit is credited with introducing him to stylistic and subject aspects later incorporated into the Canterbury Tales which exhibit considerable parallels with the Decameron. -
Leonardo da Vinci
Was educated there as an artist from the age of 14, lived there later on in his life and the Uffizi now holds several of his works -
Elias Burton Holmes
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Mapped or Illustrated by Blaeu
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King Chulalongkorn of Siam (Rama V)
(7-16 June) -
Galileo Galilei
1642 Buried in the Basilica of Sta Croce, originally in a side room and then in 1737 moved to the main part. The Museo Galileo (near the Uffizi) has on show one of his fingers removed during his reburial -
Sculpted by Canova
The "Venus Italica" in the Palazzo PittiSee en.wikipedia.org
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Charlemagne
Charlemagne conquered Florence in 774 and the city became part of the March of Tuscany.See en.wikipedia.org
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Alexandre Dumas
In his work "Une année à Florence", Dumas shows his reader the main monuments of the city, from the Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore to the Orsanmichele, passing by the Medici Palace, the Palazzo Vecchio and the Piazza della Signoria. -
Florence Nightingale
Was born at the Villa Colombaia in the WHS buffer zone 1km south of Porta Roman. Was named after the city and has a Carrara Marble monument in the cloisters of Basilica of Santa Croce. -
Peter Paul Rubens
"Rubens travelled to Rome by way of Florence in 1601." (Wikipedia) The Palazzo Pitti has several paintings by Rubens in its collection.See en.wikipedia.org
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Charles V
The Siege of Florence (1529–1530) was decided on by "the Medici Pope Clement VII and Emperor Charles V (...) to restore the Medici family in Florence." After the siege, the Republic of Florence was overthrown and Alessandro de' Medici was installed as ruler of the city as Duke of Florence, a title bestowed on him by Charles V.See en.wikipedia.org
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Goethe
Italian Journey -
Napoleon was here
Palazzo Pitti : "In the late 18th century, the palazzo was used as a power base by Napoleon (...) during his period of control over Italy."See en.wikipedia.org
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Donatello
Donatello made statues and artwork for several places in Florence, such as the Cathedral, the Baptistry, the Basilica of San Lorenzo and Orsanmichele. His work can also be found in the Palazzo Vecchio, the Museo dell'Opera del Duomo, Santa Croce and the Bargello (the bronze David).See en.wikipedia.org
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Fyodor Dostoevsky
Dostoevsky completed "The Idiot" in Florence and "had a house in Piazza Pitti where" he "lived for about a year between 1868 and 1869." Dostoevsky's child, whom he and his wife Anna named Lubjov ('love' in Russian), was born in Florence.See www.italia.it
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Giotto
"The city's history is further evident in the artistic works of great masters such as Giotto, Brunelleschi, Botticelli and Michelangelo." (Official description) - Giotto designed the freestanding campanile of Florence Cathedral.See en.wikipedia.org
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- Trivia
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Dubbed as another WHS
Athens of the Middle Ages (thanks to its leading role in the promotion of knowledge and art thus connecting it with the Akropolis, which used to be the centre of knowledge, religion and art in Classical Greece) -
Hotels in Historic Buildings
The Hotel Loggiato Dei Serviti in the Loggia dei Servi di Maria, originally built for the mendicant order, the Servi di MariaSee en.wikipedia.org
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One million visitors or more
Uffizi Galleries, one of Florence's most iconic cultural institutions, attracted approximately 5 million visitors in 2023 / Galleria degli Uffizi: 2.010.631 (2016)See museoguide.it
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Moved from location of original construction
"The Boboli obelisk (...) is an ancient Egyptian granite obelisk, which was moved in the 18th century from Rome to Florence, where it was erected in the Boboli Gardens." Before that, it had been transported to Rome from Egypt, where it probably had been erected in the city of Heliopolis.See en.wikipedia.org
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Modern Board Games
Comuni (2008) - Players "interpret" Italian cities -
Depicted in Mizielinska Maps
Santa Maria del FioreSee i.pinimg.com
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Depicted in the Ravensburger World Wide Series
Duomo in the Florence edition -
Google Doodles
9 April 2011, Italy's Culture WeekSee www.google.com
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In Video Games
Assassin's Creed II – Duomo, Ponte Vecchio -
Viewable from another WHS
From Medici Villas and Gardens, such as Fiesole -
Reportedly haunted locations
"The Hotel Burchianti in Florence has become the scene of many ghostly rumours. Not the most chilling of all supernatural tales, but guests have claimed to have seen visions (of) both a child skipping down the hallways, as well as a phantom woman knitting in a chair. Stories of the hotel's Fresco room are not so innocent, with reports of guests feeling an icy breath sensation."See www.reuters.com
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Tour de France
Tour de France 2024, Stage 1
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- History
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Places of Execution
"executions took place in the Bargello's yard until they were abolished by Grand Duke Peter Leopold in 1786"See en.wikipedia.org
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Sieges and Battles
Siege of Florence (1529-1530) -
Located in a Former Capital
Tuscany 1569-1860, Italy 1865-71 -
Knights Hospitaller
The church of San Giovannino dei Cavalieri "was renamed after the patron saint of the Cavalieri or Knights of Malta".See en.wikipedia.org
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Popes
The popes Stephen IX and Nicholas II were buried in the church of Santa Reparata, the predecessor of the cathedral of Florence. The Florence Baptistery houses the tomb of Antipope John XXIII.See en.wikipedia.org
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Contains significant structures from the 20th Century
Firenze Santa Maria Novella railway station: rebuilt in 1934, "a prime example of Italian modernism"See en.wikipedia.org
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Etruscans
"Florence was built on the site of an Etruscan settlement and the later ancient Roman colony of Florentia (founded in 59 BC)." (Official description) -
Assassinations
Ponte Vecchio : "A stone with an inscription from Dante (Paradiso xvi. 140-7) records the spot at the entrance to the bridge where Buondelmonte de' Buondelmonti was murdered by the Amidei clan in 1215, which began the urban fighting of the Guelfs and Ghibellines."See en.wikipedia.org
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Medici lions
The originals have since 1789 been displayed at the Loggia dei Lanzi in Florence. (wiki) -
Medici
Medici Palace, Medici Tombs
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- Architecture
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Neoclassical architecture
The loggia at the Piazzale Michelangelo was designed in the neoclassical style.See en.wikipedia.org
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Created by Michelangelo
Medici Chapel -
Carrara marble
Duomo + belfry + other churches and chapels apart from David and other statues -
Mannerism
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Gold Surfaces
The famous gilded Door of Paradise -
Mosaic art
The interior of the octagonal dome of the Baptistery is covered in mosaics.See en.wikipedia.org
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Gothic Revival
Basilica of Santa Croce. Neo-gothic marble facade 1857-1863See en.wikipedia.org
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Grotesques
Grotticina at Boboli Gardens -
Rococo
After a fire, the interior of the Santa Maria del Carmine was rebuilt in the Rococo style in 1782.See en.wikipedia.org
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Brick architecture
The dome of Florence cathedral is "the largest brick dome ever constructed".See en.wikipedia.org
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Baroque
Complex of San Firenze, Ognissanti, San Gaetano, Santa Maria del Carmine, the interior of the Santissima Annunziata and rooms decorated by Pietro da Cortona in the Palazzo PittiSee en.wikipedia.org
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Italian Renaissance garden
Boboli gardensSee en.wikipedia.org
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Artists' houses
Casa Buonarroti, the house of MichelangeloSee en.wikipedia.org
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Moorish revival
synagogue -
Architectural design competitions
Brunelleschi won the competition for erecting the dome of the cathedral in 1418. The competition to design the new façade of the cathedral was won by Emilio De Fabris in 1864.See en.wikipedia.org
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Designed by Leon Battista Alberti
Facade of Palazzo Rucellai, Facade of Santa Maria Novella Church, Tribune of Santissima Annunziata Church -
Domes
Santa Maria del fiore 42/5m - Europe's 1st double dome 1436 -
Octagons
Baptistry; Santa Maria degli Angeli Church; the dome of Florence cathedral; the Cappella dei Principi of the Medici Chapel -
Italian fascist architecture
Sta Maria Novella station. constructed 1932-4 " The plan of the building, as seen from above, looks as if it were based on the "fascio littorio" the symbol of Benito Mussolini's National Fascist Party, many documents give this explanation, but, that shape was forced by the pre-existing station. The "blade" represented by the first two passenger tracks and the postal ones were in fact the extension of the 1861 alignment which included the tracks of the line from Livorno." (Wiki). This interpretation is elsewhere disputed. -
Romanesque
Saint John's Baptistery -
Gothic
Palazzo Vecchio, Cathedral and Holy Cross Basilica -
Replicas within the WHS
Michelangelo's Statue of David: "In 1910, the statue of David that was exposed to the elements in Piazza della Signoria, was transferred to the Accademia Gallery to avoid its deterioration, and the David we currently see at the square is a copy of the original." -
Renaissance
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- Damaged
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Napoleonic booty
"From March 1799, after Florence was occupied by the French armies, Jean-Baptiste Wicar chose which paintings would be taken from the Palazzo Pitti and sent to Paris.[19]: 120 In total, 63 paintings and 25 pieces of pietre dure were taken from Florence.[3]: 96 In 1803, the Venus de' Medici was exported to France at the express order of Napoleon"See en.wikipedia.org
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Controversial museum plans
New exit for the UffiziSee en.wikipedia.org
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Damaged in World War II
Florence bridges -
Terrorist Attacks
Via dei Georgofili bombing in the very early morning on 27 May 1993 outside the UffiziSee en.wikipedia.org
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- World Heritage Process
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Perfect Inscriptions
1982 -
Exact locations inscribed twice (or more)
Boboli Gardens (also in Medici Villas and Gardens in Tuscany) -
Minor modifications after inscription
2021: incorporate San Miniato al Monte complex (the Abbey and the area embedded within the walls of the homonymous Fort) and its surrounding environment (cemetery, San Salvatore al Monte Church, Veterans Memorial Park and Ramp) (a 5,3% increase)
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- Religion and Belief
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Cistercian
Santa Maria Maddalena dei Pazzi : "The Cistercian order from Badia a Settimo took control of the site in 1332 and moved to it in 1442 (...)".See en.wikipedia.org
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Dominican Order
"Santa Maria Novella (...) is the first great basilica in Florence, and is the city's principal Dominican church."See en.wikipedia.org
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Legends and Folk Myths
Visitors to Il Porcellino put a coin into the boar's gaping jaws, with the intent to let it fall through the underlying grating for good luck, and they rub the boar's snout to ensure a return to Florence (wiki)See en.wikipedia.org
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Servite Order
The Basilica della Santissima Annunziata is the mother church of the Servite order (wiki)See en.wikipedia.org
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Religious Relics
San Miniato al Monte: "The crypt is the oldest part of the church and the high altar supposedly contains the bones of St Minias himself". -
Jesuit Order
San Giovannino degli Scolopi: "In the mid-16th century, Cosimo I applied the inheritance of a Giovanni di Lando of the neighboring Gori family to the erection of a church for the newly arrived Jesuits (1577)."See en.wikipedia.org
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Hercules
His labours are depicted by a series of statues by de' Rossi at the Salone del Cinquecento at the Palazzo Vecchio -
Theatines
Chiesa dei Santi Michele e Gaetano - "In 1592 it was granted to the Theatine Fathers"See it.wikipedia.org
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Order of Cluny
San Miniato al Monte: "The adjoining monastery began as a Benedictine community, then passed to the Cluniacs and then in 1373 to the Olivetans, who still run it." (Wikipedia)See en.wikipedia.org
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Cathedrals
Bas Cat Sta Maria del Fiore -
Jewish religion and culture
Tempio Maggiore (Great Synagogue) -
Anglican churches outside of the Commonwealth
St Mark's English Church: "St. Mark’s English Church on via Maggio opened its doors for worship in 1881. From the outset, its purpose was to offer a subscription-free welcome to tourist visitors to Florence..... Inside a fifteenth-century palazzo, the church glows with a rich dark vitality created a century ago by English and local artists whose work reflects the influential Pre-Raphaelite movement"See stmarksitaly.com
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Carmelites
Santa Maria del Carmine (Church) -
Augustinian Order
Basilica di Santo SpiritoSee en.wikipedia.org
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Franciscan Order
The Basilica di Santa Croce is the principal Franciscan church in Florence (wiki) -
Benedictines
Badia Fiorentina -
Christian Pilgrimage Sites
"The story of Saint Minas and spiritual bonding of the hill to the river Arno has made San Miniato a place of pilgrimage during the Renaissance period." (AB Ev 174ter)
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- Human Activity
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Paintings by Venetian Vedutisti
Florence by Bellotto -
Historical Financial Institutions
The HQ of the Medici Bank 1397-1494. A very significant Bank in European and world financial history. At the Via dell'Arte della Lana were the "bancos" or benches where Florentine bankers carried out their trade and from which the very word "Bank" came. -
Tramways
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Significant masonic lodges
Palazzo Roffia, where the first Masonic lodge in Italy was created. -
Festivals
Operas for the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino are also held at the Teatro della PergolaSee en.wikipedia.org
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Museum History
Uffizi: also one of the oldest city museums (together with Statuario Pubblico in Venice); since 1765 open to the public as one of the first modern museumsSee en.wikipedia.org
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Self-portraits
Ghiberti on the Gates of Paradise at the Baptistery -
Historical Graffiti
Michelangelo’s Graffiti: face of a man, claimed to be created by the sculptor Michelangelo, -
Traditional sports and games
Calcio fiorentino - "an early form of football that originated in 16th-century Italy. Once widely played, the sport is thought to have started in the Piazza Santa Croce" (wiki)See en.wikipedia.org
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Invention of sweets and pastries
The invention of "Gelato", the confection based on ice, cream and egg yolk as a development of the older water-based sherbet/sorbetto has been linked to Florence during the rule of Catherine de Medici. One version is that the architect and all-round Renaissance man Bernado Buontalenti was charged by Catherine with preparing 'events' for diplomatic guests including banquets and entertainments. In 1565 one of these served a frozen dessert with a recipe approximating to modern 'Gelato'. Buontalenti Gelato is still available! -
Frescoes or murals by famous painters
Dome of Duomo by Giorgio Vasari -
Oldest companies
"Torrini is a Florentine company of goldsmiths located in the Piazza del Duomo. Founded in 1369, it is arguably the oldest jeweler firm in the world."See en.wikipedia.org
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Grand Tour
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Textiles
"Palazzo dell' Arte della Lana" was the guildhall of the Florentine wool merchants -
Irrigation and drainage
Boboli Gardens: "The garden lacks a natural water source. To water its plants, a conduit was built to feed water from the nearby Arno River into an elaborate irrigation system."See en.wikipedia.org
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- Constructions
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Bazaars and Market Halls
Saint Lawrence's Market, made of cast iron and glass -
Historical Cafés
Caffe Rivoire 1872 -
Tower-houses
See www.arttrav.com
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Prison
Bargello used to be a prison -
Sites of Parliament
The Salone del Cinquecento at the Palazzo Vecchio served as the first parliament of unified Italy before the capital was moved to Rome -
Monumental Fountains
Fountain of NeptuneSee en.wikipedia.org
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Obelisk
2 in front of Santa Maria Novella: "two obelisks, which were made of Serravezza marble, quarried in 1570 and sculpted by Bartolomeo Ammannati to mark the occasion of the marriage of Cosimo II to Margherita of Austria." -
Sundial
At the facade of the Santa Maria Novella church -
Monumental Columns
Column of Sta Felicita - "Putatively the column was erected to celebrate the 13th-century victories or crusades led by the Dominican friar Peter of Verona against the Cathar heresy in Northern Italy.[1] In 1484, the capital had a terracotta statue Peter of Verona preaching, as he had to the Florentines and organizing his militia of the "Società di Santa Maria" used to persecute heretics" & Column of Justice - "an ancient Roman marble Doric column re-erected by the Florentine Medici dynasty in the Renaissance as a free-standing victory monument with a porphyry statue of Justice at the top. It stands in the Piazza Santa Trinita, in central Florence.....was originally installed in the Baths of Caracalla in Rome and was given by Pope Pius IV to Cosimo I de Medici...The column was erected on its pedestal in 1565." -
Cenotaph
The Basilica di Santa Croce in Florence contains a number of cenotaphs including one for Dante Alighieri, who is buried in Ravenna (wiki) -
Baths
Piazza della Repubblica: "Foundations of a thermae complex on the south side and a religious building were found in the 19th-century demolition of the warren of medieval streets that had encroached upon the site.See en.wikipedia.org
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Freestanding Bell Tower
Giotto Bell Tower -
Cemeteries
Part of the San Miniato al Monte complex is "the cemetery, known as the Cimitero delle Porte Sante". "Since ancient times, regardless of its defensive function, various adjacent spaces to the Abbey were used for burials, and starting from the 18th century it was officially used as a city cemetery." (Nomination file 174ter, p. 7-8) -
Equestrian Statues
Ferdinando I de' Medici,by Giambologna and completed by Tacca (1608). On the Piazza della Santissima Annunziata. Made with bronze from captured Turkish galleys. Cosimo I de Medici by Giambologna (1594) on Piazza della Signoria.See it.wikipedia.org
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Granaries
The third floor of the Orsanmichele "housed one of the city's municipal grain storehouses, maintained to withstand famine or siege."See en.wikipedia.org
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Historical Organs
Santissima Annunziata : "The organ built by Domenico Di Lorenzo da Lucca in 1509–1521 is the oldest in Florence and the third oldest in Italy."See en.wikipedia.org
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Unfinished constructions
Saint Lawrence's Basilica unfinished facade -
Loggia
Loggia del Bigallo, Loggia del Grano, Loggia del Mercato Nuovo, Loggia Rucellai, Loggia della Signoria, Loggia dei Tessitori, Loggia del Pesce, Loggia di Orsanmichele -
Railways
Santa Maria Novella railway station (1934), one of the most important landmarks in Italy?s modern architecture -
Hospitals
Santa Maria Nuova Hospital -
Dynastic Burial Places
Capelle Medicee at San Lorenzo -
Theatres and Opera Houses
Teatro della Pergola (considered to be the oldest in Italy), Teatro VerdiSee en.wikipedia.org
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Tombs
The church of Santa Croce houses the tombs of Michelangelo, Galileo Galilei, Niccolò Machiavelli, Gioachino Rossini, Lorenzo Ghiberti and Ugo Foscolo, among others.See en.wikipedia.org
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Passage of the Sun
"In 1475 the Italian astronomer Paolo dal Pozzo Toscanelli (...) pierced a hole in the dome at 91.05 metres (298.7 ft) above the pavement to create a meridian line. The height precluded the installation of a complete meridian line on the floor of the cathedral, but allowed a short section of approximately 10 metres (33 ft) to run between the main altar and the north wall of the transept. This allows for observation for around 35 days either side of the summer solstice. (...) The meridian line was covered over by the fabbricieri in 1894 and unveiled again in 1997. A yearly re-enacement of the observation takes place on 21 June each year at 12.00 UT."See en.wikipedia.org
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Bridges with Buildings on them
Ponte VecchioSee en.wikipedia.org
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Music Academies
Conservatorio Cherubini -
Triumphal Arches
Lorraine Arch -
Notable Bridges
Ponte Vecchio (1345), a stone closed-spandrel segmental arch bridge & Ponte Santa Trinitá (1569), the oldest elliptic arch bridge in the worldSee en.wikipedia.org
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- WHS on Other Lists
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World Monuments Watch (past)
Limonaia at Boboli Gardens and Garden of Villa Medici at Castello (1998) , Gardens of Villa Medici at Castello (1996), Murgia dei Trulli (2006) -
European Capital of Culture
1986
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- Timeline
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Built in the 14th century
Ponte Vecchio (1345), De Medici seat of power (gathered prominence under Cosimo de' Medici in the Republic of Florence during the late 14th century) -
Built in the 15th century
Renaissance principles by Brunelleschi (completed the cathedral's dome in 1436) e.a.
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- WHS Hotspots
- Science and Technology
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Libraries
National Central Library, Laurentian Library, Biblioteca Riccardiana, Gabinetto Vieusseux -
Universities
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Botanical Gardens
Orto Botanico di Firenze (1545) -
Coronelli globes
Several in the Istituto e Museo di Storia della Scienza, on the bank of the river near the Uffizi -
Astronomy and Astrology
"Galileo Galilei used Forte Belvedere for his astronomical observations".See en.wikipedia.org
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Early cartographic representations of the Americas
Salla delle carte geografiche (1564-1571) at Palazzo Vecchio
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- Visiting conditions
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Undergoing Restoration or Repair
Ponte Vecchio - from Oct 2024 to 2026.See edition.cnn.com
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- 18
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Location for a classic documentary
Days of Destruction (1966), about the Flood of the Arno River and its catastrophic effect on the city of FlorenceSee en.wikipedia.org
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News
- edition.cnn.com 12/23/2024
- Secret passageway Vasari Corridor …
- edition.cnn.com 04/13/2024
- Florence’s famed Ponte Vecchio to …
- independent.co.uk 10/19/2017
- Falling masonry kills Spanish visi…
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Community Reviews
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I have been to Florence 4-times during last 20 years (last visit in December 2018). My opinion, or better said relationship with this world-famous site, because it is an emotional feast to be in Florence, is changing with my ageing. Originally, I was annoyed by masses of tourists and focused only on the particular landmarks, and as a result of this, Siena would be a winner in the stereotyped competition between these two Tuscany WHSs. Later on, I realized that despite Florence is relatively small town, I definitely cannot say that I visited and enjoyed everything what Florence can offer. At the latest stages, when I walked around the massive body of the Cathedral - I mean the eastern parts, or when I watched the Arne river from the top floor of Uffizi on a gloomy December morning at the right moment of the transition from fog to gentle sunlight, or when I ascended to S Miniato al Monte for Holy Mass, it was clear to me that I am lost forever...
Besides the obvious highlight such as the Cathedral with baptistry and campanile, Piazza della Signoria, S Croce, S Maria Novella, I am always enchanted by frescoes by Fra Angelico in the convent of S Marco, the appearance of S Miniato al Monte (I am happy it was included to the core zone during 2021 WHC session), the facade of Palazzo Rucellai, all the bridges of river Arno, etc.
During my last visit in December 2018, I …
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No need to additionally emphasize how worthwhile a visit to this WHS is, the rating and the previous reviews are unambiguous. So just a few short comments and recommendations:
I visited Florence several times, both as a tourist and for buisiness reasons, most recently for four days in November 2017. And that is also the best time for a visit in my opinion: still pleasant weather with good chance for sunshine and less tourists, at least in comparison to the high season (from Easter to All Saints' Day). However, there are still long queues at the most popular sights. For the Cupola of the Duomo, I would suggest to pre-book tickets and a time slot, there is only a limited amount of day tickets available. Pre-booking is also recommended for the Uffizi, unless you just want to see the highlights, then a late afternoon visit is the best choice. If your time is limited and you want to visit as much as possible, the FirenceCard might be an option, it includes priority access to all museums and sights (with the exception of the Cupola). But it is quite expensive: 72 euros for 72 hours. So rather suitable to skip the queues, not to save money.
My specific highlights:
- the Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana and the Michelangelo stairs at San Lorenzo
- the Cappella de Pazzi at Santa Croce
- the Fra Angelico frescoes at the San Marco convent
- the bars and restaurants around the Piazza di …

Florence made a much better impression on me on my second visit, in May 2013, than when I first visited ten years before. Perhaps it was because I had not been traveling for as long before my second visit, or perhaps it was because I was older; either way, I found the city much more enchanting the second time around. Florence is a great Renaissance city, full of memorable art at the Uffizi Gallery and the Accademia, including Michelangelo's masterful David. Florence's Duomo cathedral (aka Santa Maria del Fiore) is visible from outside the city, and is just as amazing up close as from far away. The inside of the cathedral is beautiful, but I'll need to go to Florence a third time so I can finally take a tour to the top of the dome. Not far away, Florence's picturesque Ponte Vecchio crosses the Arno River, which runs through the city; I found it fascinating to imagine what the shops on the bridge must have been like in medieval times. On the south side of the Arno is the Piazzale Michelangelo, which I highly recommend for a fantastic view of the center of Florence.
Logistics: Florence can be reached by car, bus, or train, but the central section of town is best appreciated on foot.
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I visited this classic WHS for the first time recently, in November 2015. This was low-season, tourist-wise, but the city was doing a brisk trade in sightseeing nonetheless. We managed to get into the Accademia with only a 15 minute wait, and the Uffizi we were able to walk straight into! I can recommend the Palazzo Medici Riccardi for its Magi Chapel and Giordano ceiling. For a cityscape there is an excellent viewpoint to the southeast of the city walls, atop a hill. Also worth seeing is the Basilica of Santa Maria Novella, where there hangs an early Crucifix by Giotto (although unfortunately Masaccio's Holy Trinity - one of the first works to demonstrate a knowledge of the laws of perspective - is currently out for restoration). On the agenda for next time are Brunelleschi’s Pazzi Chapel (the ‘first’ Renaissance building) the Bargello museum and the Palatine Gallery, as well as the half of the Pitti Palace that we didn't manage to fit in.
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A fantastic scupture museum that is not crowded is the Bargello, full of marvelous statues by Donatello, Michelangelo, della Robbia and Giambologna. It's courtryard is lovelh, too. Another museum with few visitors is the Archeology Museum, which has gripping bronze chimera done by Etruscans, as well as many Etruscan tomb statues with realistic faces, including big noses and funny facial expressions. The Palazzo Davenzait is a medieval palazzo that is fittingly furnished with few visitors. I had not realized how much I like Ghirlandoa's frescoes until seeing them at Santa Maria Nouvella and Santa Trinita churches, neither of which was crowded. I share the preference for Florentine steak from the Mercato Centrale.
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In 2011 I started taking courses towards a Bachelor's degree in General Cultural Sciences at the Open University. This involves a mixture of Literature, Philosophy, Cultural History and Art History. It’s now almost four years later and I have nearly reached my goal: only my bachelor thesis is left to do. Part of the programme was that I “had to” attend an in-depth, 8-day study trip to Florence. A great excuse for a proper revisit of this rich WHS!
We were 20 mature students, and each of us had to deliver a 30-minute lecture about (and in front of) a Renaissance art or architecture object in Florence. We had been preparing this through a literature study beforehand.
Florence seemed to be in good shape when we visited in April 2015, nothing like the decay you hear about regarding Rome or elsewhere in Italy. A few sights are being restored at the moment, such as the Baptistery. But there’s plenty left: even a packed 8-day schedule will not cover all worthwhile sights. We did spend much time at individual works of art: we stood staring for 45 minutes at Massacio’s Holy Trinity in the Santa Maria Novella, for example, a fresco that might only get a glimpse of the more casual visitor.
The highlights for me were:
- The former San Marco Convent, with its range of Fra Angelico frescoes
- The Last Supper in the former Convent of Santa Apollonia
- The Sassetti Chapel
- The …

I have visited Florence for the third time now and I always find something new to visit or explore. This time I was lucky enough to get a private group tour of the Corridoio Vasariano connecting the Uffizi to Palazzo Pitti through Ponte Vecchio. Neverending portraits and magnificent views of the Arno from the corridor's windows. A must see if you're lucky enough to be able visit!
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I visited this WHS in September 2006. It is surely one of Italy's best WHS and it is the symbol of Renaissance. The Brunelleschi Cupola and the Battistero were the highlights of my visit coupled with a generous bistecca fiorentina and some Chianti wine!
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Yes, Florence can be packed with tourists all year round. Yes, you need to stand in line for a good hour to be able to enter a museum. Yes, you would need to make a hotel reservation well ahead of time. However, once you are in front of the Duomo, or the bronze Gate to Paradise, or Michelangelo's David, all those hours spent dodging people and waiting on line are forgotten. Florence is a city that lives and breathes art and it's well worth all the troubles with the excess of people that you can find there at all times. I would suggest investigate as much as you can before travelling to Florence so that you know what you are looking at and the whole artistic and historical values of the wonderful masterpieces that you would be looking at. And be patient on queues!! Once you enter the museums, you will forget that you spent hours on them
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You really need to spend a week here. We did two, with side trips to Sienna, San Gimingano, Pisa and Luca.(first 3 WHS's) The duomo needs a whole day to be awed, one at the Uffici, one in Barboli Gardens, half a day in Academia to look at David and other Michaelangelos, one day walking around the banks of Orno. If there is one WHS you must see in the Western World..... I would stay at one of the villas across the river. Much more space for the money, and the walk is really nice. The hotels are expensive and bad.
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Florence was a lovely place to spend two days. I really enjoyed just wandering around between the huge, if austere (showing that Florence’s developmental roots in medieval Europe), palazzo and stumbling upon some particularly fine churches. The cathedral has a hugely impressive façade and of course Brunelleschi’s dome is one of the great architectural achievements of the renaissance. The interior was a little underwhelming though after the exterior. The dome was undergoing renovations whilst I visited, and it seems that the exterior had been cleaned on three sides, but the rear was a little grubby.
I also visited the Academia gallery, worth it for the Michelangelo sculptures including David and his unfinished works intended for the tomb of Pope Julius II, but the other exhibits were a little disappointing as I have no great interest in iconography and early religious art.
Palazzo Vecchio (pictured) was a lot more interesting than I thought it would be and worth a visit if you want to avoid the queues elsewhere. The Medici chapel was impressive and culturally important, the full price entrance fee was a little steep though. I would also recommend the hike up to Piazzale Michelangelo for the best views of the centre. I also really enjoyed the train station, which is a fine piece of fascist modernist architecture and sold excellent coffee, I know this wont appeal to everyone though!
I can understand how some people may be annoyed by the vast swathes of tourists, I visited in November and …
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I have been to Florence last Nov 2002. One thing I must praise was that Italian done a very good job in maintaining their heritages! More than 100 years’ buildings, statues, paintings & frescoes still preserving very well!!
The Duomo and Santa Maria del Fiore definitely looks superb! What was impressed me is not the building itself, but was the bronze door of the baptistery (cast by Lorenzo Ghiberti in the early part of the 15th century)! It looks amazing!! Now I understand why Michelangelo descript it as the gates to paradise!!
Also, don’t miss the Uffizi Gallery. Lots of extraordinary masterpieces can be found here! And, of course, must try the decision gelato!!
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Florence is simply a great city and a must for any vistor to Italy. Unlike many other places in this country, the city doesn´t offer any sights from Antiquity (ancient Rome), but this is more than made up by the numerous monuments (palaces, churches, parks, bridges, the Cathedral) from the Middle Ages and the Renaissance period, the time of Florence´s greatest cultural flowering. The whole city is a work of art - the cradle of the Renaissance -, and names like the Medici, Boccaccio, Petrarca, Dante, Galileo, Giotto, Botticelli, and Machiavelli are famous everywhere (have I already mentioned da Vinci and Michelangelo?), and Florence is one of the cultural hotspots (not only of Europe but of the world) that everybody should have seen.
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Florence can be overwhelming. I had the good fortune of living there during the summer of 2000 which enabled me to see the city at a far more leisurely pace than the average tourist. Highlights for me include: relaxing at the Piazzale Michelangelo while taking in the best view of Florence; on the Oltrarno, the Brancacci Chapel with frescoes by Massaccio, a significant artistic contribution that is often overlooked by the casual visitor; sitting at a cafe in Fiesole, enjoying the slower pace of Florence's hilltop neighbour; and, closer in, the Convent of San Marco, where Fr'Angelico decorated the monastic cells with incredible frescoes. Certainly, the tourist with only a few days to spare will want to stay in the centre to take in as many 'must-see' sights as possible, but if you have the time, take some side-trips to the lesser known places to escape the crowds and the trappings of kitsch.
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Of course, I enjoyed Firenze. But after spending some days among rather gruesome, high, pressing Rennaisance buildings I felt - some good local friends are needed to find out the real spirit of this city. Firenze seemed so enclosed behind the huge walls of houses, but numerous sculptures and ornate churches witnessed - there is much more to find out and bypassers as all tourists are, would not get it...
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