Florence
Since early in the nineteenth century
Florence has been celebrated as the most beautiful city in Italy.
Stendhal staggered around its streets in a perpetual stupor of delight;
the Brownings sighed over its idyllic charms; and E.M. Forster's Room
with a View portrayed it as the great southern antidote to the
sterility of Anglo-Saxon life. For most people Florence comes close to
living up to the myth only in its first, resounding impressions. The
pinnacle of Brunelleschi's stupendous cathedral dome dominates the
cityscape, and the close-up view is even more breathtaking, with the
multicoloured Duomo rising behind the marble-clad Baptistry.
Wander from there down towards the River Arno and the attraction still
holds: beyond the broad Piazza della Signoria, site of the towering
Palazzo Vecchio, the river is spanned by the medieval shop-lined
Ponte Vecchio, with the gorgeous church of San Miniato al Monte
glistening on the hill behind it.
Yet after registering these marvellous sights, it's hard to stave off a
sense of disappointment, for much of Florence is a city of narrow
streets and heavy-set, oppressively dour palazzi that show only
iron-barred windows and massive, studded doors to the outside world. The
alienating effects of this physical entrenchment are redoubled by an
unending tide of mass tourism. You'll find light relief to be in
short supply.
The fact is, the best of Florence is to be seen indoors. Under the
patronage of the Medici family, the city's artists and thinkers
were instigators of the shift from the medieval to the modern
world-view, and churches, galleries and museums are the places to get to
grips with their achievement. The development of the Renaissance can be
plotted in the vast picture collection of the Uffizi and in the
sculpture of the Bargello and the Museo dell'Opera del Duomo.
Equally revelatory are the fabulously decorated chapels of Santa
Croce and Santa Maria Novella, forerunners of such
astonishing creations as Masaccio's superb frescoes in the Cappella
Brancacci, and Fra' Angelico's serene paintings in the monks' cells
at San Marco. The Renaissance emphasis on harmony and rational
design is expressed with unrivalled eloquence in Brunelleschi's
architecture, specifically in the churches of San Lorenzo,
Santo Spirito and the Cappella dei Pazzi. The full genius of
Michelangelo, the dominant creative figure of sixteenth-century Italy,
is on display in the fluid design of San Lorenzo's Biblioteca
Laurenziana and the marble statuary of the Cappelle Medicee
and the Accademia - home of the David. Every quarter of
Florence can boast a church or collection worth an extended call, and
the enormous Palazzo Pitti south of the river constitutes a
museum district on its own.
Places | Austria | Belgium | Czech Republic | Denmark | England | Finland | France | Germany |
| Greece | Hungary | Italy | Ireland | Northern Ireland | Luxembourg | Monaco | Netherlands | Norway |
| Poland | Portugal | Russia | Scotland | Slovakia | Spain | Sweden | Switzerland | Turkey |