The Main Features of Florence
The
Ponte Vecchio
The Ponte Veccio is the most well-known and
famous bridge in Florence and was originally built in the year 1345 by the
artist Neri di Fioravante. The bridge
has three arches and shops that line the sides of the bridge, back in the 14th
century there were gold smiths living and selling gold in the houses. Today the still are doing that! In WWII the bridge was going to be destroyed
by Hitler but he had a love for art and thought the bridge looked beautiful so
he decided not to bomb it. All of the
other bridges though on the canal were destroyed except for that one (they have
now been rebuilt).
The
Medici Family
The Medici Family was considered to be one
of the wealthiest families in Europe at the time and owned a lot of the land
and the houses. The Medici’s (to show
there wealth) supported Michelangelo’s artwork and inspiration to be a famous
artist so by the age of 14 he was let into the Medici’s house, to use there art
canvases and practice whenever and whatever he wanted.
This is how he became one of the most well known artists in the
world! The Medici’s owned several huge
mansions and regularly moved between them.
The main reason for the Medici’s wealth is because of the banks that
they owned. They owned every bank in
Florence at the time and they continued to be the wealthiest family in Europe
for 200 to 300 years!
The
Duomo
The Duomo is the biggest square in the
whole of Florence and also holds the biggest cathedral, the Cathedral of Santa
Maria del Fiore. Various artists
completed the cathedral over a period of centuries but no record of the
original artist has ever been found. The
huge dome inside the cathedral is a fresco and was painted by an artist called
Vasari who was summoned by Cosimo the 1st Medici. It took 2 years to paint the dome and in the
end it looked beautiful. We cycled around the Duomo - pretty cool and very crowded, thank goodness for bells on the bike!
Michelangelo
Michelangelo was a famous artist that
painted pictures of the Italian Renaissance and got the nickname the
“Renaissance Man”. He was born in March
1479 and died in February 1564 and was an only child born in Caprese, Tuscany
and moved very early to Florence after an unexpected death of his mother. He sculpted and painted many pieces of art
all based around the church and the bible.
He regularly wanted attention from some of the well-known artists in
Florence and they were surprised by how good he could paint and sculpt. He moved on in later life to be the man he is
today painting and sculpting many things like David’s Statue, The Sistine Chapel
Ceiling (in Rome) and many more!
Uffizi
Gallery
The Uffizi Gallery holds some of the most
famous paintings of it’s time some of them being the “13th and 14th
Century Painting”, which was a type of Tuscan Art and was made to look like a
fresco. The Gallery also holds the “15th
Century Painting”, which was mainly based around the Renaissance of Florence in
the 1400’s and was painted by Lorenzo Ghiberti.
It holds much more pieces of famous art from its time and is still being
used to store art today. We didn't make it into the gallery, for one the line was so long (about a 2 hour wait), and, secondly, I happened to eat an gelato (ice cream) with some nuts in it and was sick for the afternoon!
A Bike Ride Around Florence
The second day we were in Florence we did a
bike tour around the main areas and tourist attractions and we saw everything
that I listed above. The bike tour was
amazing and fun and we were lucky enough to have a blue sky (it’s always blue
though) and a mildly hot temperature. The alley ways were tricky to ride through, the surface bumpy with cobble stones and had to dodge people all the time - dodgems on a bike!
A Tour of Tuscany
Sienna
Sienna is a beautiful city that has many
wonderful features and events that occur every year. One of the lovely sights in Sienna is the
Cathedral. It was originally built in 1215
and finished construction in 1263 and was built to compete with the Cathedral
in Florence.
Horse
race
In Sienna a huge gathering of people going
up to about 500,000 all there to watch a bare back horse race. In Sienna there are 13 different districts each
of them represented by an animal (e.g. eagle, rhino, elephant etc.) 10 are
randomly selected to race in the annual race, which takes place on the 14th
of July and the 22nd of August.
The race takes place in the town square and the ground is covered with
sand so the horses run easily. Most
times the horses fall over and people can get hurt really badly. This years race had a pile up just after the start taking out 6 horses leaving only 4 to race it out.
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The Cathedral in Sienna |
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The Cathedral in Florence |
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Our Train Tickets on the Cinque Terre |
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The Cinque Terre View |
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Walking! |
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The Square where the Horse Race is |
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Photos of the Horse Race |
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The Leaning Tower of Pisa Leaning on ME! |
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The Ponte Vecchio |
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The Highest Tower in San Gimignano |
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San Gimignano |
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Going for a swim on the Cinque Terre |
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Swimming on the Cinque Terre |
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The Uffizi Gallery |
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Yummy Gelato! |
San Gimignano
San Gimignano is a lovely old town that has
a wall running around the outside of it.
The town is famous for it’s towers that most have been destroyed or fallen down now. A family would build a tower to
show how wealthy they were and in the small town it self there were just over
50 towers! We climbed one of the towers - major number of steps but worth it when we got to the top as we could see right over the town and countryside.
Pisa
Our final stop on the tour was the famous
town of Pisa with the Leaning Tower of Pisa in it. We were lucky enough to be able to go to the
top of Pisa, which was amazing and scary at the same time. It felt like you were walking sideways at times as it is REALLY leaning. The Leaning Tower of Pisa is now completely
safe since it was counter-balanced in the 1930’s, and recently experienced a major cleanup and stabilization finishing only a few years ago, before then it was
unsafe as it was sinking. Adding 3 more levels to the top
of it that moved the other way balanced the tower. The tower was built in the 14th
century and was built perfectly straight but they soon realized that it was
slowly leaning to one side because of the foundations it was built on. Many of the buildings around are also a bit crooked as well.
The Cinque Terre Walk
The last full day we were in the Florence
area we did a 10 km hike through a region and national park called the Cinque
Terre which is on the coast. The Cinque Terre is made up of 5
different towns all of which are very beautiful. We started our journey on a 2-hour bus
journey to the staring point and enjoyed a lovely walk. We then stopped for lunch and after started
our hike though the beautiful mountains.
The hike was about 1 and half hours long and by the end I was exhausted
(since it was mostly uphill). We went
for a swim and then took a train to
the our final town where we took a boat
back to the bus.