Related locations
- why? 1. Statue of Dante
- why? 2. Casa di Dante Alighieri
- why? 3. Basilica di Santa Croce di Firenze
- why? 4. Portico degli Uffizi
- why? 5. Palazzo Vecchio
- why? 6. Istituto e Museo di Storia della Scienza
- why? 7. San Lorenzo
- why? 8. Uffizi museum
- why? 9. Duomo
- why? 10. ITA, Firenze, San Lorenzo
- why? 11. ITA, Firenze, Portico degli Uffizi
- why? 12. ITA, Firenze, Basilica di Santa Croce di Firenze
- why? 13. ITA, Firenze, Piazza Santa Croce, Statue of Dante
Related topics
Related persons
- why? Galileo Galilei
- why? Niccolò Machiavelli
- why? Michelangelo Antonioni (filmdirector)
- why? Michelangelo Buonarroti
- why? Andrea Cesalpino
- why? Lorenzo I de Medici
- why? Francesco Petrarca
- why? Donatello
- why? Leonardo da Vinci
- why? Filippo Brunelleschi
- why? Giovanni Boccaccio
- why? Amerigo Vespucci
- why? Leon Battista Alberti
- why? Mariangelo Accorso
- why? Pietro Aretino
- why? Francesco Redi
- why? Lodovico Guicciardini
- why? Sandro Botticelli
Galileo Galilei, Michelangelo, Dante and Macchiavelli are burried in the Basilica di Santa Croce di Firenze.
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The house where Dante lived before he got exiled from Florence. One of the tiles on the small square has the typical profile of Dante carved in it.
The link between Dante and Galileo is the following: in 1588, Galileo gave two public lectures at the Accademia Fiorentina (Florentine Academy) about the shape, location, and dimensions of hell as described in Dante’’s Inferno. The presentation was held in the Sala del Consiglio dei Duecento in Palazzo Vecchio.
The Portico degli Uffizi is the covered courtyard outside the Uffizi Gallery. Around the walls of the courtyard are statues of scientists, artists and statesmen important to Florentine history. Here you can find Galileo Galilei, Boccaccio, Petrarca, Michelangelo, Dante, Lorenzo de Medici, Macchiaveli, Vespucci, Donatello, San Antonino, Battista Alberti, Guicciardini, Mariangelo Accorso, Michelangelo, Cesalpino, Aretino, Mascagni, Mascagni, Mascagni, Pisano, Redi.
During the Renaissance (15-16th century), Florence was ruled by the Medici family. Under their patronage the arts, science and literature flourished as nowhere else in Europe. Florence was the city of such writers as Dante, Petrarch, and Macchiavelli, and artists and engineers such as Boticelli, Brunelleschi (who built the magnificent dome on the church of St. Mary of the Flowers), Alberti, Leonardo Da Vinci, and Michelangelo. Also Galileo could count on the support of this family. He also gave lots of his tools to the de Medici. A few of them can still be seen in the Museum of Science, next to the Arno river. The de Medici asked Brunelleschi to construct the church of San Lorenzo.