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2008-10-14
Très agréable séjour avec vue sur les vignes, au milieu d'un parc verdoyant et très bien entretenu. Reçus par une famille très attentionnée, qui se met au service de ses clients avec la plus grande gentillesse et Mérite un petit détour (même un grand détour) si on aime le calme et la bonne cuisine. Grande piscine pour se délasser en fin de journée après les visites de FLORENCE et des autres villes : un petit paradis en toscane!
2008-10-10
hotel de bon confort ,moderne ,calme et idéalement situé pour aller visiter Florence par le train.
georges broca

Palazzo Vecchio Back

Palazzo Vecchio, found in Piazza della Signoria in the historical center of Florence, which once had the exclusive role of political representative of the city, began to lose importance beginning with the new construction of the Uffizi Palace in 1565.

The Palace went through three building stages from the time of its original construction. Arnolfo Di Cambio, who began the project in 1299, was the creator of the original plan, but shortly after beginning the project he died and left the project o be completed by his successors who finished it in 1314. Built on the ruins of two other palaces, the original ancient tower found on these ruins, was incorporated into the new facade by Arnolfo Di Cambio. It is 94 meters in height and contains two small holding cells which once held prisoner Cosimo the Elder in 1435 and Girolamo Savonarla later in 1498. The first large alterations were done during the Republican era and again after Cosimo I of the Medici took residence there in the mid 1500’s. Centuries later it gained importance again after the powerful Lorraine family was expelled from the city in 1848 and Florence was the capital of the kingdom of Italy. It was shortly after that Palazzo Vecchio became the seat of United Italy’s provisional government from 1865-71 and housed the Chamber of Deputies. It later returned to its original function as the seat of the City Council in 1872. The Palazzo Vecchio that we see today house offices of the City Council but much of it can be visited today. The first floor is composed of 3 courtyards, Salone dei Cinquecento, and the Studiolo. The second floor contains the Apartments of the Elements, Terrace of Saturn, The Hercules Room, the room of Jupiter, the Room of Cybele, The Ceres Rom, the Sala Verde, The Room of the Sabines, the Dining Room, the Room of Penelope, the Private Chambers of Eleanor, the Sala dell’Udienza, the Chapel of the Signoria, the Sala dell’orologio, the Stanza del Guardarobe, the Old Chancellery, and the Study.
Pitti Palace Situated in the first great square in the area that the Florentines call “Diladdarno” - beyond the Arno - Palazzo Pitti dominates uncontested by a small hill at the feet of Boboli
The Medici’s Chapels The Medici Chapels were built as a personal sepulchre of the Medici family right in the basilica of San Lorenzo, the one considered by the Medici as their private church and located in front of the residential palace in via Larga (presently via Cavour).
The Uffizi Palace The Uffizi Palace is one of the most loved monuments of Florence. An architectural work of great importance, that shelters masterpieces of inestimable value.
Santa Maria Novella Piazza Santa Maria Novella, with its original five-sided shape, is one of the largest squares in the old city centre of Florence:
Florence Dome (Santa Maria del Fiore) The Cathedral or Duomo of Florence as we see it today is the end result of years of work that covered over six centuries of history. Its basic architectural project was designed by Arnolfo di Cambio at the end of the 13th century;
Piazza della Signoria Piazza della Signoria has been the political heart of the city from the Middle Ages to the present day. It is a singular urbanistic creation that began taking shape from 1268 onwards, when the Guelph party gained control of the city again and decided to raze the houses of their Ghibelline rivals to the ground.
Ponte Vecchio Built in ancient times by the Etruscans, the bridge has weathered many storms - and storming by invading legions. Because of its location over the narrowest part of the Arno River, the bridge has been rebuilt and restored many times throughout its long history. And it has changed with the times.