Loggia dei Lanzi, Florence | MyTravelGuide.com


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Loggia dei Lanzi

Loggia dei Lanzi

Piazza della Signoria, Florence, Italy

 

Also called the Loggia della Signoria, the Loggia was named the Loggia dei Lanzi when the Duke Alessandro de'Medici made it the camp of the Lanzichenecchi after the fall of the Florentine Republic. It was the Signoria which commissioned a great Loggia for public use in 1350. The job was started by Orcagna, but continued and finished by Benci di Cione and Francesco Talenti only in 1382. Made in Serena stone with acute pointed arches and bricks decorated by sculptures designed by Agnolo Gaddi, this taste for a clasical style is what characterises Florentine art of the time. Benvenuto Cellini's famous "Perseus" was installed under the Loggia, and in the central arch Giambologna's marble "Rape of the Sabine Women", which can be found next to "Hercules with the centaur Nessus" also in marble. The other statues at the back near to the walls came from the Medici villa in Rome.

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  • Attraction Type: Monuments and Landmarks
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