Science, Art, Food, and a double dose of Galileo

We started today with a visit to the Galileo Science Museum. They have two main collections of scientific instruments, the Medici Collection (16th-18th Centuries) and the Lorraine Collection (18th-19th Centuries). The instruments contributed to the advancement of science, and many of them are beautiful works of art, too.

Plane astrolabe
Armillary Sphere (Volpaia, 1564)
Box of Mathematical Instruments, Quadrants, and Gunner’s Rule
Optical trick (look in the mirror above the painting)
Armillary Sphere (Santucci, 1588-1593)
Terrestrial Globe (late 17th C.)
Celestial Globe
Gores used to create globes
Navigational Instruments
Topographical Military Instruments
Galilean Compound Microscope (second half of 17th C.)
Galileo’s middle finger!
Fifty- and one-hundred-degree thermometers (17th C).
Frog thermometer
Early telescopes
Circle-dividing engine
Newton’s Cradle, early version
The disk rolls to the top!
Electrical Magic Show
Balances
Planetary Clock

We finished at the Galileo Museum a bit before noon, with just enough time to grab a quick lunch before our 1pm entry time for the Uffizi. Rick Steves steered us to All’Antico Vinalo, which he called “trendy”. The line stretched on for nearly a block!

The line for All’Antico Vinaio’s sandwiches

Fortunately, I noticed they had a location across the street with kiosks for placing your order and a warning that you could not customize your sandwiches at that location. We waited three minutes to get to a kiosk, five minutes for our sandwich, and were able to find seats inside at the location with the endless line! We both had caprese sandwiches and enjoyed them immensely…and even had time for dessert at Vivoli Gelato (another trendy place).

We got back to the Uffizi a few minutes before 1pm, ready to stroll into the museum. We were not alone.

The 1pm pre-booked Uffizi line

It was probably 1:30 before we were actually in the galleries; the Uffizi stays open on Tuesdays until 9pm, but we ran out of energy (and had seen almost everythihg) by 5:30.

A small part of the gallery ceiling
Crucifix with scenes from the life of Christ (circa 1230-1250)
Adoration of the Magi (Monaco)
Coronation of the Virgin (Monaco)
Madonna and Child (Masaccio, 1426)
Adoration of the Christ Child (Fra Lippi)
Duke and Dutchess of Urbino
Madonna and Child with Two Angels (Fra Lippi)
Two panels depicting Hercules (Pollaiolo, 15th C)
The Three Archangels and Tobias (Botticini)
Madonna of the Rose Garden (Botticelli)
Adoration of the Magi (Botticelli)
La Primavera (Botticelli) – LOQI put this on their Uffizi bag, and Diane bought it!
The Birth of Venus (Botticelli)
The Calumny of Apelles
The Old Dominion of the Florentine State (Butt, 1588)
Venus de’ Medici (1st C. BCE)
The Wrestlers
The Knife Grinder
View from the Sculpture Hall
Perseus freeing Andromeda (Piero di Cosimo)
Crucifixion with Mary Magdalen (Signorelli)
Holy Family with the Young St. John the Baptist (Michaelangelo)
Madonna and Child with the Young St. John the Baptist “Madonna of the Goldfinch” (Raphael)
Portraits of Agnolo Doni and Maddalena Strozzi (Raphael)
Laocoön (Bandinelli)
View from the Uffizi Dining Terrace
La studio di Rubens (de Baellieur)
Self-portrait (Rembrandt)
Self-Portrait (Gumpp)
Self-Portrait (Chagall)
Venus of Urbino (Titian)
The Expulsion of Adam and Eve (Tintoretto)
Esther and Ahasuerus (Veronese_
Salome with the head of St. John the Baptist (Battistello)
Testa di Medusa (Carvaggio)
Judith and Holofernes (Rubens)
A Rabbi (Rembrandt)
Portrait of Galileo Galilei (Suttermans)

We were ready for dinner, and there was an interesting looking place just down the block – Auditore Ristorante Braceria. Given their location, I was afraid they might be a tourist trip, so I looked them up on TripAdvisor and was shocked to discover that they had a 5.0 rating! How could we refuse?

They specialize in steak, but we’d both had that yesterday, so I had the roasted chicken with arugula and Grand Padano cheese and Diane had pasta with basil pesto and cherry tomatoes, plus a salad, roast potatoes, and wine. They lived up to their rating!

A sampling of Florence

We like Rick Steves’ books and often use his tours as the basis for our explorations. Today, we took two of his Florence tours: the Renaissance Walk, which is an overview of Florence from the Duomo to the Arno (and a bit beyond) and the Duomo Museum tour. We also visited the other sites covered by the Duomo’s Ghilberti Pass (the Bapistery (which is being renovated) and the Crypt of Santa Reparata (inside the Duomo itself – having the pass meant we didn’t have to stand in the very long line for free entry to the Duomo).

I took many, many pictures. Here are some of the best.

From our AirBnB to the Duomo

Square of Italian Unity

Around the Doumo

Campanelle and Duomo
Replica “Gates of Paradise”
Atop the “Gates of Paradise”
In front of the Bell Tower

From the Duomo to Piazzza della Signoria

Piazza della Repubblica
Orsanmichele Church: St. George (Donatello) and St. Matthew (Ghiberti)
Keeping Florence Old
Orsanmichele Church: Madonna of the Rose (Tedesco)
Four Crowned Martyrs (di Banco)
St. George (Donatello)

Piazza della Signoria

Palazzo Vecchio
Not the real David
Perseus (Cellini)
Hercules and Cacus (Bandinelli)
David (replica)
Palazzo Vecchio interior
Neptune (Ammanati)
Savonarola was hanged here

Outside the Uffizi Gallery

Uffizi Courtyard: Giotto
Uffizi Courtyard: Donatello
Uffizi Courtyard: Cellini
Uffizi Courtyard: Leonardo
Uffizi Courtyard: Dante
Uffizi Courtyard: Petrarca
Uffizi Courtyard: Machiavelli (he looks like he’s plotting something)

Ponte Vecchio and Oltarno

Ponte Vecchio
Duomo from Ponte Vecchio

Returning to the Duomo

Albero della Pace (Roggi)
Loggia del Lanzi: The Rape of Polyxena (Fedi)

The Bapistery and the Cathedral itself

Florence Cathedral
On the Cathedral
Bapistery Ceiling (not currently visible)
David and Saul in the Bapistery
In the Bapistery
Duomo Dome interior
Dante and his Poem (di Michelino)
John Hawkwood (Uccello) – it’s in 3-D!
In the Crypt of Santa Reparata
In the Crypt of Santa Reparata
In the Crypt of Santa Reparata
Brunellischi’s Tomb

Duomo Museum (much of the art you see on the Duomo buildings isn’t original – the originals are in the museum!)

North Doors of the Bapistery
Mary in Majesty (di Cambio)
St. John the Evangelist (Donatello), St. Mark the Evangelist (Lamberti)
Four Doctors of the Church with a Roman-Period Sarcophagus
Bapistery South Doors
The Madonna of San Giorgio alla Costa (Bondone)
Saint Mary Magdalene as penitant (Donatello)
Michaelangelo’s final Pieta
Habbakuk (Donatello)
Jeremiah (Donatello)

And one last Golden Hour photo on the way back to our AirBnB

Santa Maria Novella (just your basic local Florentine church)

It was a rather full day.