FLORENCE, a famous city of central Italy; on both sides of the Arno, 63 miles S. by W. of Bologna ; 68 E. N. E. of Leg horn, and 187 N.N.W. of Rome. It stands in a richly wooded, well-cultivated, and beautiful valley, encircled by the Apen nines, and is well built and agreeable. Its shape is nearly a square, the sides of which almost correspond with the car dinal points; the Arno intersects it from S. E. to N. W., three of the quarters into which it is divided being situated on the right, and the fourth on the left bank of the river. The communication between the opposite sides of the river is main tained by means of seven bridges. Flor ence contains a great number of mag nificent edifices and squares, generally adorned with statues, columns, or foun tains; there are no fewer than 170 churches, 89 convents, 2 royal, and many other palaces, hospitals, and theaters great and small. Each angle of a street presents an architectural view, fit to be drawn for a scene in a theater. Many of the houses are palaces, and are fitted up with great magnificence.
The Piazza Reale is the largest square; it has a fine marble fountain, and an equestrian statue in bronze of Duke Cosmo I. by John of Bologna. The Piazza del Mercato Vecchio, exactly in the center of the city, has a marble column from which Florence radiates for one mile on each side. The Arno is decidedly superior to the Tiber at Rome. The bridge Santa Trinita, built of mar ble in 1559 by Ammanati, is designed in a style of elegance and simplicity unri valed by the most successful efforts of modern artists. The bridges, and the handsome though not spacious quays by which the river is bordered, afford fine views of the river, Florence being in this respect much superior to the "Eter nal City." The duomo, or cathedral, a vast edifice, coated with marble, about 500 feet in length, and 384 feet in height to the top of the cross, stands in a spacious square. It was begun by Ar nolfo di Lapo in 1296, and finished by Brunelleschi in 1426. It is built of brick, and veneered, as it were, with parti colored marble slabs arranged in narrow strips or panels. The interior is very striking. The campanile or belfry, ad joining the duomo, but detached from it, is a fine tower 288 feet in height. The church of Santa Croce, called the Pan theon of Florence, is interesting from its containing the remains and tombs of four of the greatest men of modern Italy, or indeed of modern times—Michael Angelo, Galileo, Machiavelli, and Alfieri. Among the palaces are the Palazzo Vecchio, or Old Palace, inhabited by the Medici when citizens of Florence, which was begun in 1298, and finished in 1550. It is in a massive, severe, and gloomy style, with a tower 268 feet high. Ad joining it is the Piazza del Palazzo Vecchio, a square containing a fine col lection of statues, and a noble arcade, the Loggia di Lanzi, under the porticoes of which are magnificent groups of sculp ture. The Palazzo Pitti, erected in 1440. the ordinary residence of the King of Italy, is a vast and heavy structure; it is furnished in the most costly manner, and is enriched with a great number of the choicest works of art and virtu, and an excellent library. Attached to this
palace are the Boboli Gardens, laid out by Cosmo I. in 1550, in the classical style. Connected with these gardens is the botanical garden, a museum of natural history, the Fontana anatomical collec tion in wax, etc. Another fine palace, the Riccardi (built in 1440), has a noble gallery with a ceiling painted by Luca Giordano, and a library of 40,000 vol umes, open to the public. But the crown ing glory of Florence is its Grand Gal lery, occupying the upper floor of the Uffizi, a building erected after a design of Vasari, by Cosmo I., consisting of two parallel corridors or galleries, each 448 feet in length, and 72 feet apart, united at one end by a third corridor. This contains some masterpieces of statuary, as the world-renowned "Venus de Me dici," "The Knife-Grinder," the "Fawn," "Niobe and her Children," etc. The col lection of pictures comprises superb ex amples of all the best schools. A splen did apartment, known as the Tribune, contains the rarest treasures of the col lection, and is in itself a wonder of art, with its cupola inlaid with mother-of pearl, and its rich marble pavement. Besides the Riccardi and Laurentian libraries, the Magliabecchi library, con taining a rare, extensive, and valuable collection of books, is also open to the public. Florence is subject to fogs in the winter; but in spring and autumn it is a delightful residence. The literary and educational institutions are both numer ous and important. At the head of these is the famous Academia della Crusca. The charitable institutions are numerous, extensive, and well conducted.
The encouragement given under the late as well as the present government, to artistic and scientific studies, has con ferred advantages on Florence unknown in most other parts of Italy. Manufac tures silks, straw hats, articles of virtu, as intaglios, etc., jewelry, porcelain, per fumery, etc. Florence has produced more celebrated men than any other place in Italy, or, perhaps, of Europe; among others may be specified Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio, Villani, Cosmo and Lorenzo de Medici; Galileo, Michael Angelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Benvenuto Cellini, Alberti, Lapo, Brunelleschi, Giotto, An drea del Sarto, Machiavelli; Popes Leo X. and XI., Clement VII., VIII., and XII. The origin of this city is not clearly as certained; but it owed its first distinc tion to Sylla, who planted in it a Roman colony. In 541 it was almost wholly destroyed by Totila, King of the Goths. About 250 years afterward it was re stored by Charlemagne. It then became the chief city of a famous republic; and was for a lengthened period in Italy what Athens had been in Greece in the days of Xenophon and Thucydides. At length, in 1537, the Medici, from being the first of her citizens, became sovereign dukes of Florence. The city afterward became the capital of the former grand duchy of Tuscany till 1860, when it was annexed to the new kingdom of Italy, and in 1865, the seat of government was transferred thither from Turin. Pop. about 235,000.