January 14

Visit Florence Italy and Brunelleschi’s dome cathedral

This blog post is for all the art lovers planning to visit Tuscany and more specifically Florence. There are more than 10 reasons to learn to speak Italian and visit Italy. I would say Italian Renessaince art and more specifically Florentine art is one of them for sure. I bet you didn’t know what an enormous task it was to build the Florence Cathedral? Or Duomo as it’s affectionately called by the locals? Here’s a view of Florence from the Cupola of Florence Cathedral.

Florence

Brunelleschi’s Dome in Florence
Brunelleschi’s dome is the largest masonry dome ever built and it is the coverage of the Florence’s Cathedral.
Brunelleschi’s dome, 45 meters wide, was originally a wooden dome built by Arnolfo di Cambio. To construct a dome over the presbytery mixed up many technical problems.
Imagine the thriving city of Florence in the year 1296. Proud of their city, the Florentines began to build a glorious cathedral, designing it with space for a huge dome. But there was a problem: no one knew how to erect such a dome
They made a model which they kept in the half-built cathedral to show how the dome ought to be. If built, it would be the highest and widest vault raised – but how to make it remained a puzzle.

The people of Florence had a touching faith that one day God would send a man who could solve the puzzle.
Their faith was rewarded by a goldsmith and clockmaker called Filippo Brunelleschi who was born in 1377.
The dome Brunelleschi designed and built still dominates Florence today, a miracle of design and engineering.
Whether your stay in Florence is only a brief stop in the Piazzale Michelangelo to see the bronze copy of David and look across the river at the city, or whether you stay for years, the abiding memory will be the way the rhythm of the tiled rooftops culminates triumphantly in the great dome.
The cathedral is seldom known by its name, Santa Maria del Fiore, but simply as the Duomo (the Dome) for locals or Brunelleschi’s Dome worldwide.
The difficulties faced by Brunelleschi in constructing the dome were enormous.
The usual way to build an arch or dome was to support it with scaffolding called “centring” but the open space in the cathedral was 42m in width and the Florentines wanted a tall, soaring dome.

All the timber in Tuscany would not have been sufficient to make the centring. Brunelleschi decided to build without scaffolding in such a way it supported itself as it progressed.
Brunelleschi’s solutions for the dome were ingenious, innovative and costly. But even today Brunelleschi’s Dome is the tallest building in Florence, over 600 years after it was built.
Brunelleschi’s invention went everywhere. King tells how he set up a caffe’ high on the buildings so the workers would not have to return to the floor for lunch.
Once up, the dome was recognized as a marvel of the age “vast enough to cover the entire Tuscan population with its shadow,” as a younger contemporary of Brunelleschi’s, Leon Battista Alberti noted.

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About Learn Italian Manchester:  My name is Amedea and I’m a native Italian tutor with a real passion for my language. I run Italian classes in Manchester which are sociable, fun and designed to teach you Italian you will really use. As well as Italian courses in Manchester I teach 1 to 1 Italian lessons and cover areas including Manchester City Centre,Didsbury, Chorlton, Sale, Altrincham, Hale, Woodford, Bramhall and others. I also run Italian cookery classes: fresh pasta, Italian vegetarian food, cookery classes for busy people, Italian style cocktail masterclasses and more. If you would like to do something new, learn to speak Italian and make new friends along the way! Contact me at: hello@learnitalianmanchester.co.uk


Tags

10 reasons to learn italian, Beginners italian, Brunelleschi dome Florence Italy, Florentine art, Italian classes Chorlton, Italian classes in Didsbury, Italian cookery classes, Italian Renessaince art, Learn italian in Didsbury, Travel to Italy, Tuscany, Visit Florence Italy


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