Welcome to Assassin's Creed Wiki! Log in and join the community.

Palazzo Auditore: Difference between revisions

From the Assassin's Creed Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Lady Kyashira
mNo edit summary
imported>Lady Kyashira
mNo edit summary
Line 8: Line 8:
|features =  
|features =  
|events =  
|events =  
|hidea = yes
|hidea = yes}}
}}
The '''Palazzo Auditore''' (English: ''Auditore Palace'') was the home of the [[House of Auditore|Auditore]] family within the city of [[Florence]]. The building was easily recognizable by the flags bearing the Auditore family emblem.
The '''Palazzo Auditore''' (English: ''Auditore Palace'') was the home of the [[House of Auditore|Auditore]] family within the city of [[Florence]]. The building was easily recognizable by the flags bearing the Auditore family emblem.


Line 35: Line 34:
Palazzo_Auditore_v.png|The Palazzo and its surrounding streets
Palazzo_Auditore_v.png|The Palazzo and its surrounding streets
FT 7 v.png|The Palazzo under guard
FT 7 v.png|The Palazzo under guard
ACLineage Palazzo Auditore.png|The Palazzo in ''Lineage''
</gallery>
</gallery>



Revision as of 05:55, 27 October 2019

The Palazzo Auditore (English: Auditore Palace) was the home of the Auditore family within the city of Florence. The building was easily recognizable by the flags bearing the Auditore family emblem.

History

Construction and conception

Initial sketches for the palazzo were completed by Leone Battista Alberti, but the actual plans were completed by the building's commissioner and owner, Giovanni Auditore da Firenze.[1] These included secret passages and rooms where Giovanni could perform his Assassin duties.[2][3]

Auditore execution

The building was completed in 1473, but in 1476, the Auditore family was executed and the building was abandoned, apart from a contingent of Florentine city guards stationed along the palazzo's roof, presumably remaining on the lookout for the lone surviving Auditore, Ezio. These guards were removed upon the failure of the Pazzi conspiracy, leaving the palazzo completely abandoned.[2]

The palazzo was once again briefly occupied in 1494, when French troops invaded Florence and ousted Piero de' Medici. The occupying French troops used the palazzo as a billet, until departing to conquer the Kingdom of Naples. The palazzo was stripped of its remaining contents during the Bonfire of the Vanities. It was at this time that Ezio revisited the palazzo, where he experienced a ghostly vision of his family.[4]

Destruction

Between 1498 and 1500, rumors of the palazzo's destruction had reached the surviving Auditore in Monteriggioni. Once Ezio had arrived in Rome in January 1500, Niccolò Machiavelli confirmed that the palace had been demolished.[5]

Trivia

Gallery

Appearances

References