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[[File:Mercato_vecchio.jpg|thumb|250px|The Mercato Vecchio.]]
[[File:Mercato_vecchio.jpg|thumb|250px|The Mercato Vecchio.]]
The '''Mercato Vecchio''' was the name for [[Florence]]'s ''Republic Square'' during the late [[Renaissance|15<sup>th</sup>century]].


==Database Entry==
The '''Mercato Vecchio''' (English: ''Republic Square'') was a marketplace in [[Florence]] during the [[Renaissance|15th century]].
 
==Database entry==
''The centre of Florentine business, the Mercato Vecchio served all the shopping needs of the city. To quote Antonio Pucci, a 14th Century Florentine poet: "Physicians dwelt around for every ill, And here were linen cloths, and flax merchants, pork vendors, and apothecaries.''
''The centre of Florentine business, the Mercato Vecchio served all the shopping needs of the city. To quote Antonio Pucci, a 14th Century Florentine poet: "Physicians dwelt around for every ill, And here were linen cloths, and flax merchants, pork vendors, and apothecaries.''



Revision as of 00:51, 17 November 2011


Template:WPlocations

The Mercato Vecchio.

The Mercato Vecchio (English: Republic Square) was a marketplace in Florence during the 15th century.

Database entry

The centre of Florentine business, the Mercato Vecchio served all the shopping needs of the city. To quote Antonio Pucci, a 14th Century Florentine poet: "Physicians dwelt around for every ill, And here were linen cloths, and flax merchants, pork vendors, and apothecaries.

The Mercato was established first in Roman times as the city of the Forum, and only in 1030 was first documented as a marketplace. Staple foods from the countryside, like grain, were the most popular goods sold, followed by wool.

However, if shoppers became bored with the basics, to quote a 15th Century poet, Il Panormita: "There halfway down the street stands a happy whorehouse which you will know by the very smell of the place."[1]

Trivia

References