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Palazzo Auditore: Difference between revisions

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imported>Therickster18
imported>Kainzorus Prime
I think you confused this with Palazzo Medici.
Line 30: Line 30:
*Also within the certain memory, the door which led to Giovanni's hidden room was inaccessible. The secret entrance itself could not be seen, even with [[Eagle Vision]].
*Also within the certain memory, the door which led to Giovanni's hidden room was inaccessible. The secret entrance itself could not be seen, even with [[Eagle Vision]].
*In the [[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood (novel)|novelization of ''Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood'']], the Palazzo Auditore was referred to as the "Villa Auditore". Likewise, the Auditore villa in Monteriggioni was referred to as "Mario's Citadel".
*In the [[Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood (novel)|novelization of ''Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood'']], the Palazzo Auditore was referred to as the "Villa Auditore". Likewise, the Auditore villa in Monteriggioni was referred to as "Mario's Citadel".
*The exterior and inner courtyard of the Palazzo, is based off of the real life "Palazzo Medici-Riccardi" in Florence.


==Gallery==
==Gallery==

Revision as of 15:24, 7 December 2013


The Palazzo Auditore, or the Auditore Palace, was the home of the noble 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. These included secret passages and rooms where Giovanni could perform his Assassin duties.[1][2]

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.[1] The building remained in this state at least until the death of Girolamo Savonarola in 1498.

Ezio Auditore visited his family home during Savonarola's Bonfire of the Vanities, where he experienced a ghostly vision of his family.[3]

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.[4]

Trivia

Gallery

References