Palazzo Pitti: Difference between revisions
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==History== | ==History== | ||
Sometime between 1481 and 1488, [[Girolamo Riario]] sent some of his men to ransack the Palazzo Pitti, they succeeded in killing some of | Sometime between 1481 and 1488, [[Girolamo Riario]] sent some of his men to ransack the Palazzo Pitti, they succeeded in killing some of its residents and stealing a valuable map, before returning to Girolamo in [[Forlì]]. Soon after, [[Lorenzo de' Medici]] contacted the [[Assassin Order|Assassin]] [[Ezio Auditore da Firenze]] via pigeon coop while he was in Forlì, explaining to him what had had happened. With this knowledge, Ezio hunted down and killed Lord Girolamo's men. | ||
Later, [[Girolamo Savonarola]] took up residence in the Palazzo after taking over Florence in 1494, and lived there until the people of Florence, hating his anti-materialist laws, finally burned him at the stake on May 23 1498.<ref name="bonfire">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'' - [[Bonfire of the Vanities (DLC)|Bonfire of the Vanities]]</ref> | Later, [[Girolamo Savonarola]] took up residence in the Palazzo after taking over Florence in 1494, and lived there until the people of Florence, hating his anti-materialist laws, finally burned him at the stake on May 23 1498.<ref name="bonfire">''[[Assassin's Creed II]]'' - [[Bonfire of the Vanities (DLC)|Bonfire of the Vanities]]</ref> | ||
Revision as of 19:33, 9 November 2011

The Palazzo Pitti was a building located in the Oltrarno district of Florence.
History
Sometime between 1481 and 1488, Girolamo Riario sent some of his men to ransack the Palazzo Pitti, they succeeded in killing some of its residents and stealing a valuable map, before returning to Girolamo in Forlì. Soon after, Lorenzo de' Medici contacted the Assassin Ezio Auditore da Firenze via pigeon coop while he was in Forlì, explaining to him what had had happened. With this knowledge, Ezio hunted down and killed Lord Girolamo's men.
Later, Girolamo Savonarola took up residence in the Palazzo after taking over Florence in 1494, and lived there until the people of Florence, hating his anti-materialist laws, finally burned him at the stake on May 23 1498.[1]
Database Entry
Intended as a grand display of wealth by Luca Pitti, the Pitti Palace was left incomplete when Luca ran out of money and died in 1472. The severe Roman-style architecture is reminiscent of the craggy stone arches of the ancient imperial aqueducts found outside Rome.[1]
Trivia
- Historically, Girolamo Savonarola lived in the Chiesa di San Marco (Church of San Marco) after he took over Florence. The Palazzo Pitti would still have been in the possession of the Pitti family at the time.
References
Gallery
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Ezio overlooking the Palazzo Pitti.