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Titel
The Bargello Palace : the invention of civic architecture in Florence / Amee Yunn
VerfasserYunn, Amee In Wikipedia suchen nach Amee Yunn
ErschienenLondon : Harvey Miller Publishers, 2015
Umfang267 Seiten ; 25 cm : Illustrationen, Pläne
Anmerkung
Includes bibliography (pages 249-258) and index
SchlagwörterBargello <Florenz> In Wikipedia suchen nach Bargello Florenz / Adelshaus In Wikipedia suchen nach Adelshaus / Architektur In Wikipedia suchen nach Architektur / Ausstattung In Wikipedia suchen nach Ausstattung / Geschichte 1255-1500 In Wikipedia suchen nach Geschichte 1255-1500
ISBN978-1-909400-31-3
Links
Download The Bargello Palace [0,16 mb]
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Verfügbarkeit In meiner Bibliothek
Archiv METS (OAI-PMH)
Zusammenfassung

The Bargello's new building history radically changes our understanding of the communal palace's construction, function, and urban context during the formation of early modern Florence.0This book offers a new, revised building history of the Bargello, the first town hall of Florence. A careful analysis of documents, fabric, and restoration allows us to reconstruct the original site. It reveals two previously unidentified building stages. The first palace, begun in 1255, adapted an ex-neighborhood consortium, reusing an old tower and three houses. In the 1280s, a second palace arose next to it, thus creating a twin-palace complex for the Podestà and Capitano, the highest-ranking public officials.0Long misidentified as the 1255 palace, the front wing's lower two stories were actually built in 1291-1308. An unroofed precinct wall enclosed the older structures behind a monumental facade, forming an open-air courtyard used for tribunals and stables. This part became known as the old palace when the large, arcaded courtyard and rear wing were addded in 1316-1322. The "new palace" containing the Magdalen Chapel was designed for the Angevin court in residence, not for the communal administration of justice as generally believed. After a 1332 fire devastated the upper stories, the front wing was covered with two immense roof vaults in 1332-1346. Inside, many old dividing walls survived until the nineteenth century. They were demolished with the prisons during the building's conversion into the present national museum, concocting the two vast exhibition halls. This book illustrates the Bargello's early architecture. Reinterpreting the timeline radically changes our understanding of the palace's construction, function, and urban context during the formation of early modern Florence