What’s Pitti Palace?

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Palazzo Pitti is a 500-year-old palace in Florence, now open to the public with museums, art galleries, and extensive gardens. Originally built by Luca Pitti, it was expanded by the Grand Duke Cosimo I de’ Medici. The palace houses various cultural treasures, including classical art, the Royal Apartments, and the Costume Gallery. Visitors need specific tickets to enter each gallery or museum, and a ticket is available to enter all parts of the palace. The palace hosts special exhibitions throughout the year and is closed on Mondays.

The Palazzo Pitti is located in Florence, a palace that is more than 500 years old. Although historically it has been home to Italian nobles and royalty, in modern times the palace is open to the public and includes several museums and art galleries. Extensive gardens are also open to the public and the palace hosts various exhibitions throughout the year.

Already in 1400 Palazzo Pitti was started by a man named Luca Pitti, but it was the middle of the following century when it passed into the hands of the family of the Grand Duke Cosimo I de’ Medici, who added to the relatively small original building to create an imposing palatial building with a front courtyard and two additional wings built on each end of the palace. The Boboli Gardens also date back to that period, extending behind the building and containing historical examples of fountains and other decorative elements of the garden. Inside the palace, the decoration mainly dates from the 1600s.

Seat of a succession of nobles, and for some time even of the King of Italy, Palazzo Pitti now houses a variety of cultural treasures from Italy’s past. Because the building is so large, a few different museums call it home, along with a number of art galleries. Classical art is on display, with paintings and sculptural works in the Gallery of Modern Art, and a Porcelain Museum is also housed in the palace. Works of art by Rubens, Titian and Raphael are some of the paintings that are displayed in the Palatine Gallery on the first floor, and visitors can also stroll through the Royal Apartments, where the Kings of Italy and the Grand Dukes of Tuscany lived. Visitors interested in fashion through the ages can also visit the Costume Gallery, which exhibits Italian clothing from the 16th century onwards.

Located in the city of Florence itself, the Palazzo Pitti sits directly on Piazza Pitti. Some areas of the building may be free to enter, such as the Cabinet of Drawings and Prints, but generally, entry to each gallery or museum requires a specific ticket. A ticket is also available which allows the holder to enter all parts of the palace. Palazzo Pitti is open almost all year round, but may be closed one day a week, usually on Monday. In addition to the regular galleries, the palace also hosts special exhibitions throughout the year and entrance to each of these can only be with the ticket.




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