‘Books read us because they change (like people) as we read them, and change us as we read.’ Virginia Woolf
Maybe this is the best way to travel around Florence?
An artwork showing an aristocrat taking a child to the Florence baptistry for baptism; by Francesco Pieraccini (flourished 1823 – after 1851)

Do you know me?
‘Never say you know the last word about any human heart.’ Henry James
Firenze, 1959

Corridoio del Lungarno Archibusieri nel 1959, Firenze.
The village of Vinci in Tuscany
Travel can be good for your health. Recently a good friend and I, at the end of a week that for both of us was filled with stress and problems, decided to get the heck out of Dodge for a day.
We left home for a day to wander in the wider, wondrous world of the outer sections of the province of Firenze.
We landed in Vinci, to see the village near the farmhouse where Leonardo was born.
For us, it was just what the doctor ordered.
Vinci is a very, very charming borgo:







Of course the town is famous because the legendary genius Leonardo da Vinci was born in a nearby farmhouse. Every inch of this little village proclaims “Leonardo!”
The main attraction in the village is the Museo Leonardino, housed inside the building that was formerly the Castello dei Conti Guidi, originally built in the 12th century.

The castle is located high atop the town’s highest hill. Inside the museo, you encounter a hologram of Leonardo:
The museum takes up 3 floors of the castle, showcasing a collection of the original designs found in Leonardo’s notebooks as well as 40 different models of various machines that were he designed.
Most interesting of all of these, to me, was the wooden paraglider that Leonardo created.

Vinci is surrounded by the Tuscan hills and there are various vineyards and olive groves around the town which have remained the same since ancient times.
The town is spread over an area of 54 sq km and the population is close to 14,000. The economy of Vinci is based on agriculture, production of wine and olive oil, pottery and items like paper, clothes and furniture.




After seeing the main exhibition space, you can also climb up to the top of the castle and view the surrounding countryside.
Before you are afforded the spectacular views, however, you must climb an endless set of stairs leading up, up and up.

Trust me, the view above does not begin to capture the length and height of this stairway. Several stops are needed on the way up to catch your breath.
The views from the top terrazzo of the Museo di Leonardo are as vast as they are gorgeous. What a perfectly farmed section of Tuscany, filled with groves and groves of olives and grapes. The groves are in perfectly formed lines, such as you never see anywhere else. Wonder how that happened?







Leonardo Da Vinci was born in a small farmhouse which is located just 3 km from the center of the town. You could walk it, if you have a lot of stamina. On a day of 30 C., I didn’t. We drove.





A good source of info on Vinci is this:
Garden details from Villa Medici a Fiesole
Sometimes my posts are just too long, so I save a bit for later. I’ve posted twice recently about the palazzo and the grounds of the Villa Medici a Fiesole.
The bits I’ve saved from this garden are
- A closer look at a terracotta pot, which is adorned with your own coat-of-arms, at if you are a Medici
2. How to mend a valuable terracotta pot


3. How to make a broom. Yes, I know we buy ours, but have you ever thought about how they made brooms in the olden days? Well, I’m about to show you!

You tie a bunch of branches of twigs around a longer and straighter stick. Or, nowadays, a pole.

You’re welcome!! :-)
Villa Medici a Fiesole, the garden edition
A few days ago I posted on the marvel that is the Villa Medici a Fiesole. There I covered the construction and importance of the Villa as a precursor for Renaissance villa design. That post kept growing and growing, so I decided to make a 2nd post on just the gardens.
So, let’s talk (garden) turkey:

In the imagine (picture, in Italian) above you see how Michelozzo and later architects sited the palazzo and its wonderful gardens. The palazzo itself sits on the center left side of the plan.

Looking outward from the palazzo within the gardens at the villa.
Below, with stonework that recalls grotto architecture, is the entrance to the gardens. I can’t remember who the sculptured bust represents, but it is no doubt one Medici or another. The coat-of-arms beneath the bust is, of course, most definitely that of the Medici.

So, let’s look at a plan of the site. The palazzo is not numbered but you can see where the 4 main gardens exist.

We’ll start our tour in garden #1. You walk through or beside #1 when you enter the grounds and approach the palazzo from the west. You can see the white-washed palazzo on the far right side.
As you walk along the pea gravel path from the entry gate to the palazzo, you have this immediate view of the garden with its terracotta pots filled with apple-red geraniums.

If you can peel your eyes away from the palazzo, which is now fully presented ahead of you, you can already gaze over the geraniums and be rewarded with a spectacular view of Florence. The unmistakable center of the city is marked with the dome of the Duomo.

Below, the city of Florence as seen from garden #1 at Villa Medici. Wow.

I’m going to try to avoid the view for a minute, because it always steals the show. Let’s look at just the plantings and layout of garden #1, shall we?
The north side of garden #1 is constructed with a high wall covered with vines, a small outbuilding, used I think, like a pavillion. A border of pink roses line the length of the north side of garden #1.


Within garden #1, as you look back from the Palazzo end, is laid out with large specimen trees, grass (very unusual in an Italian garden), and potted citrus, lemon and oranges mostly. The building in the lower section of the photo is the entry gate to the Villa.


Along this northern border of the garden, a fountain, with a grotto-like finishing of stones, is set into the short wall. It provides a relief from the steady gaze of border wall with its oval form, and on both sides of the fountain one can walk up a few steps to walk to the pavillion at the west end.

Below: looking back at the palazzo and garden #1 from west to east:

To enter garden #2, you must pass along the walkway to the south of the palazzo. You climb this tall hill, which is guarded by 2 terracotta lions.

Angels in the architecture of the gate proclaim the (almost?) divine majesty of the Medici family.

Through the gate, you see garden #2, with its own set of panoramic views, awaiting you.

I don’t know if everyone else is like me, but when I passed under the gate leading to garden #2, I was drawn like a magnet to the end walls of the property, where this view, framed by cypress trees, awaits the spectator. I mean, come on (and people ask me why I choose to live in Italy…don’t I miss the USA???)!!

Garden #2 is a more private, secluded space than #1. The palazzo on this, the west side, has magnificent magnolia trees, and, as you can see, the palazzo itself has many windows and arched openings to give those inside the palazzo a gorgeous smallish garden to observe, with extraordinary views available to anyone standing near the short walls that separate the site from the ravines below.

A low and wide fountain occupies the geometrically divided garden #2.

After strolling through this garden, lost in thought about the people who had walked through this garden throughout the last 500+ years, I tore myself away, for new gardens #3 & 4 awaited.
This is what the view leading back to garden #1 looks like. You pass through the gateway again, and walk along the gravel path to a structure on the east end of garden #1.


On the west end of garden #1, sits the backside of the first gateway. However, this is no regular backside! It is a semi-enclosed room with its own frescoes. The main fresco provides an imaginary walkway to follow into the depths of an imaginary garden.




To the right side of this small structure, you find a set of stairs leading to gardens 3 and 4. Unfortunately, caught up in the wonder of this Medici sponsored experience of passing between gardens, I forgot to take pictures. Dang it. The stairs lead you to a long, plant covered passage. This passage is quite long, with another pea stone path. It was the end of July when I visited this Medici villa, and the plants splayed over this path were not in bloom. I am not sure what the plant is, but it didn’t look like wisteria. Maybe it is honeysuckle? Not sure. Whatever it is, this covered passageway is garden #3 and I don’t have any pictures of it.
Garden #3 takes you from the east end of the site to the center of garden #4, pictured below. As you walk through garden #3, you have tantalizing views of garden #4, and, once again, the city of Florence in the background. Is it any wonder that I failed to take pictures of garden #3 itself?!



Oh wait, I do have one photo of garden #3

Beautiful, isn’t it, garden #3?
To enter the final garden, #4, you take these picturesque stairs below to the lower level. Now you are in the final garden, and it more than earns its position as the climax of this site’s garden experience:

Each side of this marvelous little stairway is planted with wisteria, and although the wisteria season is essentially over in the Arno valley, I could see the purple racemes in my imagination. I loved walking down these stairs, the wisteria branches tried to wrap you up from both sides. It was a very cool experience.
Here’s the big reward awaiting any visitor to garden #4, an unparalleled vista of the city of Florence, spread out before your eyes.

When you can tear yourself away from the views that open from garden #4, you can get lost for a while in the flowers that take center stage in this lowest level of the Villa Medici a Fiesole.
For example, below is the closest thing to an English-style border that I’ve ever seen in Italy. You are looking up from garden #4 through the passage (garden #3), and don’t fail to notice the cypress trees that also grace these plantings.


Let’s look for a second at the geometric beds laid out in garden #4. It is mostly marigolds which fill these beds.



Look back up at the palazzo from garden #4, and this is what you see.

The picture below show how landscape architects (could it have been Michelozzo who designed the palazzo?) treated the change in levels. This picture serves like a painting, with fore, middle, and backgrounds treated with hard and soft scapes.



Much use of wisteria is made on the west end of garden #4, which also has some modern architecture in it. Can you imagine living here, at the west end of the Medici villa?



Water makes a lovely cameo in garden #4, in the shape of a low circle at the exact center of the site.

Before departing, let’s take one last look at Florence from way up here:


And, finally, we must depart, or else the custodian might get nervous and come looking for us.
And now we depart, climbing the beautiful framed stairway from garden #4 to #3.

Pass through garden #3, constantly looking back and down and notice your senses have been used to the max. Seeing, hearing, touching, and the scent of the carefully used roses, have worked together to create an unforgettable experience.

Walking along the Via Beato Angelico that leads from the center of Fiesole down into the outskirts of Florence. One last backward glance, to see the Villa Medici in all its glory. Note the swimming pool that I doubt very much was added originally by Michelozzo. Or, who knows?!

Another Leonardo da Vinci mystery
I recently posted an intriguing video about The Mona Lisa. Now, here is a further mystery, utilizing some of the same experts and scholars, the same scientific techniques.
5 weird (but wonderful) things about Florence
A perfect Italian summer Sunday
We chose Livorno as our Sunday getaway. Livorno is a bustling port town and the 2nd largest city in Tuscany. We were lured by its history and its unparalleled seafood.
Livorno, not so well known outside of Italy, boasts a picturesque system of canals, an authentic urban character, an attractive waterfront along with a fine collection of historical and cultural sites.
But the main advantage for us was that we had Francesca with us, a lovely woman who lived in Livorno when she was growing up. We had our own personal tour guide! She guided us here and there and took us to an outstanding restaurant, but I’m getting ahead of myself.
We started here: a monument to the Medici family (they were everywhere in Tuscany) with 4 Moors depicted on the lower level. I show it here with 2 sweet sisters and good friends (of each other and of me). We were ready for an adventure!


Sketching this monument was a local painter:

I thought he was very able, here’s his start above and below:

The painter is a colorful local with a lot of painterly skill. Pay attention to his sketch because we will come back later and see how far he got.

We boarded a boat for a watery tour of Livorno. The barca took us through and around the city, including the most picturesque quarter of Livorno, the Venezia Nuova, aka “Little Venice,” with its canals, arching bridges, and ornate merchant palaces.

This city is simply unique, rich in history, and built upon the water by Venetian engineers who were hired to carry out a Medicean dream. Cosmopolitan Livorno was full with rich merchant palazzi during the 17th & 18th centuries. Merchants from all over the world arrived in Livorno, all of whom wanted to get in on what was a very lucrative trade.
These merchants petitioned the Grand Duke to grant them space to construct palaces and warehouses in order to furnish the port with an almost endless supply of provisions and luxuries. By the 17th century, Livorno was becoming one of the most important ports in the Mediterranean.
A 19th-century map of the city.
The canals of Livorno were constructed over waters reclaimed from the sea north of Livorno between 1629 and 1700.


Protected from the west and east by its two Medicean fortresses, we glided in our boat through the many sectors of the city, a once rich city which had become the coffer of the riches of all the world.



The Medici fortified the city and its water lanes with these massive walls.


“New Venice” was very much admired by intelligentsia and aristocrats on the 18th century “Grand Tour.” That atmosphere lingers today, with canals, shops and cellars on the water, and an architectural system tailor-made for commerce.

Gliding through the man-made canals, we saw evidence of the old artisanal traditions of the boatmen, sailors, barrel-makers, and porters who lived, worked, and traded secrets in “Little Venice.” We heard many stories, and became acquainted with Livorno’s lively and charismatic inhabitants, among whom were smugglers and pirates in the pay of the Grand Tuscan Dukes. Inside these palazzi, the city’s rich merchants and noblemen rubbed shoulders with the Grand Dukes, and, often, other random members of European aristocracy.
On the water we passed under the shadow of the octagonal dome of the church of Saint Catherine of Siena, which for 3 centuries has graced the Livornese skyline. We also saw the entrance of the so-called “New Fortress” of Livorno, an island completely surrounded by the city’s principal moat and canal, the Fosso Reale, and last remnant of the 5 original bulwarks of this fortified city, the famous pentagon of Bernardo Buontalenti.
source: https://www.livornotour.com/senza-categoria-en/la-piccola-venezia-toscana.php?lang=en
Livorno is also the home of Casa Modigliani, the birthplace and childhood home of Amedeo Modigliani. The Museo Fattori, Livorno’s art museum, contains artwork from Modigliani and 19th century Italian Impressionists. I am sad to report that we didn’t look at any of the many interesting museums. It was a Sunday and we were on holiday! We wanted to stay out doors and enjoy the city and the coast, not go inside a darkened space.

Santa Caterina church ahead on left.




Above is the 19th century mercato centrale. It reminded me of the same type of structure in Florence.

Our boat ride lasted about an hour, and took us under the Piazza Repubblica, along the canals, to the harbour of the fishing boats, the harbour of the yachts, as well as past the fortress.
It was a beautiful way to enjoy a fascinating city. I am looking forward to returning to this intriguing place, which so often lives in the shadow of other Tuscan known cities. I’d like to return in the fall or spring, or even the winter, because the height of summer is a brutal time to visit.

Here we are, roasting in the heat!

N. tried to keep Free (that’s his name, in English!) cool, but it was a losing battle.

Walking back to the car after the marina, we passed the artist and here is the sketch:

He had made a lot of progress and I tried to buy the sketch, but he said it wasn’t for sale because it wasn’t good enough. No matter how I protested, he wouldn’t give. He was in the process of loading up his supplies because it was just too hot and I thought he might like to lighten his load. No go.
After the boat ride and a drive along the lengthy waterfront, we settled in at a ristorante chosen by Francesca for a long, leisurely lunch. It’s Sunday and we’re in Italy, so of course it will be a long, leisurely lunch! That’s what they do best here!
This was the view.


This was the food: A small plate (ha ha) of mussels for antipasto.

A pasta of spaghetti vongole veraci for pasta. Grilled fish for main.

When you put 2 or more Italians into the same space, you’ve created a party. This charming gentleman joined our lively lunch. He lives near Livorno and worked for 40 years for Coca Cola company. He loves America and Americans. He was sweet, can’t you just tell from his beautiful face?


Much later on, it was time for le dolce. We tried a few. I started this course with a limone sorbet served with vodka:

We ordered a torta della nonna, which despite being called a cake is more like a cream pie. The pastry was delicious, like a shortbread, and there was a vanilla creme patisserie in the center, plus pine nuts and powdered sugar on top. We had to have a 2nd piece brought to the table. Here’s a recipe if you are inspired (you can translate with Google Translate):
https://www.tavolartegusto.it/ricetta/torta-della-nonna-la-ricetta-perfetta/


Some members of our party skipped the torta and went straight in for the gelato.

All the while I looked towards America. Can you see it? Way over there to the west? Hi America! I’m worried about you.



After a couple of hours, out party had expanded like so:

And so:




As I was leaving the restaurant, I took a couple of shots of dolce I want to try in the future at this locale:


Below: profiteroles smothered in chocolate.

And no, the day wasn’t finished.
Next we drove to Montecatini, which has both lower and an upper versions. You start in the lower level and ride the funicular up the the side of a mountian. Charming beyond words is the station, built in 1898, and the cable cars with their wooden seats.

And yes, here we go, up this mountain side. The picture lacks the drama of the real ride.

Once we arrived in Alto Montecatini, I was bowled over by yet another amazing little hilltop Italian village. Each one has its own flavor, but they all go into the category of “wonderful.”



This castle looking structure is the movie theater!!

Table set for dinner:

Random beauties:










Free had cooled off and now was enjoying his stroller. He is as sweet as he is cute!

What a perfect day!

You must be logged in to post a comment.