Thu. Jul 31st, 2025

Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Italy – Marks Meanderings


I doubt many know that the Uffizi Gallery they visit today wasn’t built to display art. In 1560 the first Grand Duke of Tuscany (Cosimo I) commissioned the building of the “Uffizi”. Its original purpose was to house the administrative and judiciary offices of Florence.

My Italian lessons continue as I find out that “Uffizi” means offices. Cosimo commissioned his favourite architect (Vasari – remember the rooms in Palazzo Vecchio, the rebuild of Palazzo Pitti and the Vasari corridor) to design them.

To build these new offices, space was needed for the huge complex. Local buildings were pulled down which included the ancient and Romanesque church, San Pier Scheraggio. After Vasari’s death in 1574 the offices were completed in 1581 by architects Buontalenti and Parigi.

Cosimo also instructed that a corridor be built linking the offices and his new residence at Palazzo Pitti. In the post regarding Ponte Vecchio, I discovered that the corridor was named after the man who constructed it – the Vasari corridor.

The corridor took just 5 months to complete and was built to celebrate the marriage between Cosimo’s son Francesco to Giovanna d’Austria in 1565. When visiting the Palazzo Vecchio, you’ll discover that the courtyard behind the main entrance was refurbished by Vasari and decorated in time for their nuptials.

Francesco (Cosimo’s eldest son) was to become the next Duke of Tuscany after his father. He ruled the grand duchy from 1574 until his death in 1587. It was Francesco who decided to set up a private gallery within the Uffizi. This was to house the vastly expanding collection of statues and other precious objects belonging to the Medici family.

The location chosen was the top floor of the east wing.  The main room of this private area was the octagonal room called the Tribuna, built by Bernardo Buontalenti in 1584. The stunning room is adorned with thousands of shells on the inside of the dome.

By uttu

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