Museo Nazionale del Bargello
The Bargello holds the world's greatest collection of Renaissance sculpture inside a forbidding 13th-century fortress that once served as Florence's prison and courthouse.
About Museo Nazionale del Bargello
The Bargello holds the world's greatest collection of Renaissance sculpture inside a forbidding 13th-century fortress that once served as Florence's prison and courthouse. You'll find Donatello's revolutionary bronze David (the first nude sculpture since antiquity), Michelangelo's early Bacchus, and Cellini's intricate bronze models alongside works by Ghiberti and Giambologna. The building itself tells stories: prisoners were once executed in the courtyard where you'll now admire Gothic arches and medieval stonework.
You enter through the ground floor's vaulted halls filled with Michelangelo's works, then climb the external stone staircase to reach Donatello's masterpieces on the first floor. The rooms feel intimate compared to the Uffizi's crowds, letting you study details like the expression on David's face or the texture of bronze drapery. Each hall focuses on different periods and artists, creating a clear narrative of sculptural evolution from medieval to Renaissance.
Most visitors rush through in 45 minutes, but you need at least 90 minutes to appreciate the craftsmanship properly. Skip the upper floors unless you're passionate about decorative arts and Islamic metalwork. At €8 for a full ticket (free for EU citizens under 25), it's Florence's best museum value. The audio guide costs extra €5 but adds crucial context about techniques and historical significance that the sparse wall labels miss.
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