Palazzo Pitti
The Palazzo Pitti houses the world's second largest collection of Raphael paintings, plus the opulent private apartments where the Medici grand dukes actually lived.
About Palazzo Pitti
The Palazzo Pitti houses the world's second largest collection of Raphael paintings, plus the opulent private apartments where the Medici grand dukes actually lived. You'll walk through rooms where Cosimo I made political decisions that shaped Renaissance Europe, seeing his bedroom, dining halls, and the throne room where foreign ambassadors waited for audiences. The Palatine Gallery contains masterpieces by Titian, Rubens, and Van Dyck displayed salon style on silk covered walls, exactly how the Medici arranged them.
The visit flows through increasingly grand spaces, starting with intimate family rooms filled with personal portraits and moving into ceremonial halls with 20 foot ceilings covered in allegorical frescoes. Each room tells a story about Medici power: the Throne Room's red velvet and gold leaf designed to intimidate visitors, the Mars Room celebrating military victories, the Apollo Room where the family held private concerts. The scale feels genuinely overwhelming, more like Versailles than a typical Florentine palace.
Most guides don't mention that tickets cost 16 EUR and include access to all galleries, making it Florence's best art value after you've seen the Uffizi. Skip the Modern Art Gallery entirely unless you're obsessed with 19th century Italian painting. Focus your energy on the Palatine Gallery's Raphael room and the Royal Apartments' bedroom suites. The audio guide costs extra 6 EUR but explains the complex ceiling allegories that otherwise look like random mythology.
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