Palazzo Pubblico & Museo Civico
The Palazzo Pubblico houses Siena's most important art collection, centered around Ambrogio Lorenzetti's extraordinary Allegory of Good and Bad Government frescoes from 1338.
About Palazzo Pubblico & Museo Civico
The Palazzo Pubblico houses Siena's most important art collection, centered around Ambrogio Lorenzetti's extraordinary Allegory of Good and Bad Government frescoes from 1338. These aren't just pretty paintings: they're a complete political manifesto painted across three walls, showing exactly what happens when rulers govern well versus badly. You'll also see Simone Martini's stunning Maesta and the controversial Guidoriccio equestrian portrait that art historians still argue about.
You enter through the palazzo's Gothic courtyard and climb marble stairs to the first floor where the frescoes await. The Sala della Pace stops everyone in their tracks: Lorenzetti's good government scene shows merchants trading peacefully while farmers tend orderly fields, then the bad government wall reveals the same landscape in ruins with armed thugs roaming the streets. The contrast is startling and surprisingly relevant today. The adjoining Sala del Mappamondo feels more formal with its towering Maesta dominating one wall.
Most visitors rush past this for the Torre del Mangia, which is backwards thinking. The museum ticket costs EUR 10 alone, or EUR 15 combined with the tower (saving you EUR 5). Skip the upper floors unless you're obsessed with minor 14th century works. Focus your hour on the two main rooms: they contain some of Europe's most sophisticated medieval political commentary, and unlike most fresco cycles, these tell a complete story you can actually follow.
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