Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Berlitz Pocket Guide Florence (Travel Guide eBook)
Berlitz Pocket Guide Florence (Travel Guide eBook)
Berlitz Pocket Guide Florence (Travel Guide eBook)
Ebook367 pages2 hours

Berlitz Pocket Guide Florence (Travel Guide eBook)

Rating: 1.5 out of 5 stars

1.5/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

With an iconic style and a bestselling brand, this is the quintessential pocket-sized travel guide to Florence - now with a bilingual dictionary

Plan your trip, plan perfect days and discover how to get around - this pocket-sized guide is a convenient, quick-reference companion to discovering fun and interesting things to do and see in Florence, from top tourist attractions like Santa Croce, the Duomo, the Accademia, San Lorenzo and the Uffizi to hidden gems, including  the Officina Profumo Farmaceutica di Santa Maria Novella, Museo di San Marco and Giardino di Bardini.  

- What to see: comprehensive coverage of the city's attractions, illustrated with striking photography
- What to do: how to make the most of your leisure time, from local entertainment to the best activities and shopping
- History and culture: giving you a deeper understanding of the city's heritage, people and contemporary life
- Practical tips: where to stay, dining out and how to get around: reliable recommendations and expert travel advice
- Dictionary: quick-reference bilingual language guide to help you with vocabulary on the ground
- Covers: Piazza del Duomo, Piazza della Signoria, the Bargello and Santa Croce, Piazza della Repubblica, San Lorenzo, San Marco, Santa Maria Novella and the Oltrarno.

About Berlitz: Berlitz draws on years of travel and language expertise to bring you a wide range of travel and language products, including travel guides, maps, phrase books, language-learning courses, dictionaries and kids' language products.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 1, 2019
ISBN9781785732560
Berlitz Pocket Guide Florence (Travel Guide eBook)
Author

Berlitz

Make the most of your time on Earth with the ultimate travel guides

Read more from Berlitz

Related to Berlitz Pocket Guide Florence (Travel Guide eBook)

Related ebooks

Europe Travel For You

View More

Related articles

Related categories

Reviews for Berlitz Pocket Guide Florence (Travel Guide eBook)

Rating: 1.5 out of 5 stars
1.5/5

1 rating0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

    Book preview

    Berlitz Pocket Guide Florence (Travel Guide eBook) - Berlitz

    How To Use This E-Book

    Getting Around the e-Book

    This Pocket Guide e-book is designed to give you inspiration and planning advice for your visit to Florence, and is also the perfect on-the-ground companion for your trip.

    The guide begins with our selection of Top 10 Attractions, plus a Perfect Itinerary feature to help you plan unmissable experiences. The Introduction and History chapters paint a vivid cultural portrait of Florence, and the Where to Go chapter gives a complete guide to all the sights worth visiting. You will find ideas for activities in the What to Do section, while the Eating Out chapter describes the local cuisine and gives listings of the best restaurants. The Travel Tips offer practical information to help you plan your trip. Finally, there are carefully selected hotel listings.

    In the Table of Contents and throughout this e-book you will see hyperlinked references. Just tap a hyperlink once to skip to the section you would like to read. Practical information and listings are also hyperlinked, so as long as you have an external connection to the internet, you can tap a link to go directly to the website for more information.

    Maps

    All key attractions and sights in Florence are numbered and cross-referenced to high-quality maps. Wherever you see the reference [map], tap once to go straight to the related map. You can also double-tap any map for a zoom view.

    Images

    You’ll find lots of beautiful high-resolution images that capture the essence of Florence. Simply double-tap an image to see it in full-screen.

    About Berlitz Pocket Guides

    The Berlitz story began in 1877 when Maximilian Berlitz devised his revolutionary method of language learning. More than 130 years later, Berlitz is a household name, famed not only for language schools but also as a provider of best-selling language and travel guides.

    Our wide-ranging travel products – printed travel guides and phrase books, as well as apps and ebooks – offer all the information you need for a perfect trip, and are regularly updated by our team of expert local authors. Their practical emphasis means they are perfect for use on the ground. Wherever you’re going – whether it’s on a short break, the trip of a lifetime, a cruise or a business trip – we offer the ideal guide for your needs.

    Our Berlitz Pocket Guides are the perfect choice if you need reliable, concise information in a handy format. We provide amazing value for money – these guides may be small, but they are packed with information. No wonder they have sold more than 45 million copies worldwide.

    © 2019 Apa Digital (CH) AG and Apa Publications (UK) Ltd

    Table of Contents

    Florence’s Top 10 Attractions

    Top Attraction #1

    Top Attraction #2

    Top Attraction #3

    Top Attraction #4

    Top Attraction #5

    Top Attraction #6

    Top Attraction #7

    Top Attraction #8

    Top Attraction #9

    Top Attraction #10

    A Perfect Day In Florence

    Introduction

    Trials and Tribulations

    A Brief History

    From the Carolingians to the Republic

    Guelphs and Ghibellines

    Evolution of Florentine society

    Florence’s golden age

    The Renaissance

    The Medici

    Bonfire of the Vanities

    The 18th and 19th centuries

    Early 20th century

    World War II to the Present Day

    Historical Landmarks

    Where To Go

    Piazza del Duomo

    The Duomo

    The Campanile

    The Baptistery

    Loggia del Bigallo

    Museo dell’Opera del Duomo

    Piazza della Signoria

    Palazzo Vecchio

    Loggia dei Lanzi

    The Gucci Garden

    The Uffizi

    The Museo Galileo

    The Bargello and Santa Croce

    The Bargello

    Badia Fiorentina

    Piazza Santa Croce

    Cappella dei Pazzi

    Casa Buonarroti

    The Horne Museum

    Piazza della Repubblica

    Via Tornabuoni and Piazza Santa Trinità

    Palazzo Davanzati and Mercato Nuovo

    Orsanmichele

    San Lorenzo

    The Medici Chapels

    The Mercato Centrale and Palazzo Riccardi

    San Marco

    Galleria dell’Accademia

    Piazza della Santissima Annunziata

    The Foundling Hospital

    Museo Archeologico and Tempio Ebraico

    Santa Maria Novella

    Santa Maria Novella

    Museum and Cloisters

    Museo Marino Marini and Cappella Rucellai

    Ognissanti

    The Oltrarno

    Ponte Vecchio

    Palazzo Pitti

    Palatine Gallery and Royal Apartments

    The Modern Art, Costume and Medici Treasures Museums

    The Garden and the Porcelain Museum

    Giardino Bardini

    Santo Spirito

    Santa Maria del Carmine

    Piazzale Michelangelo and San Miniato al Monte

    Excursions

    Fiesole

    Piazza Mino

    Between Fiesole and Florence

    Pisa

    Siena

    Piazza del Campo

    Piazza del Duomo

    Santa Maria della Scala

    San Gimignano

    What To Do

    Shopping

    Fashion

    Antiques and Reproductions

    Ceramics

    Gold and Silver

    Inlays and Mosaics

    Leather

    Perfumes

    Street Markets

    Entertainment

    Theatre and Music

    Nightlife and Cinema

    Sports

    Children’s Florence

    Calendar of Events

    Eating Out

    Where and When to Eat

    What to Eat

    Antipasti

    Primi

    Secondi

    Contorni

    Dolci

    What to Drink

    Reading the Menu

    To Help You Order…

    …and Read the Menu

    Restaurants

    Centro Storico (Centre)

    Santa Croce (East)

    San Lorenzo and San Marco (North)

    Santa Maria Novella (West)

    Oltrarno (South)

    A–Z Travel Tips

    A

    Accommodation

    Airports

    B

    Bicycle Hire

    Budgeting for your Trip

    C

    Car Hire (See also Driving)

    Climate

    Clothing

    Crime and Safety

    D

    Disabled Travellers

    Driving

    E

    Electricity

    Embassies and Consulates

    Emergencies

    G

    Getting There

    Guides and Tours

    H

    Health and Medical Care (see also Emergencies)

    L

    Language

    LGBTQ travellers

    M

    Maps

    Media

    Money

    O

    Opening Hours

    P

    Police

    Post Offices

    Public Holidays

    R

    Religion

    T

    Telephones

    Time Differences

    Tipping

    Toilets

    Tourist Information

    Transport

    V

    Visa and Entry requirements

    W

    Websites and Internet Access

    Y

    Youth Hostels

    Recommended Hotels

    Centro Storico (centre)

    Santa Croce (East)

    San Lorenzo and San Marco (North)

    Santa Maria Novella (West)

    Oltrarno (South)

    Fiesole

    Dictionary

    English–Italian

    Italian–English

    Florence’s Top 10 Attractions

    Top Attraction #1

    Shutterstock

    Santa Croce

    This glorious church is full of artistic treasures. For more information, click here.

    Dreamstime.com

    Top Attraction #2

    Getty Images

    Palazzo Pitti and Giardino di Boboli

    A sumptuous palace and delightful pleasure-garden that once belonged to the Medicis. For more information, click here or click here..

    Dreamstime.com

    Top Attraction #3

    Shutterstock

    The Duomo

    Brunelleschi’s magnificent dome towers above the city; equally impressive is Giotto’s graceful campanile. For more information, click here.

    Dreamstime.com

    Top Attraction #4

    Getty Images

    The Accademia

    The gallery’s star exhibit is Michelangelo’s David, perhaps the most famous piece of sculpture in the Western world. For more information, click here.

    Dreamstime.com

    Top Attraction #5

    Getty Images

    Ponte Vecchio

    The beautiful medieval bridge still retains the small shops of its artisans. For more information, click here.

    Dreamstime.com

    Top Attraction #6

    Getty Images

    The Uffizi

    Home to the world’s greatest collection of Italian Renaissance paintings. For more information, click here.

    Dreamstime.com

    Top Attraction #7

    Shutterstock

    Santa Maria Novella

    The cavernous church was designed by Dominican architects in the mid-13th century. For more information, click here.

    Dreamstime.com

    Top Attraction #8

    Getty Images

    San Marco

    The frescoed dormitory of the monastery is the location of some of Fra Angelico’s finest works. For more information, click here.

    Dreamstime.com

    Top Attraction #9

    iStock

    San Lorenzo

    The first Renaissance church and home to the glorious Medici Chapels. For more information, click here.

    Dreamstime.com

    Top Attraction #10

    Getty Images

    Cappella Brancacci

    The site of Masaccio’s sublime frescoes. For more information, click here.

    Dreamstime.com

    A Perfect Day In Florence

    9.00am

    Breakfast

    Start your day with a cappuccino and cornetto at Caffè Scudieri on the Piazza di San Giovanni (19r). This smart, long-established café/pasticceria is right in the heart of Florence, in the pedestrianised Piazza.

    10.00am

    The Duomo

    Amble around the Piazza, admiring the Baptistery, Campanile (bell tower) and the iconic Duomo (cathedral). Those with stamina can tackle the 463 stairs spiralling to the top of the cathedral’s dome to admire Brunelleschi’s engineering genius and the fabulous views.

    11.30am

    Via de’Tornabuoni

    Take the Via Roma south of the Baptistery for Piazza della Repubblica, home to some of the city’s most elegant cafés. Cross the square for Via Strozzi and at the end turn left onto Via de’ Tornabuoni for the lavish flagship stores of Armani, Gucci and Prada, to name just a few.

    1.00pm

    Mercato Nuovo

    At Piazza Santa Trinità, turn left onto Via Porta, passing halfway along the Palazzo Davanzati. At the end on the right is the Mercato Nuovo; built for the sale of silk and gold, the market is now devoted to leather and souvenirs. Rub the snout of the bronze boar to guarantee your return to Florence and maybe brave a tripe sandwich from the popular stand at the market’s southwest corner.

    1.30pm

    Piazza art

    Since medieval times this expansive piazza has been a hub of city life. Overlooking the piazza is the towering Palazzo Vecchio, former ancestral home of the Medici. Admire the array of open-air sculpture, check out the Gucci Garden, or sit at one of the people-watching cafés. For a juicy bistecca a la fiorentina and a glass of Chianti, head for nearby Frescobaldi (Via dei Magazzini).

    3.00pm

    Ponte Vecchio

    Head south for the river, passing the famous Uffizi Gallery, repository of the world’s finest collection of Renaissance art. At the River Arno turn right for Ponte Vecchio, symbol of Florence and its oldest bridge. Goldsmiths and jewellers have been selling their wares here since 1593.

    3.30pm

    Boboli

    From the bridge follow the flow to the Palazzo Pitti. The vast palace is home to five museums and could occupy a whole day or more. For now just explore the lovely Giardino di Boboli, the formal gardens dotted with loggias, cool fountains, grottos and myriad statues.

    8.00pm

    Dinner time

    Make for Piazza Santo Spirito, just northwest of Palazzo Pitti. Relax with an aperitivo on the piazza and then choose a spot for dinner. The piazza buzzes with cafés, restaurants and wine bars.

    10.30pm

    Nightlife

    On summer evenings sit outside and admire the floodlit facade of the Church of Santo Spirito, or join the young Florentines in the lively bars around the piazza.

    Introduction

    The magnificent view from the hilltop church of San Miniato has changed little since the 16th century. The belvedere here looks out across the bridge-trellised Arno to Florence’s centro storico (historic centre). It is a sea of terracotta rooftops interrupted only by the cupola (dome) of San Lorenzo, the medieval bell-tower of the Palazzo Vecchio and the focal point; the massive cupola of the Duomo.

    The awesome contribution that Florence made to Western civilisation and culture was greatly out of proportion to its then diminutive size. Few nations, let alone cities, can boast of having nurtured such a remarkable heritage of artistic, literary, scientific and political talent in such a short period of time. Florence was, as D.H. Lawrence put it, ‘man’s perfect universe’. The roll call of artists and writers is an unparalleled record for any city; and remarkable for one whose uncontested period of greatness spanned less than 300 years.

    Travel guides often compare Renaissance Florence with Athens in the 5th century BC, but while that glory is recalled only by spectacular ruins, Renaissance Florence remains intact and in evidence at every turn. Its historic palaces, great churches, exquisite sculptures and countless masterpieces are not crumbling relics, but a vivid and functional part of everyday life – worked in, lived in, prayed in, prized by present-day Florentines and open to all.

    The elegant Palazzo Vecchio, where the first civic authority sat in the Middle Ages, still houses the offices of the city council. Congregations kneel for mass in churches commissioned by medieval guilds. The jewellery stores lining the Ponte Vecchio are occupied by the descendants of goldsmiths who set up workshops here in the 14th century. Most of the city’s narrow, cobbled side streets were wide enough to permit the passage of horse-drawn carts of centuries ago.

    Not surprisingly, the city has proved irresistible to tourists since the late 18th century, when Florence and its treasures became an unmissable stop on the ‘Grand Tour’ undertaken by the British gentry. Today, the medieval alleys are lined with ice cream bars and pizzerias. Postcard vendors and souvenir stalls crowd the piazzas, and milling throngs of international visitors cram the streets and museums. Yet among the trappings of modern tourism, the bronze-workers and leather artisans, although dying breeds, can still be found in their workshops.

    Florence’s detractors describe the city as overcrowded and overpriced. There is a modicum of truth

    Enjoying the preview?
    Page 1 of 1