Galileo Museum Tour with Santa Croce

Learn how the Medici family's patronage contributed to scientific discovery

From US$614 privately
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Tour Details
Duration
3 hours
Product Type
Tour
Venues
  • Museo Galileo
  • Basilica of Santa Croce - Pazzi Chapel
Photos & Highlights
  • Focus on the growth of scientific progress and humanism during the Renaissance
  • Led by a social or art historian
Select a date
Tour Description
The rule of the Medici family in Renaissance-era Florence led to an explosion of scientific progress and the rise of humanism. This Galileo and science in Renaissance Florence tour, led by a social or art historian, will introduce you to sites around the city, including the Galileo Museum, that stand as a testament to this era of intellectual progress. The Medicis, Cosimo I and Ferdinand I, were fervent patrons of the sciences, especially astronomy. Under their rule, Florence became a shining beacon for experimentation, which the Roman church was frantically trying to suppress with the Inquisition. At the same time, humanism, stemming from the study of ancient Greek and Latin texts, was a new way of thinking about a man’s place in the world and became a recurring theme in Renaissance literature, art, and society.

Galileo Museum Tour

We begin our walk at the Museo Galileo, where the most important Medicean collections of scientific instruments are preserved (for more on the great family, see our Florence Medici tour). The greatest among these collections include some of the original instruments that Galileo Galilei, one of the most outstanding figures of the scientific revolution, used for his groundbreaking experiments. Our encounter with Galileo will shed some light on the Medicean systems of patronage and on the way in which scientists shaped their own image inside a court.

Hitting the Streets

After visiting the museum, we will head to the center of town in order to trace the role of humanism in Renaissance Florence; be it through the poetry of Dante and Petrarch, a discussion of the drastic changes in the art of the period, or of the growing interest in the study of the traditional liberal arts.

To further explore the life of the great author, try our Dante Tour.

Take Aways

This walk is intended, in true humanist ideology, to present an in-depth and well-rounded view of these groundbreaking intellectual developments and the various Florentine characters who played a large role in spurring this change.

If you are interested in further exploring Renaissance-era Florence, you will enjoy our Renaissance Tour Florence, a look at the daily lives of average Florentines during the era.
Experts
Manoli Manoli
Local Guide
Irene Irene
Local Guide
Laura Laura
Art Historian
Sarah Sarah
Local Guide
Agata Anna Agata Anna
Art Historian
Paola Paola
Historian
Martino Martino
College instructor
Sandro Sandro
Art Historian/Local Guide
Molly Molly
Art Historian
Siro Siro
Art Historian - guide
Kristin Kristin
Local Guide
Where You'll Start
Map of Galileo Museum Tour with Santa Croce general meeting point area
(4.54) 107 Reviews

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Martino made our visit to the Galileo Museum really interesting of everyone in our group - this was an accomplishment as our ages ranged between 14 and 80 years old. His breadth of knowledge was vast and his explanations were accessible to all. We returned to the Museum after our walk finished as a result of the interest Martino had sparked in our group.
Martino did a very good job. The material was a bit dry, which may have contributed to a bit of a 'slow start'. Also, the room in which the tour started was quite noisy and full of distractions. We stood there for a long time, which also made it more difficult than a tour with more walking. He seemed to warm up as our tour went on, and was fine in the latter portion of the tour. I'd have to say the starting location in the museum didn't work very well.
This was a good tour and for the science fans in our group, I'm very glad that we took it. Martino has a very relaxed, comfortable style. We learned a lot about Galileo and his pursuits, I wished we had talked a bit more about other science in the Renaissance - maybe you don't because there isn't anything to look at - although we did see the distressed labor models upstairs in the museum, and then didn't really talk about what else was going on in medicine, the interest in human anatomy and how that might tie into the art.