FLORENCE, capital of the region of
Tuscany, has a population of around half a
million inhabitants, spreads on the banks
of the Arno, between the Adriatic and the
Tyrrhenian seas, almost in the middle of the
Italian peninsula. It is a city which bustles
with industry and craft, commerce and culture,
art and science. Being on the main national
railway lines, it is easily accessible from
most important places both in Italy and abroad.
The Florence "Vespucci" airport,
where both national and international airlines
stop, is located 5 Km. from the city centre.
The main motorway, A1, connects Florence with
Bologna and Milano in the North and Rome and
Naples in the South. The motorway A11 to the
sea joins it to Prato, Pistoia, Montecatini,
Lucca, Pisa and all the resorts on the Tyrrhenian
sea. There is also motorway which connects
Florence to Siena. The climate is temperate
but rather variable, with breezy winters and
hot summers.
The Chianti area, between
Florence and Siena, is one of the most beautiful
countrysides in Italy and a famous wine production
area.
HISTORY
Founded by the Romans in the first century
B.C., Florence began its rebirth after the
decadence of the barbaric ages, in the Carolingian
period, and reached its highest pinnacles
of civilization between the 11th and 15th
centuries, as a free city, balancing the authority
of the Emperors with that of the Popes, overcoming
the unfortunate internal dispute between Guelfs
and Ghibellines. In the 15th century, it came
under the rule of the Medici family, who later
became the Grand Dukes of Tuscany. This in
fact was the period when the city was at the
height of its glory in art and culture, in
politics and economic power. The Grand Duchy
of the Medicis was succeeded, in the 18th
century, by that of the House of Lorraine,
when in 1860 Tuscany became part of the Kingdom
of Italy of which Florence was the capital
from 1865 to 1871. In this century, the city
has once more taken up its role as an important
centre for culture and the arts.