The Magic of Biblioteca delle Oblate

View from the terrace of Biblioteca delle Oblate

Photo by author
By Danika Clark 

FUA student Danika Clark shares her favorite study spot and culture hub within the first week of school.

Libraries. Some love them, some hate them, but we all have to use them. In Florence, the library is the center of all the action. Students from all over the world come here to study or socialize and it is the perfect place to make new friends.

This is the view of my new favorite spot in Florence. After spending the first week in awe and enchantment while exploring the city, homework and school quickly catches up to you here. Roaming the campuses of FUA, I’ve discovered some incredible study spots, but I found my favorite one right down the street from The Duomo.

If it is your first time, this public library can be quite intimidating. It is so large and under some major reconstruction. When arriving, I was a little embarrassed wandering through the narrow empty halls and trying to find out where the crowd was. So, as your new Florence tour guide, I have suffered through it and have taken notes to help guide you to my favorite spot.

To get to the rooftop terrace at Biblioteca delle Oblate, head to Via Dell’ Oriuolo and walk through the gardens in the entrance. Once you’ve reached the main building, take a left. Go through the sliding doors into where the main lobby is and find the elevator. Head to the second floor, walk out of the elevator and straight ahead you will see a gorgeous outdoor patio. This is my favorite spot, overlooking The Duomo.

It is bustling on the patio, with students from all over the world. It can be the perfect place to make friends or to reflect alone. In addition, the inside of the library tends to remain quiet, so if you’re in need of a silent study session, it is a great escape.

In conclusion, if you’re looking to make friends, explore Florence, or study, I could not recommend this library enough. The breathtaking views are worth the visit in and of itself.

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Catching Galileo’s Middle Finger

Galileo’s middle finger

Photo by author
By Barbara Carranza

SPEL Journalism student Barbara Carranza explores the unusual at the Museo Galileo.

Though I’m not a science major, I was still interested in visiting the Museo Galileo. Not necessarily due to the scientific and technological instruments that have been collected and conserved, but that they literally have Galileo’s actual middle finger on display.

The story behind how it’s even possible to view this ancient middler finger (and it’s not alone; there’s also an index finger and a thumb, all from his hand) is one that spans almost three centuries. Galileo may now be referred to as the “father of modern science,” but the last years of his life were marred with controversy. He went against the teachings of the Catholic Church by supporting Heliocentrism, which states that the Sun, not the Earth, is at the centre of the universe. The subsequent inquisition in 1633 found him guilty of heresy. He was sentenced to house arrest that lasted until his death nine years later. The Church initially refused to honour him with a tomb, so Galileo’s family buried him in an unmarked grave outside the Basilica of Santa Croce. This decision was reversed in 1737, when he was deservingly built a tomb inside the basilica. It was during the process of reburying the cadaver when a man named Anton Francesco Gore reportedly removed three fingers, a tooth, and a vertebrae. Passed down through the generations of his family, the body parts disappeared in the early 20th century. Then in 2009, they surprisingly reemerged in an auction.  They were brought to the Florence History of Science Museum, now known as the Museo Galileo.

The museum, which sits right next to the Uffizi Gallery, dedicates its priceless collections not only to the instruments that Galileo used for his groundbreaking discoveries, but also equipment that was assembled by the Medici and Lorraine dynasties. It is in the Medici collection where the famed middle finger and the other two digits are.

When you enter the room, you are greeted with Antonio Santucci’s enormous armillary sphere, walls of other smaller spheres depicting a map of the Earth, and a regal marble bust of Galileo holding a geometric compass and a telescope. Walking past the bust, you will see the ancient fingers in egg-shaped glass shrines. It is perched up high on a pillar, the bones visible as it points up towards the sky. Looking at it at a first glance, I thought it was kind of gross that a museum would exhibit human remains, even if they belonged to a genius like Galileo. But the longer I looked at it, bringing my face as close to the glass as I could manage to examine the decaying texture of the fingers, the more I became captivated by it, just like the other visitors around me. We were, after all, seeing the real human fingers that once belonged to someone who lived 376 years ago. And not just any anyone, but someone who revolutionised science as we know it.

I think everyone should pay a visit to the Museo Galileo, even if the history of science might not sound particularly interesting. The museum provides a close personal look at thousands and thousands of artefacts that have all contributed to the evolution of science, physics, mathematics, astronomy, and technology. Despite not entirely understanding what exactly I was seeing, it was an intriguing experience overall, especially observing the fingers that Galileo used to hold his telescope as he uncovered that Jupiter has four moons.

Museo Galileo is on Piazza dei Giudici 1, open Monday, Wednesday through Sunday from 9:30am to 6pm. Open Tuesday from 9:30am to 1pm. The price for admission is 10 euros, and there is no need book a tour in advance as the wait lines are short. 

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The Fascinating Garden of Villa Stibbert

By Donald Blair
All photos by author

Photography SPEL student Donald Blair explores the beauty of the Villa Stibbert garden.


Gazebo in the garden.

This Stibbert garden sculpture has a ghostly presence as seen by the weathering of her face.

This is one of the many pieces of art one can discover by exploring the area.
 Statue inside gazebo.

Stibbert Garden is designed in the English Garden tradition, allowing one to walk around and discover the art and beauty of the garden’s landscape.

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