The Uffizi Gallery covers an area of about 8.000 sq.m.. and contains
one of the most important collections of art of all times, including
classical sculpture and paintings on canvas and wood by 13th to
18th century Italian and foreign schools.
The Gallery of the Uffizi was also the first museum ever to be
opened to the public: in fact the Grand Duke granted permission
to visit it on request from the year 1591. Its four centuries
of history make the Uffizi Gallery the oldest museum in the world.
Cosimo I de' Medici decided to build the Palace, whose construction
was started by Giorgio Vasari in 1560 and later completed by Buontalenti,
who designed the famous Tribune, to house the administrative offices
(or "uffizi") of the Government because Palazzo Vecchio,
which also overlooks Piazza della Signoria, had become too small
to hold them all. However it was his son Francesco I who was responsible
for starting to turn the palace into a museum in 1581, when he
closed the second floor Gallery with huge windows and arranged
part of the grand-ducal collection of classical statues, medals,
jewellery, weapons, paintings and scientific instruments here.
The Medici were untiring collectors and were forever adding to
the Gallery: some of the most important elements to be added to
the collection came from the inheritance left by Ferdinando II's
mother, Vittoria della Rovere (1631), together with the many acquisitions
made by Cardinal Leopoldo de' Medici (1617-1675), which were to
create the basis of the Gallery of Prints and Drawings (on the
first floor of the Uffizi, on the site of the old Court Theatre
built by Bernardo Buontalenti) and the collection of Self-portraits,
exhibited today in the Vasari Corridor linking the Uffizi to the
royal palace of Pitti.
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