The 2,500-foot-long Vasari Corridor impressed guests of the Medicis and other leaders that followed (including Benito ...
Florence's Vasari Corridor, a historic passage once exclusive to the Medici family, is now open to the public for the first ...
The Corridoio Vasariano, or Vasari Corridor, was built as a secret pathway connecting Palazzo Vecchio to Palazzo Pitti via the Uffizi Galleries and the Ponte Vecchio. It’s now open to the public for ...
The Uffizi’s hidden Medici passageway has opened to the public for the first time following an eight-year restoration.View on ...
A secret passageway built 500 years ago to allow the Medici family to pass through the Italian city of Florence unhindered ...
A 16th-century secret passageway built for the ruling family of Florence, Italy, has opened to the public for the first time ...
The passage was commissioned by Cosimo I de’ Medici, the Duke of Florence, and designed by the renowned Renaissance painter ...
The Vasari Corridor (Corridoio Vasariano)—the secret passageway over the Arno River in Florence that connects the Uffizi Galleries to the Pitti Palace—has reopened following an eight-year ...
Florence’s 16th-century Vasari Corridor, the raised passageway that connects the city’s Uffizi Galleries to the former residence of the powerful Medici family, has reopened to the public after ...
The Vasari Corridor was commissioned by Cosimo de Medici as part of the celebrations for the marriage between his son and ...
The corridor was built by Florence’s powerful Medici family to allow them to move secretly and safely from one part of the ...