. Men and manners of old Florence. us to determinethe site of the ancient walls with absolute moat and wall, which together formed the cityboundary, ran on the eastern side from the CastellodAltafronte, where is now the Piazza dei Giudici,to San Firenze and the Badia and up the Via delProconsolo, forming an angle on the northern sideof the Piazza del Duomo, opposite to the modernCathedral Museum. Thence it went in a straightline past the Baptistery and the Archbishops house,along the present Via dei Cerretani. Near thecorner of the Via Rondinelli the moat joined theMugnone river,


. Men and manners of old Florence. us to determinethe site of the ancient walls with absolute moat and wall, which together formed the cityboundary, ran on the eastern side from the CastellodAltafronte, where is now the Piazza dei Giudici,to San Firenze and the Badia and up the Via delProconsolo, forming an angle on the northern sideof the Piazza del Duomo, opposite to the modernCathedral Museum. Thence it went in a straightline past the Baptistery and the Archbishops house,along the present Via dei Cerretani. Near thecorner of the Via Rondinelli the moat joined theMugnone river, which then took its place, and flow-ing past San Michele Berteldi, now San Gaetano,and the houses of the Tornaquinci, afterwards calledTornabuoni, it emptied itself into the Arno at thepoint where the Santa Trinita bridge was subsequentlyerected. On the south side the walls followed thesite of the Via delle Terme as far as Por SantaMaria, and from the corner of the present Via Lam-bertesca they continued behind the church of San. WITHIN HER ANCIENT BOUNDARY i^ Piero Scheraggio, which stood where is now the2ntrance to the Uffizi Gallery. That part of themoat was named Scheraggio and it collected all therain-water of the city and carried it to the Villani wrote that Florence possessed ?^-,.ood walls with towers at frequent intervals, and|four principal gates. These were the Porta Saniero, at the point where the Corso joins the Viael Proconsolo ; the Porta del Duorao (or Saniovanni), in earlier times called the Bishops Gate,pposite the end of the Borgo SanLorenzo ; the Portaan Brancazio, at the junction of streets near theitrozzi Palace ; and finally the Porta Santa Maria,, which stood opposite the earliest bridge, built uponI stone piles sunk in the Arno, and eventually calledthe Old Bridge, or Ponte Vecchio, after the construc-tion of the new bridge, or Ponte alia Carraia. Eachate had a secondary or outer gate, enclosed withinattlemented walls, the space in betwee


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Keywords: ., bo, bookauthorbiagiguido18551925, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900