he
most beautiful loggia in Florence is without doubt the Loggia dei
Lanzi in Piazza della Signoria. Originally called the Loggia dei
Priori, in the time of Cosimo I it housed his soldiers (Swiss lancers),
who were called Lanzichenecchi, and so it came to be known as the
Loggia dei Lanzi. This elegant loggia, built to form part of the
Palazzo Vecchio complex and inaugurated in 1381, was used for ceremonies
and for the proclamation of the edicts of the Signoria. Today the
loggia is a kind of open-air museum housing an important group of
statues which all rather strangely share a note of violence. Under
the left arch is Benvenuto Cellini's Perseus, which depicts the
Greek hero holding up the head of the Medusa that he has just killed.
Under the right arch is the Rape of the Sabines by Giambologna.
In the second row, on the right, there is another work by Giambologna,
Hercules fighting the Centaur Nessus; then there is Menelaus supporting
the Body of Patroclus, a Roman copy of the original Greek work,
and The Rape of Polixena by Pio Fedi. At the back of the loggia
there are six Roman statues which have been heavily restored.
Above the loggia there is a beautiful terrace with a view of Piazza
della Signoria, which can be reached from the Galleria degli Uffizi.
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