As Utopian and SteemSTEM slowly yet relentlessly merge like a pair of giant black holes gravitationally bound to one another, it’s worth considering what these two groups of brainiacs are actually going to get up to when they finally collide.
Famously now, one primary goal is to enjoy the tremendous and exciting privilege of visiting the Virgo Interferometer near Pisa, Italy, but there’s so much more food for the mind and soul in Italy to enjoy.
So we decided to go on an intellectual tour of historic Florence!
The Natural History Museum of Florence
This museum is also known as La Specola - The observatory, in reference to the observatory that was founded there in 1790. As you can imagine, the museum has a pretty rich history of its own, and its foundations lie in the Medici Family.
Dynastic beginnings
The House of Medici goes way back to the 12th century, when the Medicis, recently formed, used banking and commerce skills to rise in power, wealth and influence all around Florence.
Cosimo The Elder, by Alessandro Pieroni - Public Domain
In 1434, when their dynasty was in its prime, Cosimo the Elder ruled Florence as an ‘uncrowned monarch’ his entire life. During this time, Cosimo was devoted to the arts and humanities and as a result, Florence blossomed into a cultural centre of renaissance. Suddenly, the City’s name, translated in English as flourish, had a much deeper meaning.
The Medici family continued to support famed artists and thinkers (including three mutant ninja turtles!) like Donatello, Leonardo da Vinci, Michaelangelo and Galileo Galilei (who was not a mutant turtle), even commissioning some of them for various projects.
After some ups and downs, the Medicis reached their peak around 1512, continuing to influence Europe with their love of the arts, while spreading their genetic makeup around the continent.
By the time the rule of the Medicis came to an end, Italy was left with a beautifully developed region heavily influenced by this dynasty, with a proud history of talent and beauty over three centuries.
But Florence isn’t entirely about external beauty. It’s what’s on the inside that counts, you know?
La Specola’s Hippo
The Medici’s humanities-loving legacy also left us with the observatory, which, among other things, houses an extremely bizarre stuffed hippo.
No you didn’t read that wrong. Here’s a sneak preview:
Available under Fair Use
This is not some random stuffed prize, however. As it turns out, this hippo was the pet of Cosimo III, direct descendent of Cosimo the elder. For exotic reasons, he decided to keep the hippo, letting it roam around the astonishingly beautiful Boboli Gardens, located a stone’s throw away from the natural history museum:
But the hippo is not alone, thankfully, accompanied by an almost infinite number of (badly) stuffed exotic animals and disturbing anatomical models from wax. I’ve had a look at these and trust me, they are dis-tur-bing. Ever seen a decapitated lower body with twins eternally cuddled together inside? Well, there’s 24 rooms of simiilar stuff, free of charge!
Aside from the hippo, another masterpiece comes in the form of Botticelli’s Venus… only with all her guts on display, lungs, blood vessels and all.
Botticelli’s Venus. Not quite what we’re going to see there… - Public Domain.jpg)
La Specola is a contrasting gem among Florence, a city so beautiful that many visitors suffer from Stendhal Syndrome, a condition that causes dizziness, fainting, confusion and even hallucinations as a result of experiencing such otherworldly majesty. It may be refreshing to take a deep breath of fresh air from Boboli Gardens before diving into a nightmarish museum of skinless heads and wax fetuses for a while.
Around and about
The Natural History Museum is, of course, not the only interesting thing in the area. In fact, right across the river are 5 other museums that fit a ‘collection’ of museums from the Medici Dynasty, including:
Giardino dei Semplici - The third oldest Botanical Garden in Europe
Museum of Botany
Museum of Geology and Paleontology
Museum of Mineralogy & Lithology
National Museum of Anthropology & Ethnology
So if 3 million zoological specimens spread around rooms named things like ‘The Hall of Skeletons’ makes you thirsty for more, Florence has brain food by the truck load! The city is clearly much more than first meets the eye.
Excited?
–@mobbs
The Meetup
For more information on this meetup and our expected schedule, Check @steemstem’s post and @utopian’s post. Seats are running out, so if you want to be a part of it, be quick!
Thanks to fundition.io for supporting this wonderful collaboration
References: History of Medici Family | Italoamericano.org | The Hippopotamus in Florentine Zoological Museum ‘La Specola’: A discsussion of Stuffed Animals as Sources of Cultural History
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