Hello Marronaia Friends! Welcome to the 7th episode of discovering the Hidden Gems of San Gimignano with @paolasflorencetours! Thanks to @san_gimignano municipality for letting film inside the medieval walls of the town hall!
Today we visited the Musei Civici, in particular here you have a highlight on the Sala del Consiglio or Sala di Dante.
The Sala del Consiglio (Council Room), also known as the Sala Dante, so-called recollection of the Florentine poet’s visit in 1299 as the ambassador of the Guelph League.
The room exhibits a famous, late thirteenth-century fresco cycle (1290 circa) depicting tournaments of knights and hunting scenes dedicated to Charles of Anjou who is depicted enthroned on the wall opposite the entrance, as several personages render homage to him with the gift of a falcon.
The paintings are attributed to Florentine painter Azzo di Masetto. On the right wall is the Madonna in MaestĂ  that Lippo Memmi painted in 1317. A painter of the Sienese school, Lippo Memmi was a follower of Simone Martini and was active during the first half of the XIV century.
The fresco was indeed inspired by the MaestĂ  Simone Martini had been painted in the Palazzo Pubblico of Siena two years earlier, that is in the year 1315. The second floor is the location of the Chamber of the PodestĂ , the title of a high official in many Italian cities beginning in the late Middle Ages.
The room is entirely frescoed with a unique narration presenting love scenes, in addition to a series of moral exempla addressed to the PodestĂ  who is entreated not to give in to corruption. Executed in the early 1330s, the frescoes are attributed to Memmo di Filippuccio, the father of Lippo Memmi.
HERE THE MAP OF ALL OUR HIDDEN GEMS OF TUSCANY:


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