Skip to content
Default
Photo © Valentina Dainelli
Photo © Valentina Dainelli

Museum of Terre Nuove

account_balance
Museums

Housed in the Palazzo d’Arnolfo, it’s dedicated to the foundation of new towns in the late Middle Ages

The Museum of Terre Nuove (of the New Lands) is located inside Palazzo d’Arnolfo, a building that once housed the representative of the Florence commune and whose perimeter wall bears hundreds of coats of arms.

The exhibition narrates the history of the foundation of new towns, a phenomenon that took place throughout most of Europe in the late Middle Ages, a period of growth in the population and commercial trade. It was mostly rulers and religious institutions who extended the borders of their territories, redrawing the urban geography of the era. In these new areas, the inhabitants benefitted from many comforts, like freedom from the feudal hierarchy and fiscal exemptions.

Through videos, images, interactive animations, 3D models and historic re-enactments, the museum introduces visitors to the urban characteristics that shaped Tuscany’s New Towns, and traces the main boundaries of the phenomenon of these newly-founded towns. 

The museum dedicates particular attention to the phenomenon’s development in Tuscany and the Florentine area, where, starting in the late 13th century, several new towns began to pop up, including Castel San Giovanni, today known as San Giovanni Valdarno, where the museum is located.