The River, the Wool, and the Money

The River, the Wool, and the Money

Before the Medici. Before the Dome. Before the David.

There was a small city on the banks of a river that processed wool, lent money, and survived its own internal wars. A city that lost half its population in a spring of plague and remained standing. That forged a republican identity in the fires of adversity and accumulated—without yet knowing what it was accumulating—everything it would need to change the world.

This is episode one — the world before it all began.

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Florence: The City That Changed the World is a series about the city that invented the Renaissance, financed Europe, and left a legacy still present in everything you see, think, and use every day.

Don't forget to subscribe, thank you for listening, and if you'd like to support or contribute to the project, ⁠reach out through Instagram⁠.


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Avsnitt(11)

Ponte Vecchio: The City That Continues

Ponte Vecchio: The City That Continues

The Ponte Vecchio has stood for nearly seven hundred years. It survived the floods that destroyed it and forced it to be rebuilt. It survived the Second World War — the only bridge in Florence left st...

15 Apr 9min

Boboli Gardens: The City Seen From Above

Boboli Gardens: The City Seen From Above

The Medici built it to dominate nature. Nature had other plans.In 1549, Eleonora de Toledo commissioned a garden on the hillside behind the Palazzo Pitti. The architects were given a simple brief: tur...

14 Apr 7min

Palazzo Pitti: The Palace That Outlived Everyone

Palazzo Pitti: The Palace That Outlived Everyone

Luca Pitti wanted a palace larger than the Medici's. He got it. Then lost everything — including the palace.In 1458, one of Florence's most powerful bankers commissioned a residence on the other side ...

13 Apr 8min

Uffizi Gallery: The Office That Became the World

Uffizi Gallery: The Office That Became the World

In 1560, Cosimo I de' Medici wanted to solve an administrative problem. The government of Florence was scattered across the city, and he wanted it in one place. He called Giorgio Vasari. He asked for ...

12 Apr 9min

The Dome: The Hole That Should Have Stayed Open

The Dome: The Hole That Should Have Stayed Open

Imagine arriving in Florence in the early fifteenth century and looking toward the center of the city.The cathedral is there. The walls rise. The marbles fit together with a precision that seems almos...

12 Apr 7min

Piazza della Signoria: The Mirror That Forgot Nothing

Piazza della Signoria: The Mirror That Forgot Nothing

For five centuries, the Piazza della Signoria was where Florence went when it needed to decide who it was.A republic raised its tower here to stand taller than any noble in the city. A conspiracy was ...

11 Apr 10min

David: The Stone That Already Held Everything

David: The Stone That Already Held Everything

In 1464, a block of marble arrived in Florence that no one knew what to do with. Two sculptors tried. Both gave up. For decades, it sat in a courtyard — exposed, abandoned, already cut in ways that li...

28 Feb 9min

The Medici, Part III: The City Devours Its Masters

The Medici, Part III: The City Devours Its Masters

The Medici had ruled Florence for sixty years. They were the family the city couldn’t imagine losing—until the moment it decided to discard them like something that no longer served a purpose.When Lor...

27 Feb 8min

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