Top 6 Sacred & Religious Sites in Santo Spirito / San Frediano, Tuscany

January 9, 2022 Marlin Saiz

Florence is an art historian’s dream. The Galleria dell'Accademia bursts with works by Michelangelo, who is entombed within the frescoed walls of the Basilica di Santa Croce. Budding photographers can snap pics of the Ponte Vecchio bridge, and serious shoppers can spend a blissful afternoon wandering the shops of Piazza Santo Spirito. Tuscan cuisine pays homage to the region’s bounty. Swipe a hunk of crusty bread across a pool of local olive oil and you’ll be instantly transported to your happiest place.
Restaurants in Florence

1. Santa Maria del Carmine

Piazza del Carmine, 50124, Florence Italy +39 055 238 2195 http://museicivicifiorentini.comune.fi.it/brancacci/informazioni.html
Excellent
50%
Good
31%
Satisfactory
16%
Poor
1%
Terrible
2%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 175 reviews

Santa Maria del Carmine

An elegant church decorated by Masaccio's famous frescoes on the life of St. Peter.

2. Cappella Brancacci

Piazza del Carmine Chiesa di Santa Maria del Carmine, 50124, Florence Italy +39 055 276 8224 http://www.museumsinflorence.com/musei/Brancacci_chapel.html
Excellent
70%
Good
15%
Satisfactory
6%
Poor
4%
Terrible
5%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 640 reviews

Cappella Brancacci

The church and convent of the Carmine in Florence were founded shortly after the middle of the thirteenth century, by a group of Carmelite monks from Pisa. In the church we find the Brancacci Chapel, a masterpiece known around the world for its frescoes of the Life of Saint Peter by Masaccio and Masolino. Created between 1425-1427, the frescoes were left incomplete and finished by Filippino Lippi between 1481 and 1482

Reviewed By jennyf818 - Montreal, Canada

The Chapel is definitely worth seeing,as the frescoes are breath-taking. Much of the Church is cordoned off due to restorations but do not let that prevent you from visiting. As small as the Chapel is, the frescoes run the length and breadth of the walls - an absolute marvel to see! An audio/video guide is also provided to further elaborate on the works of art in the Chapel.

3. San Frediano in Cestello

Piazza di Cestello, Florence Italy +39 055 215816
Excellent
27%
Good
43%
Satisfactory
29%
Poor
0%
Terrible
1%
Overall Ratings

4.0 based on 51 reviews

San Frediano in Cestello

4. Fondazione Salvatore Romano

piazza Santo Spirito 29, 50100, Florence Italy +39 055 287043 http://museicivicifiorentini.comune.fi.it/romano/
Excellent
35%
Good
40%
Satisfactory
20%
Poor
5%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.0 based on 20 reviews

Fondazione Salvatore Romano

The church of Santo Spirito old refectory, built in fourteenth-century, is dominated by the imposing fourteenth-century fresco by Andrea Orcagna. It houses the works donated by the collector Salvatore Romano: sculptures, decorations, detached frescoes and furnishings, from ancient Rome to the seventeenth century, among which an Angel and a Caryatid by Tino di Camaino, two fragments of reliefs attributed to Donatello and a Madonna and Child attributed to the circle of Jacopo della Quercia.

5. Cenacolo di Santo Spirito Museum

Piazza Santo Spirito 29, Florence Italy +39 055 287043
Excellent
21%
Good
26%
Satisfactory
37%
Poor
11%
Terrible
5%
Overall Ratings

3.5 based on 19 reviews

Cenacolo di Santo Spirito Museum

6. Oratorio di San Sebastiano De' Bini

Via Romana 10, 50125, Florence Italy +39 055 221706 http://www.museionline.info/musei-firenze/item/oratorio-di-san-sebastiano.html
Excellent
0%
Good
67%
Satisfactory
33%
Poor
0%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

3.5 based on 3 reviews

Oratorio di San Sebastiano De' Bini

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