Have you always dreamed of owning a magnificent palace with a garden that could rival the best in Italy? That’s exactly what Don Luigi di Toledo envisioned in the heart of Florence. Right before your eyes, the Palazzo di San Clemente whispers tales of ambition, artistry, and the passage of time. While its current form might not match Don Luigi’s ambitious sixteenth-century garden which Giorgio Vasari claimed had “no equal in Florence, nor perhaps in Italy”, it still holds a captivating allure.
The Palazzo di San Clemente, or Casino Guadagni as it’s sometimes called, has seen a parade of fascinating figures within its walls. Imagine the echoes of exiled royalty as you stand on the same grounds where Charles Edward Stuart, the “Young Pretender” to the British throne, once resided. The grand coat of arms on the first floor speaks to his lineage and ambition. After his defeat at Culloden, his hopes of regaining the throne seemed as distant as the Scottish Highlands.
Before the Stuarts, the Guadagni family commissioned the building of the Palazzo di San Clemente, transforming an older structure into a grand 17th-century palazzo. They adorned it with masterpieces, like the awe-inspiring fresco by Baldassarre Franceschini, also known as “Il Volterrano”. Imagine the hush that must have fallen over gatherings as guests gazed at the vibrant depiction of Saint Martin, cloak billowing, as he offered succor to a pauper. As you explore the halls now housing the University of Florence’s Department of Architecture, let your mind wander. Picture the elegant gatherings, the clatter of carriages, the whispers of courtly intrigue that once filled this magnificent palazzo. The Palazzo di San Clemente, though transformed, still holds within its walls the echoes of its storied past.