Florence Baptistery

Florence Baptistery
Baptistery of Saint John
  • Battistero di San Giovanni
Facade opposite Florence Cathedral
Partial interior view
LocationFlorence, Tuscany
CountryItaly
DenominationCatholic Church
WebsiteFlorence Baptistery
History
Statusbaptistery, minor basilica
DedicationSaint John the Baptist
Associated peopleBishop Ranieri, Pope Gregory VII, Beatrice of Lorraine, Matilda of Tuscany (hypothesized[1])
Architecture
StyleRomanesque
Groundbreaking11th century
Specifications
Length37.0 m (121.4 ft)
Width32.5 m (107 ft)
Height39 m (128 ft)
MaterialsMarble, serpentinite, sandstone
Administration
ArchdioceseArchdiocese of Florence
Clergy
ArchbishopGherardo Gambelli
Official nameHistoric Centre of Florence
TypeCultural
Criteriai, ii, iii, iv, vi
Designated1982 (6th session)
Reference no.174
RegionEurope and North America

The Florence Baptistery, also known as the Baptistery of Saint John (Italian: Battistero di San Giovanni), is a religious building in Florence, Italy. Dedicated to the patron saint of the city, John the Baptist, it has been a focus of religious, civic, and artistic life since its completion. The octagonal baptistery stands in both the Piazza del Duomo and the Piazza San Giovanni, between Florence Cathedral and the Archbishop's Palace.

Florentine infants were originally baptized in large groups on Holy Saturday and Pentecost in a five-basin baptismal font located at the center of the building. Over the course of the 13th century, individual baptisms soon after birth became common, so less apparatus was necessary. Around 1370 a small font was commissioned, which is still in use today.[2] The original font, disused, was dismantled in 1577 by Francesco I de' Medici to make room for grand-ducal celebrations, an act deplored by Florentines at the time.[3]

The Baptistery serves as a focus for the city’s most important religious celebrations, including the Festival of Saint John held on June 24, still a legal holiday in Florence. In the past the Baptistery housed the insignia of Florence and the towns it conquered[4] and offered a venue to honor individual achievement like victory in festival horse races.[5] Dante Alighieri was baptized there and hoped, in vain, that he would “return as poet and put on, at my baptismal font, the laurel crown.”[6] The city walls begun in 1285 may have been designed so that the baptistery would be at the exact center of Florence, like the temple at the center of the New Jerusalem prophesied by Ezekiel.[7]

The architecture of the Baptistery takes inspiration from the Pantheon, an ancient Roman temple, as observers have noted for at least 700 years,[8] and yet it is also a highly original artistic achievement. The scholar Walter Paatz observed that the total effect of the Baptistery has no parallels at all.[9] This singularity has made the origins of the Baptistery a centuries-long enigma, with hypotheses that it was originally a Roman temple, an early Christian church built by Roman master masons, or (the current scholarly consensus) a work of 11th- or 12th-century “proto-Renaissance” architecture. To Filippo Brunelleschi, it was a near-perfect building that inspired his studies of perspective and his approach to architecture.[10]

The Baptistery is also renowned for the works of art with which it is adorned, including its mosaics and its three sets of bronze doors with relief sculptures. Andrea Pisano led the creation of the south doors, while Lorenzo Ghiberti led the workshops that sculpted the north and east doors. Michelangelo said the east doors were so beautiful that “they might fittingly stand at the gates of Paradise.”[11] The building also contains the first Renaissance funerary monument, by Donatello and Michelozzo.

  1. ^ Danziger 2024.
  2. ^ Bloch 2013, pp. 80–92. Further on the original font, see Schwarz, Viktor Michael (2021). "'In sul fonte del mio battesimo': Dante's baptismal font in an unknown floor plan of the Florentine baptistery". Rivista d'Arte. 5a. 11: 1–14.
  3. ^ Anna Maria Giusti. "The Baptistery Pavement". In Paolucci 1994, p. 373.
  4. ^ Giusti, Anna Maria (2000). The Baptistery of San Giovanni in Florence. Florence: Mandragora. p. 11.
  5. ^ Van Veen, Henk Th. (2013). Cosimo I de' Medici and his Self-Representation in Florentine Art and Culture. Cambridge University Press. pp. 44–45.
  6. ^ Paradiso, Canto XXV, lines 8-9, Mandelbaum translation.
  7. ^ Manetti, Renzo (2024). Le mura di Firenze da Arnolfo a Michelangelo. Florence: Pontecorboli Editore. pp. 45–50.
  8. ^ The comparison is made by the fourteenth-century historian Giovanni Villani in his Nuova Cronica, II, xxiii.
  9. ^ Paatz 1940, p. 43.
  10. ^ Danziger 2024, p. 1.
  11. ^ Vasari, Lives of the Artists, life of Lorenzo Ghiberti, translated by Mrs. Jonathan Foster. https://en.wikisource.orgview_html.php?sq=&lang=&q=Page%3AVasari_-_Lives_of_the_Most_Excellent_Painters%2C_Sculptors%2C_and_Architects%2C_volume_1.djvu/396