Tribune of Galileo
[file:Tribuna di galileo 03.JPG|thumb|alt=A room with a domed roof supported by round arches. The room beyond the facing arch has frescoes on the wall and a white marble statue of Galileo, also facing the viewer.|Tribune of Galileo interior: view across the anteroom toward the statue under the dome]
The Tribune of Galileo is a Neoclassic architectural addition, built to commemorate the famous Florentine scientist, Galileo Galilei and to house some of his scientific instruments.
Description
The tribune was completed in 1841 and built within the first floor of the Science Museum of La Specola in Florence. The tribune was built by orders of Leopold II. The House of Lorraine-Habsburg was foreign to Tuscany; and the embrace of Galileo can be seen as an attempt to co-opt local patriotism. It contains a large statue of Galileo and a series of lunettes and frescoes depicting events in scientific history relating to Florence. It once contained some of his original instruments such as his geometric and military compass, an armed loadstone, two telescopes, and the objective lens of the telescope with which Galileo discovered the four largest moons of Jupiter. The tribune is generally not open to the public.The tribune consists mainly of two rooms: a square vaulted hall, and an adjacent square room glass-metal dome. The dome allows light to shine over a marble statue of Galileo by Aristodemo Costoli. The surrounding niches have busts of famous pupils of Galileo: Benedetto Castelli, Bonaventura Cavalieri, Evangelista Torricelli, and Vincenzo Viviani. Medallions in the adjacent hall commemorate the patrons. The frescoes on the walls depict:
- Leonardo da Vinci before the Duke of Milan, Ludovico Sforza
- Galileo demonstrates the Laws of Gravity to the Medici
- Galileo observes the lamp-pendulum of the Duomo of Pisa
- Galileo presents the telescope to the Senate of Venice
- Galileo, blind and old, converses with disciples
- Session of Experiments at the Accademia del Cimento
- Alessandro Volta demonstrates his experimental battery to Napoleon.