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Rick Steves' Florence & Tuscany 2014
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Rick Steves' Florence & Tuscany 2014
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Rick Steves
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Rick Steves' Florence &
Via Banchi di Sopra and Via Banchi di Sotto These main drags in town are named "upper row of banks" and "lower row of banks." They were once lined with market tables {banchi}, and rents were paid to the city for a table's position along the street. If the owner of a banco neglected to pay the rent for his space, thugs came along and literally broke {rotto} his table. It is from this practice-banco rotto, broken table-that we get the English word "bankrupt.
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Rick Steves
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Rick Steves' Florence &
St. Galgano was a 12th-century saint who renounced his past as a knight to become a hermit. Lacking a cross to display, he created his own by miraculously burying his sword up to its hilt in a stone, à la King Arthur, but in reverse. After his death, a large Cistercian monastery complex grew. Today, all you'll see is the roofless, ruined abbey and, on a nearby hill, the Chapel of San Galgano with its fascinating dome and sword in the stone."
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Rick Steves
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Rick Steves' Florence &
To say that Siena and Florence have always been competitive is an understatement. In medieval times, a statue of Venus stood on Il Campo. After the plague hit Siena, the monks blamed the pagan statue. The people cut it to pieces and buried it along the walls of Florence.
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