SHARE
COPY LINK

TOURISM

One of Florence’s greatest spectacles is about to begin

Each June, Florence Cathedral hosts a unique demonstration of nature's precision matched by human engineering: the passage of the midday sun through a gnomon set into the mighty dome.

One of Florence's greatest spectacles is about to begin
The dome of Florence Cathedral. Photo: Giuseppe Cacace/AFP

Unnoticed by visitors for most of the year, the Duomo's gnomon – a device that tells the time of day or year by the way the sun strikes it – comes into its own between late May and July each year.

The instrument itself is hard to spot: located just over 90 metres up, just beneath the windowed lantern at the top of the dome, it looks like a small bronze shelf jutting out from the southern wall.


Photo: Sailko, CC BY-SA 3.0, Wikimedia

More easily identified is the brass meridian line running across the floor of the Chapel of the Cross, accompanied by an inlaid circle.

But what's it for?

That question is answered at midday on June 21st, the date of the summer solstice when the sun is at its highest point in the sky. It's then that light hits the gnomon, which has a round hole in its centre, and is projected along the meridian and onto the circle, which matches it perfectly in size.

Photo: Sailko, CC BY-SA 3.0, Wikimedia

The device is what's known as a pinhole gnomon, which means that instead of casting a shadow the way the simplest sundials do, it projects a circle of light – a miniature image of the sun. 

This image moves with the real sun across the sky (or rather, with the earth as it rotates and makes the sun appear to be travelling). It can be seen sliding down the walls of the cathedral and across the floor for several weeks when the sun is near its highest, though the solstice is when the alignment is at its best.

READ ALSO:

One of the highest placed gnomons in the world, the spectacle it produces is considered one of the most impressive (you can find smaller versions in San Petronio in Bologna and Santa Maria degli Angeli e dei Martiri in Rome).

It's even more so when you consider that it was built more than 500 years ago. The Florentine mathematician Paolo Toscanelli is thought to have first placed the gnomon in the Duomo in 1475, while the Sicilian astronomer and Jesuit Leonardo Ximenes laid the meridian you see today in 1756.

It was designed partly so that “the measure of the year and the date of Easter be more accurately determined”, according to the inscription still visible on the wall near the choir: a valuable tool in the days when the most accurate way of measuring time was by observing the sun. 


Photo: Sailko, CC BY-SA 3.0, Wikimedia

Pre-telescopes, early astronomers also used it to study rarer events like sunspots, eclipses or the passage of Venus between sun and earth. Ximenes took careful measurements over several years to determine whether earth's axis of rotation was shifting, from which he concluded (correctly) that it was.

Today the gnomon no longer serves a scientific purpose, but remains a fascinating sight. The disc of light travels at around 7 centimetres per second across the glorious backdrop of the cathedral for roughly 30 minutes around 1 pm (which during summer daylight saving time is when “true”, solar noon falls).

Every year the cathedral invites guests to watch, with commentary from a guide, on several dates when the spectacle is at its best: in 2019, that will be June 11th, 14th, 18th and of course, the 21st.

You'll need to reserve by email ahead of time and arrive early to get a good seat. On the 18th, the commentary will be in English and in every case, entry is free. Find full details on the cathedral's website

If you can't make it in person – or if you just can't wait – here's a video of the show. 

 
This is an updated version of an article first published in June 2018.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

VENICE

What are the new rules for tourist groups visiting Venice?

The famed Italian city of Venice will restrict tour group sizes from summer 2024 in an effort to regulate crowds of tourists that throng the streets.

What are the new rules for tourist groups visiting Venice?

The Italian city of Venice announced on Saturday new regulations on the size of tourist groups to reduce the number of huge crowds and improve the lives of locals. 

The measure will come into effect from June. The use of loudspeakers will also be banned as they “create confusion” the city said in a statement.

Elizabeth Pesce, the city’s security councillor said: “This is an important measure to improve the management of organized groups and promote sustainable tourism.”

The rule is an amendment to the police and urban security regulation dedicated to ‘regulating the methods of conducting visits for accompanied groups, with particular attention to the needs to protect residents and promoting pedestrian mobility’.

Simone Venturini, tourism councillor for the city added: “The measure is part of a broader framework of interventions aimed at ensuring a greater balance between the needs of those who live in the city and those who come to visit it.”

He concluded the introduction of the new rule on June 1st will give operators enough time to organise themselves.

The regulation was announced just five weeks after the city said it would introduce a fee of €5 for day trippers starting from April 25th to May 5th this year. The fee will also apply for the rest of the weekends in May and June as well as the first two weeks of July. Tickets will be sold via an online platform that’s expected to be up later this month. 

Both the moves come after UNESCO warned it could list the city as an at-risk heritage site, partly due to the risk of over-tourism.

SHOW COMMENTS