Villa La Pietra
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Villa La Pietra is a villa outside Florence, Italy in Italy. The villa and its 57-acre (23 ha) estate is now owned by New York University, after it was bequeathed in 1994 by Sir Harold Acton.
[edit] History
The original villa was built in the fifteenth century by the Macinghi family. It is named after a milestone which used to mark its distance from Florence. It was bought in 1460 by the Florentine banker Francesco Sassetti. It was bought in 1491 by the Capponi family. Cardinal Luigi Capponi made substantial renovations in the seventeenth century, adding the baroque exterior, thought to be designed by Carlo Fontana.
The gardens were entirely redesigned when it was landscaped in the 'English style' in the nineteenth century. The villa was bought in 1902 by Arthur Acton and his wife Hortense, the parents of Harold Acton. They recreated a garden in the original Italian, a task continued by Harold.
[edit] The Garden
A long and impressive cypress avenue connects the entrance of the estate to the house itself. One of the purposes of the garden was as a foil to Arthur Acton's collection of statues.
[edit] References
- Ramsay, A., and Attlee, H. Italian Gardens, Robertson McCarta, London 1989.