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The Medici lions are a pair of of : one of which is , dating to the 2nd century AD, and the other a 16th-century . By 1598 both were placed at the , . Since 1789 they have been displayed at the Loggia dei Lanzi in . The sculptures depict standing male lions with a sphere or ball under one paw, looking to the side.

Copies of the Medici lions have been made and publicly installed in over 30 other locations, and smaller versions made in a variety of media. Medici lion has become a term for this sculptural type.

A similar Roman lion sculpture, of the 1st century AD, is known as the , and is now in the . Here, the stone used for the ball is different from the body. Both may derive from a original. louvre.fr (in French)


History
A pair of lions were required by Ferdinando I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, who had acquired the Villa Medici in 1576, to serve as majestic ornaments for the villa's garden staircase, the Loggia dei leoni. The first lion originates from a 2nd-century that was first mentioned in 1594, by the sculptor ,Vacca 1790 by which time it was already in the collection of Ferdinando;Haskell and Penny 1981:247–50. Vacca reported that it had been found in the , outside Porta San Lorenzo. According to Vacca, the lion had been a relief, which was carved free of its background and reworked by "Giovanni Sciarano" or Giovanni di Scherano Fancelli, of whom little is now known.

The second was made and signedHaskell and Penny 1981:247. by Vacca, also in marble, as a to the ancient sculpture at a date variously reported as between 1594 and 1598 or between 1570 and 1590. The pair were in place at the Loggia dei Leoni in 1598Haskell and Penny 1981:246. The pendant was made from a capital that had come from the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus.Giovanna Giusti Galardi: The Statues of the Loggia Della Signoria in Florence: Masterpieces Restored, Florence 2002.

The Villa Medici was inherited by the house of Lorraine in 1737, and in 1787

(1998). 9780810965188, Metropolitan Museum of Art. .
the lions were moved to , and since 1789 borghiditoscana.net they flank the steps to the Loggia dei Lanzi at the Piazza della Signoria.

The sculptures were replaced by copies at the Villa Medici when relocated the French Academy in Rome to the villa in 1803. These copies were made by the French sculptor .

at the Villa Medici]]
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Copies
The original Medici lions (1598) have since 1789 stood in the Loggia dei Lanzi, Piazza della Signoria, . There is a smaller left-looking sculpture attributed to Italian sculptor Pietro da Barga and the same period. Later copies or replicas include (ordered by first year):


Spain
  • Twelve sculptures in bronze by da Lucca, commissioned in by Velázquez for the Room of Mirrors at the Royal Alcazar of Madrid (1651):
    • Four sculptures are now in the in the Royal Palace of Madrid (since 1764).
    • Eight sculptures are now in the Museo del Prado, of which four support the tabletop of Rodrigo Calderón.
  • Sculptures in Colmenar marble at the , by José Bellver (circa 1860).
  • Sculptures in marble at the , (park created 1886).


Sweden
  • Sculpture in bronze in the Royal Swedish Academy of Arts building, Stockholm (before 1735?).
  • Sculpture in bronze at the Royal Institute of Art, Stockholm (1995).
  • Sculpture in bronze in , (1996).


Great Britain


Russia and Ukraine
Versions in , include:

  • The in bronze at (1799–1801).
  • Sculptures in marble at the Lobanov-Rostovsky Residence (constructed 1817–20).
  • Sculptures in bronze at the staircase of the Mikhailovsky Palace (constructed 1819–25).
  • Sculptures at the entrance of (completed 1822).
  • The Lions at the Dvortsovaya pier in bronze at the Admiralty embankment (1832).
  • Sculptures at the pier on the western point of (1926).

Versions in southern Russia and later Ukraine include:

  • Sculptures in marble at the Vorontsov Palace, (now , completed 1830).
  • One pair of marble lion sculptures at the Voronstov Palace, (installed in 1848).
  • Pair of lion sculptures at Starosinnyi Garden, Odessa (now Ukraine, unknown year).
  • Lion sculpture at the National University of Life and Environmental Sciences of Ukraine Botanical Garden.


Italy


Germany


Cuba
  • Two versions outside the Cathedral de la Purisma Concepción in (built 1833–69), .


United States
  • The Florentine Lions in cast-iron in the , (cast in 1849 at the Alexandroffsky Head Mechanical Works, St Petersburg, Russia for Andrew M. Eastwick, originally displayed at Bartram's Garden, 1851–1879, installed at west Fairmount Park in 1887).
  • Medici Lions, at Bowdoin College Museum of Art, , .
  • Stone sculptures, Mick and Mack, at McMicken Hall, The University of Cincinnati, (there since 1904).
  • The pair of lions on the western end of the eponymous Bridge of Lions in St. Augustine, Florida (constructed 1925–1927, rebuilt 2011–2012).
  • Sculpture in at the Museum of Outdoor Arts, (founded 1981).


Estonia
  • The Swedish lion in bronze in , . A version of one of the Slottslejonen was first erected in 1936 but destroyed 1944 during the battle of Narva of the Second World War. A sized-down copy of the Medici Lion in the Royal Swedish Academy of Arts was re-erected in 2000.


Lithuania
  • Sculptures of lions in bronze at the staircase of the Vytautas the Great War Museum in ,


France


Hungary
  • Statues at Pétervására, (of unknown origin).


Close imitations
  • Sweden: ( for The Palace Lions) in , by at the Royal Palace, Stockholm (1700–1704).
  • United Kingdom: Sculptures in bronze at the Queen's Gate entrance to Royal Victoria Park in Bath (1818–1819).
  • Belgium: Lion of Waterloo in , by Jean-François Van Geel in Waterloo (1826).
  • India: Fitzgerald Bridge statue in , (1866).
  • Spain: The in bronze at the Congress of Deputies, , Cast in 1865, installed 1872.
  • Finland: Parolan Leijona ( for The Lion of Parola) on a pedestal in . Erected in 1868 to commemorate the 1863 visit by Alexander II of Russia.
  • Barbados: The Lion at Gun Hill carved from a single piece of coral stone in 1868 by Captain Henry John Wilkinson, who was stationed there. It is situated southeast and below the Gun Hill Signal Station, overlooking the St. George Valley.
    (2017). 9780947481032, National Museum of Bermuda Press. .
  • Germany: The lions of the in the in Munich are a work of Wilhelm von Rümann, added in 1906 in imitation of the Medici lions of the Loggia dei Lanzi.


In popular culture
Medici Lions have appeared, often downsized and sometimes anachronistically, in films including The Plague of Florence (1919), The Black Shield of Falworth (1954), It Happened in Rome (1957), (1972, in the garden of the estate), History of the World, Part I (1981), The Concert (2009), and many others.


See also
  • (the heraldic symbol of Florence)
  • (the 1st century Roman lion with a sphere)
  • Cultural depictions of lions
  • Chinese guardian lions


Explanatory notes

Citation notes

Additional sources


External links

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