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Large plaster-cast Serristori coat of arms
Large plaster-cast Serristori coat of arms
Large plaster-cast Serristori coat of arms
Large plaster-cast Serristori coat of arms
the courtyard of the Palazzo dei Vicari in Lari (Pisa)
the courtyard of the Palazzo dei Vicari in Lari (Pisa)
Figline, piazza averani, original ancient Della Robbia Serristori coat of arms

Large plaster-cast Serristori coat of arms

15379

Large plaster coat of arms of the Serristori family of Florence (Figline Valdarno). Averardo da Figline, alive in 1178, is considered the founder, from whom descends that "ser Ristoro" notary in 1299 from which the family name then took root. This "plaster" version is intended to be placed indoors or outdoors but only in an area protected from the rain.
We make it in white cement or on request gray or red.
the ancient original is visible in the courtyard of the Lari Castle nicknamed the Castle of the Vicars. On the external facade, inside the courtyard in fact, countless noble coats of arms are displayed indicating the families of the Vicars who have governed the town of Lari (PI) over the centuries.

Historical and artistic notes on the original of the Lari Castle:
Within a large tile in white Carrara marble, a dog is depicted, sitting with his head covered by a helmet from which sumptuous feathers branch out, holding up with his right paw the "tornarium" type shield containing the Serristori's weapons . In the upper part there is the crest, with the carrier surmounted by a harpy, and the personal feat of the Vicar with the motto: PACIENCIA.

€440.00
No tax Delivery : please contact the secretary's office

 

This great noble coat of arms is published on:
THE CASTLE'S COATS OF ARMS The image of power in Lari. Edizioni Talete by Andrea Guerrieri, Carlo Tibaldeschi and Michele Fiaschi. See attached photos. Description on pages 84 and 85.

Serristori info
Averardo da Figline, who was alive in 1178, is considered the progenitor, from whom the notary "ser Ristoro" descends in 1299 from which the family name took root, in particular thanks to his namesake, ser Ristoro di Jacopo, who fixed the familiar name and was notary of the Signoria in 1383. His direct grandson was Antonio Serristori, who greatly enriched his family and was gonfalonier of justice in 1443. One of his sons, Giovanni (1419-1494), surpassed the political successes of his father , obtaining the appointments of prior of the Arts, member of the Ten of Balia and finally gonfalonier of justice. During the fifteenth century they obtained the privilege of King Ladislao of Naples to affix the head of Anjou on their family coat of arms. The noble title of counts came with Francesco di Averardo, who was appointed, together with other Florentine patricians, Count Palatine by Leo X on the occasion of his visit to Florence in 1515.

Among these Bartolomeo Serristori was appointed archbishop of Trani in 1551, and Lorenzo (of Averardo) and Lodovico were bishops of Bitetto (1528 and 1552). It was Lorenzo himself who started the construction of the large Serristori palace along the Arno, completed in 1520.

At the time of the anti-Medici struggles against Cosimo I Francesco di Guglielmo and Niccolò di Francesco sided with the republican side, losing all their assets in the city. Despite this, some family branches resisted and remained loyal to the Medici, obtaining wealth and honors during the sixteenth century. In particular, Averardo Serristori was close to the new ruler, so much so that he was chosen as ambassador to Charles V in the delicate mission that asked the emperor to recognize the title of duke to the indirect successor of the murdered Alexander, the return of the Tuscan fortresses, and the future of the widow Margaret of Austria, younger daughter of Charles himself and former wife of Alexander (1537). Eventually Averardo obtained the title and, in part, the fortresses, but not the hand of the widow (for Cosimo), who in fact later married Ottavio Farnese. After this success he was sent ambassador to the new Pius V (1556): the very pope who granted the title of Grand Duke in exchange for a hard fight against heresy in Tuscany, with the painful condemnation of the trusted Pietro Carnesecchi.

In the eighteenth century Anton Maria di Averardo, minister of Pietro Leopoldo, distinguished himself, and in the nineteenth century Luigi Serristori, who had important political positions and in whose palace on the Lungarno that later took his name from them he had the honor of hosting Giuseppe Bonaparte deposed, who died there on July 28, 1844.

A family that still exists today, over the centuries it was the owner of vast estates in the city and in the countryside. Their historic villa, in Figline, was donated for the creation of a hospital: the Serristori hospital is still the main hospital in the upper Valdarno.
Source Wikipedia

Height
92
Width
60
Thickness
7
Weight
40
Historical period
1515
Manufacturing
Made in Italy
Material
Plaster-cast
Museum where the Original is exhibited
On the facade of the castle of the Vicars of Lari (Pisa)
Note 01
Published on: THE CASTLE'S COATS OF ARMS The image of power in Lari. Edizioni Talete by Andrea Guerrieri and other authors
Historical references
Averardo da Figline, who was alive in 1178
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