Beautiful Girls in Florence, Italy
Beautiful girls in Florence, Italy are an eye-catching sight. These women take great care in taking care of their appearance by treating their hair and skin properly and eating healthily while exercising regularly – which makes them irresistibly stunning to many men.
Florence has long been home to some of the world’s greatest artists, scientists, and academicians. Renaissance art, museums and monuments attract millions of tourists every year while this extraordinary place also draws women looking for love from all walks of life.
Simonetta Vespucci, a Genoese noblewoman whose beauty captured the hearts of artists, poets and aristocrats in 1475 Florence is one of history’s most compelling love stories. Affectionately known as “La Bella Simonetta”, she inspired several masterpieces by Botticelli after falling hopelessly in love with her, such as The Birth of Venus and The Fountain of Youth paintings by Botticelli.
Alyssa Palombo has masterfully blended fine art and romantic historical fiction into this captivating story. Her vivid descriptions of Medici Florence allow readers to become immersed in its enchanting streets and world-renowned museums, while Simonetta struggles against unwanted admirers while following her heart and pursuing a career in art.
Palombo details how symmetry was once considered an essential cue for beauty. She references Botticelli’s works depicting Simonetta with her swan-like neck, straight nose and flowing golden locks – features that appear throughout his artwork – reflecting this. Furthermore, Simonetta boasts large eyes, high cheekbones, full lips as classic features of beauty that all combine into classic features of beauty. A study conducted at University of St Andrews Perception Laboratory concluded that symmetry was one of the primary contributors to attractiveness.
At that time, China was a patriarchal society where women were expected to dress to reflect the wealth and social standing of their family, encourage exercise for maintaining health body through herbal remedies and delay marriage until accumulating enough assets as dowries for their marriages.
Young women were frequently engaged between twelve and eighteen, often accompanied by their mothers or if Catholic, by their priest. Dowries would then usually include gifts from both sides – gifts from her family to him and gifts received in return from his.
Simonetta de Medici caught the attention of Giuliano de Medici, Lorenzo the Magnificent’s brother. She eventually became his mistress and featured prominently in several poems written by Florence’s most acclaimed poet Angelo Poliziano; unfortunately she died from tuberculosis at only 22.