Palazzo
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Palazzo is more broadly used in Italian than its English equivalent " Palace". It Italy, a palazzo is a grand building of some architectural ambition that is the headquarters of a family of some renown, or of an institution, or even, in modern times of what the English call "a block of flats."
Palazzi with their own entries include:
- Palazzo Barbarigo, Venice
- Palazzo Barberini, Rome
- Palazzo della Cancelleria, Rome
- Palazzo Ducale, Venice
- Palazzo Farnese, Rome
- Palazzo Foscari, Venice
- Palazzo Medici, Florence
- Palazzo Pamphilj, Rome
- Palazzo Piccolomini, Piacenza
- Palazzo Pitti, Florence
- Palazzo Rucellai, Florence
- Palazzo Salvadori, Trento
- Palazzo Strozzi, Florence
- Palazzo del Te, outside Mantua
- Palazzo del Vaticano, Vatican City, Rome
In Venice some palazzi are conventionally called Ca' ("casa"):
See also:
Palazzo San Gervasio is a commune in the province of Potenza, in Basilicata, Italy.