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In 1827 the Swiss Evangelical Reformed Church purchased land outside the medieval wall and gate of Porta a’ Pinti from Leopold II, Grand Duke of Tuscany for an international and ecumenical cemetery, Russian and Greek Orthodox burials joining the Protestant ones. Prior to that date non-Catholics and non-Jews who died in Florence could only be buried in Livorno. Carlo Reishammer, as a young architectural student, First landscaped the Swiss-owned, so-called ‘English’ Cemetery, then Giuseppe Poggi shaped it as its present oval when Florence became Capital of Italy, surrounding it with great studios for artists, including that of Michele Gordigiani, who painted the portraits of Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning, now in the National Portrait Gallery, London.
Among the many Swiss, Russians, Americans and English buried here, the English graves are of the majority as their community in Florence in the nineteenth century was the largest.
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