Florence, Italy — City tour de Florença + museus - privativo is a seven‑hour private experience that threads the city’s urban fabric from Roman forum to Renaissance galleries. Meeting point: Piazza della Repubblica, 50123 Firenze FI, Italy. The itinerary follows three hours of guided walking in the morning, a lunch break, and four hours in the afternoon visiting the Galleria Uffizi and the Galleria dell'Accademia, making for a compact but deep introduction to Florence. You walk under stone arcades, cross the Arno at Ponte Vecchio, and stand beneath the vast dome of the Duomo while your guide—Portuguese-speaking and, as the operator notes, Nós trabalhamos somente com guias autorizados em português, na sua maioria, brasileiros—unpacks the city's civic drama: Roman foundations, medieval guilds, and the Medici patronage that propelled the Renaissance. Key stops include the exterior and piazza views of Palazzo Vecchio, the riverside vista toward the Boboli slopes, and the narrow lanes where artisan workshops still cut leather and carve marble. The afternoon pivots to two of the world’s most consequential museums. In the Uffizi you’ll see Botticelli’s Nascita di Venere alongside works by Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Titian and Caravaggio; these are touchstones for understanding shifts in light, composition and humanism. At the Accademia the program culminates with Michelangelo’s David and his unfinished Prigioni, revealing both the sweep of Renaissance ideal and the carved-in-progress relationship with Carrara marble. The tour calibrates time so each room has context without museum fatigue. Why this operator stands out: it packages a private Portuguese-language guide with a tailored pace for small groups (from 1 to 15 people), balancing street-level history with gallery-level art history. For travelers with limited time, it’s a concentrated course in Florence’s major signatures—architecture, sculpture, painting—delivered by authorized guides who read archival details into street corners and brushstrokes alike. Practical notes: wear comfortable shoes for cobbled streets, bring a lightweight daypack, and expect security lines at major museums (advance bookings are typically included by the operator). This outing is ideal for first-time visitors and art lovers who want museum context without slogging through every gallery. By day’s end you’ll understand why Florence reshaped European visual culture—and you'll have seen many of the masterpieces that made it so. Expect a rhythm of walking, explanation and quiet looking: your guide leads short contextual talks at plazas and churches, then you get focused time before major works in museum rooms. Small-group dynamics mean questions are encouraged and the pace can adapt for families or slower walkers. Bring a digital copy of your booking and ID; some galleries require passport details for reservations. Photography rules vary—flash and tripods are prohibited in many rooms—so keep gear minimal. The schedule accommodates a relaxed lunch at a trattoria. Buon viaggio.