The Innocents of Florence
Sun, Mar 22
|Virtual Encounter
(London 6pm, New York 2pm, Chicago 1pm, Los Angeles 11am) Presented by Joseph Luzzi


Time & Location
Mar 22, 2026, 7:00 PM GMT+1
Virtual Encounter
Guests
About the Event
How a Florentine orphanage rescued thousands of children and revolutionized childhood education amid the splendor of Renaissance art.
Among the wonders of the Italian Renaissance and its inspired humanism was Florence’s Hospital of the Innocents, Europe’s first orphanage for abandoned children. In an era when children were often trafficked or left to die or roam the streets, an orphanage devoted to their care and protection was a striking innovation. Designed by Filippo Brunelleschi and a symbol of Florence’s cultural and architectural brilliance, the institution known as the Innocenti became a haven for more than 400,000 children across five centuries.
With deep knowledge of the literary and artistic environment in which this new understanding of childhood flowered, Joseph Luzzi explores how the Innocenti taught young children mercantile skills, rudimentary literature, and even, for a select few, the arts. Of course, he also does not shy away from addressing the flaws in…
