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The first Renaissance refectory in Florence is that of the
Benedictine nuns of Sant'Apollonia, created at the finest moments of the convent
in about 1445.
The end wall of the refectory (measuring 9.75 x 9.10 metres) was then covered
with frescoes, but it was not known for a long time because of the nun's strict
clausura. The suppression of the convent in 1860 revealed the Last Supper (the
upper part had been whitewashed), which was initially attributed to Paolo
Uccello then to the real author Andrea del Castagno (1421-1457).
Above the Last Supper are represented the Resurrection, the Crucifixion and
Entombment of Christ. At the time of restoration in 1952 the three scenes were
removed to be preserved at the same time recovering their splendid sinopiates.
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