Is Basilica di Santa Croce worth it for history buffs?
Worth itFor history
For history & culture, Basilica di Santa Croce delivers.
The draw the entry names but doesn't deliver is the felt weight of the place: you walk a stone floor itself paved with tombs, past Michelangelo's monument, then Galileo's (rehabilitated and finally buried in the church that once feared his ideas), then Machiavelli's and Rossini's — a national pantheon where the air feels heavier than in an ordinary church. Off the cloister, Brunelleschi's Pazzi Chapel is the opposite register: small, calm, mathematically serene grey-and-white, where you exhale. The honest catch: it's a paid church (which surprises people), the Giotto frescoes are faded and set high, and it's a longer walk east — skip it if you've already done three churches that day.
Burial place of Michelangelo, Galileo, Machiavelli and Rossini; the 2026 combined ticket covers the basilica, tombs, both cloisters, Brunelleschi's Pazzi Chapel and the Museo dell'Opera. · santacroceopera.it
Galileo, condemned by the Inquisition, was initially buried in a side room; he was reinterred under his monument in the main nave only in 1737, nearly a century after his death. · santacroceopera.it