The first place to go to Florence is the Holy Cross Church. The Church of the Holy Cross was designed and constructed in 1294 by Amorford & Di Canbio and is a Gothic building. The church was initially completed and opened in 1443, but the entire facade was not built until 1863, and the Gothic Bell Tower behind the church was built in 1842. There are some monuments and mausoleums of heavyweight celebrities in the church, such as Dante, Michelangelo, Galileo, Machiavelli, Rossini and so on. In the church, there are eight prismatic columns between the three halls on the right side of the church. On the columns, there are two long-span double-edged spire arches. After partial renovation in the 16th century, the church became more beautiful. From the entrance to the end of the three halls, the whole floor is paved with old gravestones, and the windows of the church are painted in the late 14th century. Appella de'Pazzi was designed by Bruneski. In the chapel there are Aquilo Gaddy's mural The Legend of the Holy Cross and Jerini's painting The Virgin Mother and the Saint on the altar. The Cross Church, Florence's largest Franciscan church, is said to have been constructed intentionally to play against the new Notre Dame Church of many congregations. On May 3, 1294, the construction of the Church of the Holy Cross was officially started. Architect Amorford Dicambio laid the foundation of the Church on that day, which meant that he was laying the foundation for a model of Tuscan Gothic architecture. Amorford Dicambio's design intent is to create a spacious and magnificent space, and strive for conciseness and solemnity in the use of architectural elements. The church was designed as an Egyptian cross (T-shaped), with three vertical halls (114 meters in length), an altar and ears lined with chapels (a total of 10 chapels, five on each side of the back hall). Florence's most prestigious family financed the construction of these chapels.