





Below: Piazza Garibaldi, near the river. It is in the exact middle of Pisa. They were setting up for a concert.
Below: eating pizza in the main street, Borgo Stretto, after a hard day's sightseeing.
Below: Piazza Garibaldi, near the river. It is in the exact middle of Pisa. They were setting up for a concert.
Below: eating pizza in the main street, Borgo Stretto, after a hard day's sightseeing.
Below: The cathedral, roof of the baptistery and leaning tower.
Below: One good shove.
Below: ooops! Too far!
Below: Oh no! It's going to topple the other way.
Below: Inside the cathedral. Playing with fire (artificial).
Below: Ceiling and interior of the cathedral
Below: Inside the baptistery from the gallery
Below: View of the cathedral and tower from the baptistery
Below: The Leaning Cathedral of Pisa
Below: Nose in a book, baptistery, while mum lingers at photos
Below: The camposanto
Below: Frescoes in the camposanto
Below: Statue of Fibonacci
Fibonacci was a Pisan mathematician, whose name was Leonardo of Pisa (c. 1170 – c. 1250), also known as Leonardo Pisano, Leonardo Bonacci, Leonardo Fibonacci. Fibonacci is best known for spreading of the Arabic numeral system in Europe, primarily through the publication in the early 13th century of his Book of Calculation, the Liber Abaci, and a modern number sequence named after him known as the Fibonacci numbers, which he did not discover but used as an example in the Liber Abaci.
The nickname Fibonacci came about because his father Gugliemo was nicknamed Bonaccio ("good natured" or "simple"). Fibonacci is derived from filius Bonacci, meaning son of Bonaccio.
The statue was finished in 1863 and placed here to honour Fibonacci. It is not known what he looked like.
Below: Chains which used to close the medieval harbour of Pisa. They were taken by the Genoese rivals who won the Meloria battle in 1284 and they gave them back to the city only in 1860.