Tourist killed after 15cm wide stone falls off one of Florence’s most visited tourist sites

Florence’s Basilica, where Michelangelo is buried, has now been closed

The square piece of stone, which was about 15 centimetres in diameter, fell from a height of around 20 metres. Photograph: Maurizio Degl’Innocenti/ AP
The square piece of stone, which was about 15 centimetres in diameter, fell from a height of around 20 metres. Photograph: Maurizio Degl’Innocenti/ AP

A Spanish man was killed on Thursday when a falling fragment of stone struck him in Florence’s Basilica of the Holy Cross, ambulance services said.

The church where Renaissance master Michelangelo is buried has been closed by police, a spokesman for the national fire rescue service said.

The square piece of stone, which was about 15 centimetres in diameter, fell from a height of around 20 metres (65 feet), said a superintendent for Florence’s artistic heritage.

The 52-year-old tourist was visiting the church with his wife, when struck in the head by the decorative element.

READ SOME MORE

It had supported a beam in the right transept of the basilica, the main Franciscan church in Florence and one of the city’s most visited tourist sites.

Alongside Michelangelo, it contains the tombs of other famous Italian historical figures including scientist Galileo Galilei and philosopher and writer Niccolo Machiavelli.

In 2012 Florence’s 14th century, 85-metre-high bell tower, which stands next to the cathedral, was cordoned off after a piece of marble fell off it.

There have also been collapses at the ancient Roman site of Pompeii.

Irene Sanesi, the president of the Opera di Santa Croce, the body which runs the church, said she was “distraught” over the incident and offered her condolences to the victim’s family.

She said that maintenance and restoration of the church had been “carried out constantly” in recent years with the help of Italy’s civil protection agency.

“That is why we are truly stunned and astonished by what has happened,” she said, adding that she did not know when the church would be reopened.

- Reuters Service