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Piazza del Campidoglio: Capitoline Hill cordonata leading from Via del Teatro di Marcello to Piazza del Campidoglio and the Palazzo Senatorio

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posted on 2017-07-03, 00:00 authored by G. Massiot & cie
Michelangelo devised a monumental wide ramped stair (the cordonata), gradually ascending the hill to reach the high piazza, so that the Campidoglio resolutely turned its back on the Roman Forum that it had once commanded. It was built to be wide enough for horse riders to ascend the hill without dismounting.\u000a\u000aA few years after he arrived in Rome, Pope Paul III (Farnese) decided to reshape the Capitoline Hill into a monumental civic piazza; Michelangelo designed the project and his Piazza del Campidoglio is one of the most significant contributions ever made in the history of urban planning. The hill's importance as a sacred site in antiquity had been largely forgotten due to its medieval transformation into the seat of the secular government and headquarters for the Roman guilds, and it was in forlorn condition when Michelangelo took charge of reorganizing it as a dynamic new center of Roman political life. The project went forward in slow stages with many interruptions; little was built before his death in 1564. It was begun in 1538 and was not completed until the seventeenth century, but Michelangelo's original design is preserved in engravings from the 1560s by \u00C9tienne Dup\u00E9rac. pp.313-314 [Della Porta added the central window of Il Palazzo Nuovo.]

History

Date Created

1910-01-01

Date Modified

2017-07-03

Spatial Coverage

Rome|Rome, Lazio, Italy: Capitoline Hill|+41.893333+12.483056

Temporal Coverage

before or circa 1910

Cultural Context

Renaissance

Rights Statement

To view the physical lantern slide, please contact the Architecture Library.

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