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La Mostra    The Making of Modern-day Rome    Things Most Wondrous

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View of Rome from Trinità dei Monti, atop the Spanish Steps

Francesco Miccinelli (dis.), Giovanni Maria Cassini (inc.), Veduta del profilo della città di Roma delineata dal Palazzo di Villa Medici alla Trinità de’ Monti sul Monte Pincio, Roma 1807 [ma post 1870]

View of Rome from Trinità dei Monti, atop the Spanish Steps

Francesco Miccinelli (dis.), Giovanni Maria Cassini (inc.), Veduta del profilo della città di Roma delineata dal Palazzo di Villa Medici alla Trinità de’ Monti sul Monte Pincio, Roma 1807 [ma post 1870]

View of Rome from Trinità dei Monti, atop the Spanish Steps

Francesco Miccinelli (dis.), Giovanni Maria Cassini (inc.), Veduta del profilo della città di Roma delineata dal Palazzo di Villa Medici alla Trinità de’ Monti sul Monte Pincio, Roma 1807 [ma post 1870]

View of Rome from Trinità dei Monti, atop the Spanish Steps

Francesco Miccinelli (dis.), Giovanni Maria Cassini (inc.), Veduta del profilo della città di Roma delineata dal Palazzo di Villa Medici alla Trinità de’ Monti sul Monte Pincio, Roma 1807 [ma post 1870]

The Church of Santa Maria in Ara Coeli

S.te Marie d'Ara-Coeli, in: François Jacques Deseine, Rome moderne, premiére ville de l’Europe, avec toutes ses magnificences et ses delices..., vol. II, Leiden 1713

The Capitol

Campidoglio, in: Bernardo Gamucci, Le antichità della città di Roma..., 2 ed., Venezia 1569

The Capitol

The landscape by Giovanni Battista Falda shows the look of piazza del Campidoglio after the accomplishment of Michelangelo's project.

Giovanni Battista Falda, Campidoglio, in: Id., Il nuovo teatro delle fabriche et edificii in prospettiva di Roma moderna..., vol. I, Roma 1665

The Capitol

Giovanni Battista Falda, Altra veduta del' Campidoglio, in: Id., Il nuovo teatro delle fabriche et edificii in prospettiva di Roma moderna..., vol. I, Roma 1665

The Capitol

Giovanni Battista Cipriani, Campidoglio,in: Id., Vedute principali e più interessanti di Roma, Roma 1799

Construction of places of worship and church enhancement under Gregory XIII

Carlo Coquelines, Delle azioni memorabili di papa Gregorio decimoterzo tratte dalle memorie originali de' suoi tempi, in: Giampietro Maffei, Degli annali di Gregorio XIII pontefice massimo..., vol. II, Roma 1742

The Pantheon before the 17th century alterations

The Pantheon, built in 27 b.C. and rebuilt by emperor Hadrian in I century a.D., is the only building of ancient Rome to have been continously used for religious reasons. At the beginning of VII century the great temple dedicated by the Romans to all gods was given by byzantin emperor Phocas to pope Boniface IV, who consecrated it to Sancta Maria ad Martyres. The engraving by Aegidius Sadeler still shows the medieval bell tower, destroyed on the occasion of seventeenth century works wanted by Urban VIII and realized by Gian Lorenzo Bernini.

Aegidius Sadeler, Vestigij del Pantheon..., in: Id., Vestigi delle antichità di Roma, Tivoli, Pozzuolo et altri luoghi, Praha 1601

Piazza della Rotonda before the 17th-century alterations

For the Jubilee of 1575 pope Gregory XIII commissioned to Giacomo della Porta a fountain to place in the middle of the square. The look of the fountain remained the same until 1711 when pope Clement XI established that the Egyptian obelisk then placed in San Macuto were repositioned in front of the Pantheon. In so doing it was been realized a radical restoration of the fountain, whose basin was replaced by a group of rocks and dolphins to support the obelisk. In the view by Cruyl you can also see the two side bell-towers built in the first half of the Seventeenth century by Gian Lorenzo Bernini for pope Urban VIII, then removed in 1883.

Levin Cruyl, stampa del 1667, in: Cento vedute di Roma antica raccolte e illustrate da Alfonso Bartoli, Firenze 1911

Piazza della Rotonda in 1751, after the Egyptian obelisj was erected in the middle of the square

In 1711, Pope Clement XI decided to move the Egyptian obelisk from San Macuto to just outside the Pantheon. The fountain underwent a radical restoration: the basin was replaced by a group of rocks and dolphins to support the obelisk.

Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Veduta della Piazza della Rotonda, in: Id., Vedute di Roma disegnate ed incise da Giambattista Piranesi Architetto veneziano, vol. II, Paris 1836

Piazza della Rotonda and the Pantheon, albumen print, circa 1870

Pantheon, fotografia all'albumina 1870 ca

Caravaggio, the Calling of Saint Matthew for the Contarelli Chapel

On 23 July 1599, Michelangelo Merisi signed a contract for his first major public commission at the Contarelli chapel at the Church of San Luigi dei Francesi. The commission was made in the run-up to the Jubilee of 1600, for which Caravaggio painted two of the three canvases in the Chapel today: the Vocation and Martyrdom of Saint Matthew.

Il Caravaggio e le sue grandi opere da San Luigi dei Francesi, text by Gian Alberto Dell'Acqua with an addendum by Mia Cinotti, Milano 1971

Caravaggio, the Martyrdom of Saint Matthew for the Contarelli Chapel

On 23 July 1599, Michelangelo Merisi signed a contract for his first major public commission at the Contarelli chapel at the Church of San Luigi dei Francesi. The commission was made in the run-up to the Jubilee of 1600, for which Caravaggio painted two of the three canvases in the Chapel today: the Vocation and Martyrdom of Saint Matthew.

Il Caravaggio e le sue grandi opere da San Luigi dei Francesi, text by Gian Alberto Dell'Acqua with an addendum by Mia Cinotti, Milano 1971

Saint Lewis of the French

The church of Saint Lewis of the French contains, in the Cappella Contarelli, the two paintings by Caravaggio for the Jubilee of 1600: the Vocation and the Martyrdom of Saint Matthew.

S. Louis des François, in: François Jacques Deseine, Rome moderne, première ville de l'Europe, avec toutes ses magnificences et ses délices..., vol. II, Leiden 1713

Piazza Navona before 1650

During the Middle Ages, the walls of the stepped seating around Domitian’s stadium, today known as Piazza Navona, were converted into homes, workshops, and even churches and religious institutions. Already the focal point of the city’s tourism and trade (it hosted the city’s biggest market), in the fifteenth century the piazza became more important still. It underwent initial refurbishment in the fifteen hundreds, when fountains were erected at either end of the square, along with a simple horse trough in the middle. Piazza Navona became a favourite place for people to meet, stroll, and watch spontaneous shows put on by jugglers and acrobats, as well as organized events sacred and profane. In the seventeenth century, a member of the Pamphilj family, Innocent X, was elected to the papal throne; the family palazzo looked out onto the piazza. In the run-up to the 1650 Jubilee, the Pope commissioned Gian Lorenzo Bernini to make the Fontana dei Fiumi, which he designed as four white marble giants sitting on a central cliff-like plinth: the Nile, the Ganges, the Danube and the Rio della Plata. The Fountain also served as a rather sumptuous base for a Roman copy of an Egyptian obelisk unearthed near the Maxentius Circus in 1647.

Platea Agonalis, in: Pompilio Totti, Ritratto di Roma moderna..., Roma 1638

The obelisk and the new fountain at Piazza Navona

Pompilio Totti, Ritratto di Roma moderna... in questa nuova editione accresciuto, e migliorato in molti luoghi, Roma 1652

Bernini, Athanasius Kircher, the Fountain of the Rivers and the Pamphilj obelisk

Athanasius Kircher, Athanasii Kircheri e Soc. Iesu Obeliscus Pamphilius, hoc est interpretatio nova..., Roma 1650

Piazza Navona

Place Navonne, bâtie sur les ruines du Cirque Agonalis de l'empereur Alexandre Severe, avec la vue de ses magnifiques edifices et fontaines, embellie de la sainte memoire du pape Innocent X, in: François Jacques Deseine, Rome moderne, première ville de l'Europe, avec toutes ses magnificences et ses délices..., vol. II, Leiden 1713

Piazza Navona in 1773

Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Veduta di Piazza Navona sopra le rovine del Circo Agonale, in: Id., Vedute di Roma disegnate ed incise da Giambattista Piranesi Architetto veneziano, vol. II, Paris 1836

The Trevi Fountain before the 18th century

Giovanni Battista Falda (dis.), Chiesa di Santi Vincenzo et Anastasio alla Fontana di Trevi de' padri religiosi di S. Girolamo, in: Il nuovo splendore delle fabbriche in prospettiva di Roma moderna, vol. III (Il terzo libro del nuovo splendore di Roma moderna con sue giuste vedute in prospettiva delle facciate, strade e chiese...), Roma 1773

The Trevi Fountain a few years before it completion in 1762

Several projects and initiatives followed each other during Seventeenth and Eighteenth century without coming to an end, until in 1731 Clement XII promoted a competition for the realization of a monumental fountain to build up against the façade of Palazzo Poli. Among the many projects produced was chosen the one by Nicola Salvi, which struggled to reach a conclusion after his death, in 1762. The view by Piranesi was probably engraved about the Fifties of the Eighteenth century, few years before the end of the works.

Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Veduta in prospettiva della gran Fontana dell'Acqua Vergine detta di Trevi architettura di Nicola Salvi, in: Id., Vedute di Roma disegnate ed incise da Giambattista Piranesi Architetto veneziano, vol. I, Paris 1836

The Trevi Fountain

The Trevi Fountain under restoration for the 2016 Jubilee

Paolo Conti, La Fontana di Trevi restaurata: quella luce miracolosa che rischiara le tenebre romane, in: "Corriere della sera" a. 140, n. 281, 4 November 2015

The Trinità dei Monti hill before the construction of the Spanish Steps

During the 1500s and 1600s, the French church of Trinità dei Monti was connected with Piazza di Spagna below by steep paths that ran up a tree-lined slope. In the late 1600s, it became apparent that a staircase was needed to link the church and the square. However, the work was not tackled until the papacy of Clement XI, who commissioned designs from a number of illustrious artists of the day, including Alessandro Specchi and Francesco De Sanctis, the architect who worked for the Ordine dei Minimi (which owned the land). De Sanctis, whose works included the new façade for the Church of Trinità dei Pellegrini, was chosen by Clement XI’s successor, Innocent XII, who gave the go-ahead in 1723 in the hope that work would be completed in time for the 1725 Jubilee. The staircase was indeed inaugurated during the Holy Year, despite the fact that work had not entirely been completed. The final phase of remodelling the hill on which Trinità dei Monti sits was the erection of the Sallustian obelisk in front of the convent, which Pius VI commissioned in the late 1780s, as clearly shown in Giovanni Battista Cipriani’s engraving.

Giovanni Battista Falda, Chiesa della Santiss. Trinità de Monti de PP. minimi francesi sul monte Pincio,in: Id., Il nuovo teatro delle fabriche et edificii in prospettiva di Roma moderna..., vol. II (Il secondo libro del novo teatro delle fabriche, et edificii, fatte fare in Roma, e fuori di Roma dalla santità di nostro signore papa Alessandro VII), Roma 1665-1667

The Trinità dei Monti hill before the construction of the Spanish Steps

During the 1500s and 1600s, the French church of Trinità dei Monti was connected with Piazza di Spagna below by steep paths that ran up a tree-lined slope. In the late 1600s, it became apparent that a staircase was needed to link the church and the square. However, the work was not tackled until the papacy of Clement XI, who commissioned designs from a number of illustrious artists of the day, including Alessandro Specchi and Francesco De Sanctis, the architect who worked for the Ordine dei Minimi (which owned the land). De Sanctis, whose works included the new façade for the Church of Trinità dei Pellegrini, was chosen by Clement XI’s successor, Innocent XII, who gave the go-ahead in 1723 in the hope that work would be completed in time for the 1725 Jubilee. The staircase was indeed inaugurated during the Holy Year, despite the fact that work had not entirely been completed. The final phase of remodelling the hill on which Trinità dei Monti sits was the erection of the Sallustian obelisk in front of the convent, which Pius VI commissioned in the late 1780s, as clearly shown in Giovanni Battista Cipriani’s engraving.

SS. Trinita de' Monti, in: Fioravanti Martinelli, Roma di nuovo ricercata nel suo sito... Di nuovo con ogni diligenza corretta & accresciuta con belle figure, Roma 1702

The Trinità dei Monti hill before the construction of the Spanish Steps

During the 1500s and 1600s, the French church of Trinità dei Monti was connected with Piazza di Spagna below by steep paths that ran up a tree-lined slope. In the late 1600s, it became apparent that a staircase was needed to link the church and the square. However, the work was not tackled until the papacy of Clement XI, who commissioned designs from a number of illustrious artists of the day, including Alessandro Specchi and Francesco De Sanctis, the architect who worked for the Ordine dei Minimi (which owned the land). De Sanctis, whose works included the new façade for the Church of Trinità dei Pellegrini, was chosen by Clement XI’s successor, Innocent XII, who gave the go-ahead in 1723 in the hope that work would be completed in time for the 1725 Jubilee. The staircase was indeed inaugurated during the Holy Year, despite the fact that work had not entirely been completed. The final phase of remodelling the hill on which Trinità dei Monti sits was the erection of the Sallustian obelisk in front of the convent, which Pius VI commissioned in the late 1780s, as clearly shown in Giovanni Battista Cipriani’s engraving.

La Trinité du Mont, in: François Jacques Deseine, Rome moderne, première ville de l'Europe, avec toutes ses magnificences et ses délices..., vol. I, Leiden 1713

The Spanish Steps

This representation of the "new" staircase of Trinità dei Monti appears for the first time in a guide in 1725: la Roma ampliata e rinovata o sia Nuova descrizione della moderna città di Roma e di tutti gli edifizi notabili che sono in essa, printed and edited by Gregorio Roisecco. His heirs will keep on using it during the Eighteenth century even though new and more accurate representations of the staircase illustrate by then also the most popular guides.

La Trinita de Monti, in: Nuova descrizione di Roma antica e moderna e di tutti li più nobili monumenti sagri e profani che sono in essa e nelle sue vicinanze... Edizione seconda..., Roma 1775

The Spanish Steps

Piazza di Spagna, in: Roma antica e moderna o sia nuova descrizione della moderna città di Roma... Abbellita con duecento e più figure in rame... Accresciuta in questa nuova edizione di un tomo terzo..., vol. I, Roma 1745

Piazza di Spagna and the Spanish Steps in 1750

Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Veduta di Piazza di Spagna, in: Id., Vedute di Roma disegnate ed incise da Giambattista Piranesi Architetto veneziano, vol. II, Paris 1836

Trinità dei Monti after completion of the Spanish Steps and the erection of the Sallustian obelisk

Giovanni Battista Cipriani, Piazza di Spagna, in: Id., Vedute principali e più interessanti di Roma, Roma 1799

Piazza del Quirinale and the Papal Palace in 1750

Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Veduta della Piazza di Monte Cavallo, in: Id., Vedute di Roma disegnate ed incise da Giambattista Piranesi Architetto veneziano, vol. I, Paris 1836
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