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Bramante, pianta di San Pietro

Michelangelo, pianta di San Pietro

"Dome" by Michelangelo
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At
the beginning of the Early Middle Ages, the city of Rome
went under a progressive decline, no longer the heart of a great
Empire but the target for sacking by the Barbarians, by the Goths
of Alarico (410) and by Vitige(537-538), by the Vandals of Genserico
(445), who cut the aqueducts to bendthe city and finally by Totila
(545-546).
One thousand years after its foundation, St. Peter's was going to
ruin and Niccolò V° decided to undertook extensive
works of restoration upon suggestion of Leon Battista Alberti and
the project of Bernardo Rossellino. During the Renaissance
in Italy and in Europe a new cultural and political climate was breathed,
the rebuilding of Rome began (the urban situation of the period and
the transformations) on the initiative of a new generation of popes
who saw the building works as a means for reaching them asses that,
Niccolò V°,
the humanist pope, thought needed to be fascinated by grand works.
And so began the magnificent plan of Niccolò V, the restoration of
ancient monuments that could be used as the infrastructure of the
papal city: the Aurelian walls, the bridges, the Mausoleum
of Hadrian transformed into a castle, several aqueducts, the reconstruction or
repair of the forty basilicas making up the Holy Stations of pilgr
image and finally the creation of a small city on the Vatican
hill,
seen as a holy city different from the profane city, on the other
side of the Tiber and connected only via the bridge of Castel
S.Angelo.
Niccolò V only managed to complete a small part of his project. The
newbasilica was constructed by Giulio
II della Rovere. Works began with the demolition of a large
part of the old church, following the project of Bramante,
with theintention of building a Greek cross plan edifice inspired
by the Pantheon. The central pillars of the design by Bramante were
created, with the largesupport arches of the dome, and the spaces
created adjacent to the central part, then works stopped for 20 years.
In 1527 there was the terrible sacking of Rome by the Lanzichenecchi.
The
direction of works was then continued - with strange and recurring
competition between Greek cross plan and Latin cross plan - by Frà Giocondo,
Raffaello, Giuliano da Sangallo, Baldassarre Peruzzi, Antonio da Sangallo
il Giovane and finally Michelangelo, who
re-applied the design of Bramante, restructuring the smaller areas
surrounding the central part and beginning the construction of the
dome, which was only completed under Sixtus V in 1593 by Giacomo
Della Porta and Domenico Fontana. Under
the pontificate of Paul V the decision was made to restore the basilica
with the definite return to the Latin cross plan. Architect Carlo
Maderno added three chapels to each side of the building
and conducted the naves up to the current façade (begun
in 1607 terminated in 1614 and restored on the occasion of the Jubilee
2000). Maderno’s works
was criticised by many because hiding from view the tambour, the risingeffect
of the dome is dampened. The consecration of the new basilica was
celebrated by Urban VIII in November 1626.
Upon conclusion of this grand work, the construction of the city
was stopped, but the miraculous balance between ancient ruins and
the Baroque scenes of papal Rome is so great that it has fascinated
and enraptured great travellers such as Byron,
Goethe, Stendhal...
Activitaly staff
> The
Basilica of St. Peter - part I
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