Piazza del Campidoglio

Item

Title
Piazza del Campidoglio
Alternative Title
Capitoline Hill
Capitolino
il Campidoglio
Monte Capitolino
Creator
Michelangelo Buonarroti (Italian architect, 1475-1564)
Drafter
J. J. Olivier
City
Rome, Lazio, Italy
Location
Italy
Building Creation Date
1538-1564 (creation)
Century
16th century
Description
plan of the piazza and capitol buildings, plans
A 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 Étienne Dupérac. pp.313-314 [Della Porta added the central window of Il Palazzo Nuovo.] Buildings and equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius restored in the 1990s
Techniques
line drawings (drawings)
Classification
Architectural Documentation
Building Type
Documentation Type
plans
Style/Period
Renaissance
Cultural Context
Italian
Subject
architectural exteriors
City planning
Source
Letarouilly, Paul Marie. Edifices de Rome Moderne. Paris: A. Morel, 1868, 352.
Access Rights
Public Domain
Related
Capitoline Palaces, Rome
Palazzo Nuovo (Capitoline Museum)
Palazzo dei Conservatori
Palazzo Senatorio
creator
Buonarroti, Michelangelo

Michelangelo Buonarroti (Italian architect, 1475-1564), “Piazza del Campidoglio”, Arch Design Images, accessed November 14, 2024, https://exhibits.lib.ttu.edu/s/archlib/item/19041