- Palazzo Venezia
The Palazzo Venezia is a
palazzo (palace) in centralRome ,Italy , just north of theCapitoline Hill . Its name recalls that it once served as theembassy of theRepublic of Venice .Begun in 1455, the building was one of the first
Renaissance buildings in Rome; although it was built around the medieval tower at the right of its facade. Much of its stone was quarried from the nearbyColosseum , a common practice in Rome until recent centuries. It was inhabited by the Venetian cardinal, Pietro Barbo, who later becamePope Paul II . He supposedly had it built on this location in order to view thehorse races in the adjacentVia del Corso .The building became a papal residence, and
Pope Pius IV gave use of much the building to theRepublic of Venice for its embassy. Throughout the nineteenth century, the building was the seat for the Austrianambassador to the Vatican.In 1917,
Italy regained possession of the building, and it was restored.Mussolini had his office in theSala del Mappamondo , and used abalcony in the palazzo for many of his most notable speeches to people gathered in thePiazza Venezia below.The Museo del Palazzo di Venezia is within the building, containing galleries of
art , predominantlypottery ,tapestry ,statuary from the earlyChristian era up to earlyRenaissance .External links
* [http://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en%7C&t=k&ll=41.895972,12.481171&spn=0.002468,0.005032&om=1 Satellite photo] The Palazzo Venezia is to the left of the Piazza Venezia's boat-shaped central lawns. The Palazzo's tower is exactly to the left of the "split" in the "boat". At the bottom is the white marble monument to Vittorio Emanuele.
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