Former name(s) | Burgus Saxonum Burgus Frisonum Borgo San Michele Borgo San Martino |
---|---|
Location | Rome, Italy |
Quarter | Borgo |
Coordinates | 41°54′06″N12°27′45″E / 41.90167°N 12.46250°E |
East end | Via San Pio X |
West end | Largo degli Alicorni |
Borgo Santo Spirito is a street in Rome, Italy, important for historical and artistic reasons. From a historical point of view, it is considered the most interesting street in the Borgo district. [1] Of medieval origin, it is linked to the foundation of the ancient fortified hospice for pilgrims from England, the Burgus Saxonum. The street houses the oldest Roman hospital, the Arcispedale di Santo Spirito in Saxia, which gave it its name. Heavily altered during the works for the opening of Via della Conciliazione, it nevertheless avoided the fate of the two parallel streets of Borgo Nuovo and Borgo Vecchio, both destroyed.
The street is located in Rome, in the Borgo rione , and extends in an east–west direction from Via San Pio X to Largo degli Alicorni. Until 1870, the present Via dei Penitenzieri between house numbers 12 and 32 was also part of Borgo Santo Spirito. [2] [3]
In the early Middle Ages, the eastern part of the street was called Borgo dei Sassoni, while the western part was called Borgo dei Frisoni [4] or Borgo San Michele, [5] and the one further west Borgo San Martino. [6]
The name Borgo, used instead of Via for Borgo Santo Spirito as well as for the main streets of the district, derives from the Anglo-Saxon word Burg ("fortified centre"), which denoted the Saxon pilgrims' fortified complex (Burgus Saxonum) located between the Circus of Nero and the Tiber. [7]
During the Roman period no road existed on the route of the modern Borgo Santo Spirito: however, a few metres south of the modern street, ran the Roman road that departed from the Pons Neronianus . [8] Remains of the road have been found under the Corsia Sistina ("Sixtine lane") of the Santo Spirito hospital and under the Generalate ("Curia Generalizia") of the Jesuits. [8] This road was used during the late Empire by emperors who, during their increasingly rare visits to the capital, after crossing the Tiber on the Pons Helius (Nero's bridge had been already demolished for defensive reasons), made their way along the route at the foot of the Janiculum to Saint Peter's tomb. [9]
In the early Middle Ages, the future Borgo Santo Spirito was a path flanked by two walls, with vegetable gardens and a few small houses, leading from the square of the old church of Santa Maria in Traspontina (almost opposite Castel Sant'Angelo) towards the old Vatican Basilica. [10] At the beginning of the road towards the Tiber, some tanners had settled down, who gave their name to a winding alley, called dei Macellari ("Butchers' lane") or degli Spellari ("Tanners' lane"), which joined the road to the Tiber and later also to the Portica (the covered passage connecting Castel Sant'Angelo to St. Peter's), the future Borgo Vecchio. [10] At the beginning of the alley along the river there was a small harbour, called della Traspontina . [10]
At that time, the pilgrimage to the tomb of the Apostle Peter through the Via Francigena had become common among the Britons. In 689, Caedwalla of Wessex, king of the Saxons, made a pilgrimage to Rome. [11] The same did in 727 his successor Ine of Wessex who, after abdicating in favour of his relative Æthelheard, had a building built near the Tiber to house clergymen and princes from his kingdom, [12] imposing for its maintenance a tribute called Rome scot . [11] [13] [14] The complex, called Schola Saxonum or Burgus Saxonum, [15] [16] was extended by Offa, king of Mercia, who built for the British pilgrims traveling to Rome a xenodochium with a small church called Santa Maria in Saxia. [12]
The schola, destroyed by two fires in 817 and 852, [11] suffered severe damage during the Saracen incursion against Rome in 846. [17] After this, Pope Leo IV (r. 847–855) protected St Peter's and its surroundings with the walls that still bear his name. [18] On this occasion it is possible that the Scholae were included inside the circuit of the new walls. [18] The Schola Saxonum, restored again by Leo IV after the sack, was ruined by the conflict between Pope Gregory VII (r. 1073–1085) and Emperor Henry IV of Franconia. [17] The latter had fortified the ruins of the so-called Villa di Nerone ("Nero's Villa") on the high ground of the Palatiolum , the northernmost offshoot of the Janiculum hill overlooking to the south the western part of the street. [17] Moreover, after the Norman conquest of England in 1066, the sending of tribute for the maintenance of the schola ceased. [19] [13]
In 1167, Frederick Barbarossa definitively destroyed the fortified complex. [20] Before Innocent III, the Schola Saxonum was turned into a hospital. [17] In 1204, Innocent had Guy de Montpellier come to Rome, and entrusted the hospital, rebuilt by Marchionne Aretino, to the Order of the Holy Ghost. [21] [20] The hospital expanded considerably until the end of the 14th century, acquiring many houses in the Borgo. It declined like the whole city during the Avignon Papacy. [22] It was seriously damaged in 1409 by Ladislaus of Naples, and was later almost abandoned. [23] [24] Pope Eugene IV (r. 1431–1447) and above all Pope Sixtus IV (r. 1471–1484) had the hospital restored and enlarged. [25] The latter entrusted the work to Florentine architect Baccio Pontelli; among others he designed the Corsia Sistina, a 126 m long hall with three rows of beds, flanked by a portico under which the homeless could sleep, to whom what was left over from the canteen was distributed. [26]
Beyond the hospital, the church of Santa Maria in Saxia was rebuilt in 1363 and restored by Eugene IV. [24] Due to Pontelli's work, the church was demolished, but Pope Sixtus founded a new one, Santo Spirito in Sassia, which he left unfinished. [27] In front of the church there was a small alley, called Vicolo Geremia, connecting the street with the Portica. [21] Going westwards, on the northern side lay Vicolo dell'Ospedale, near which there were the houses belonging to the Tomacelli and Migliorati families, and on the left the Via Settimiana (today's Via dei Penitenzieri) leading to Trastevere. [28]
After this crossroads the Burgus changed its name, and was called Burgus Frisonum ("Burg of the Frisians"), [4] because of the schola founded there in the eight century by the Anglo-Saxon bishop Boniface. [29] The schola, like the others, was founded to provide shelter for Frisian pilgrims, i.e. the inhabitants of the coastal areas between Denmark and today's Belgian Flanders, who were on their pilgrimage to Rome. [30] On the left there was a slope (the future slope of Villa Cecchini) going to the ruins of the so-called palace of Nero, or Palatiolum , and to the small church of Santa Maria in Palazzolo, which was given to the Canons of St. Peter by Leo IV. [31] On the right were some houses owned in the 15th century by Cesare Borgia, and on the left two alleys (the first no longer existing, and the second transformed into a flight of steps) leading up to the national church of the Frisians, San Michele, later Santi Michele e Magno, mentioned for the first time in 854. [4] [32] Proceeding further westwards, one arrived at Borgo San Martino, which extended between two blocks formed by houses and little churches. [6] To the north Santa Maria dei Vergari and San Gregorio de Cortina, to the south San Martino. [6] In this area was also located the Schola Armeniorum, or School of the Armenians, established either by Innocent III in 1202 or by Honorius III (r. 1216–1227). [33]
In the two blocks of San Martino and San Gregorio in the late Middle Ages, there were several inns with lodgings: among them were the inns of the chiavi ("keys"), of the colomba ("dove") and of the cavallo ("horse"). [5] In addition, there were several shops of Paternostrari (or Coronari), i.e. sellers of sacred images, and of Vergari, who sold the Bordone del pellegrino (pilgrim's staff), i.e. the staff used by pilgrims on their way to St. Peter's. [34] After these two blocks, the Borgo merged in the old St. Peter's Square. [5] Until the beginning of the Renaissance, Borgo Vecchio and Borgo Santo Spirito were the only streets that allowed pilgrims coming from the left bank of the Tiber to reach the Vatican Basilica. [35] Because of this, both streets were paved by Pope Nicholas V (r. 1447–1455). [36]
Between the hospital and Via dei Penitenzieri in the 15th century lay some houses belonging to the Tomacelli and then to the Migliorati. [37]
The mother of Boniface IX (r. 1389–1404) and Ludovico Migliorati, nephew of Innocent VII (r. 1404–1406), lived there. [37] In the Migliorati palace, Ludovico, on the orders of his uncle, slaughtered the representatives of the Commune of Rome who had come to the pope to ask for guarantees for republican freedom. [37] In this period during solemnities the Veil of Veronica, the most important relic of Christianity, was displayed from a window of the palace. [37] In 1600, this group of houses was demolished to erect the palace of the Commendatore dell'Ospedale, built by order of Gregory XIII (r. 1572–1585) by Nanni di Baccio Bigio. [38]
Borgo Santo Spirito was affected too by the building renewal of the Borgo during the Renaissance. Cause of this was Pope Sixtus IV, who on the occasion of the Jubilee of 1475 had the road straightened and paved. [35] In addition, besides rebuilding the Hospital of Santo Spirito, on the first of January 1474 he issued a papal bull granting many benefits to those who built houses in the Borgo that were at least 7 canne (15 m (49 ft) ca.) high. [39]
At the turn of the 15th and 16th centuries, Palazzo della Rovere was built on the northern side of the street, but its main façade faced Piazza Scossacavalli and Borgo Vecchio. [40] Opposite the western side of this palace, Averando Serristori built the palace that still bears his name during the reign of Pope Pius IV (r. 1559–1565). [40] West of this palace, between 1517 and 1520 Cardinal Francesco Armellini let built his palace, possibly after a project of Giulio Romano or his pupils. [41]
In the late Renaissance, several houses were built on the southern side of the street beyond the hospital. [8] Most of them were demolished between 1923 and 1927 for the construction of the Jesuit Generalate, [8] but a couple still remain today. [42] In 1544 Pope Paul III (r. 1534–1549) had Antonio da Sangallo the Younger elevate and complete the church of Santo Spirito, apart from the façade, which was built under Sixtus V (r. 1585–1590) by Ottavio Mascherino. [27]
In the 16th century, the portal leading to the Scala Santa (one of two in Rome) was erected, which is the stairway that Jesus is said to have climbed after being scourged. [43] It leads to the Church of Saints Michael and Magnus. [44]
Between 1742 and 1745, Pietro Passalacqua designed near the Tiber on the north side of the street the oratory of the SS Annunziata, popularly nicknamed the Nunziatina. [45] Beyond the oratory, Pope Pius VI (r. 1775–1799) had the Ospedale di San Carlo built in 1789, a branch of the Santo Spirito. [45] The hospital of Santo Spirito itself was enlarged by Alexander VII (r. 1655–1667) (towards Via dei Penitenzieri) and by Benedict XIV (r. 1740–1758) (along the Tiber). [46] Continuing along the road towards St Peter's on the right-hand side, in 1659 the church of San Lorenzo in Piscibus ("St. Lawrence among the fishes", because of a nearby fish market), founded according to an ancient tradition by Galla of Rome in the second half of the sixth century, [47] was rebuilt by the architect Francesco Massari. [48] The renovation was commissioned by the Dukes of Acquasparta, at that time owners of the adjacent Palazzo Cesi-Armellini. [48] Opposite on the left, on the Palazzolo hill, the church of San Michele e Magno was completely rebuilt under Benedict XIV. [48]
In 1905, the construction of the Lungotevere Vaticano caused the demolition of the buildings of the Hospital of Santo Spirito adjacent to the river, [49] while the construction of Ponte Vittorio Emanuele II rose the issue of opening a road connecting the Historic Centre to Prati, cutting through the Rione and Borgo Santo Spirito. [50] The solution came in 1936, with the construction of Via della Conciliazione, which profoundly altered the street, although this, unlike the nearby Borgo Vecchio and Borgo Nuovo, both demolished, was spared. Borgo Santo Spirito lost its easternmost stretch (east of the crossing with Via San Pio X), which now follows the numbering of the Lungotevere Vaticano.
The Oratory of the Nunziatina was demolished and rebuilt in a different context along the Lungotevere Vaticano with a modern framework built according to the laws of structural engineering . [51] [52] The construction of Via della Traspontina, the road connecting Ponte Vittorio and the Prati rione (renamed Via San Pio X in its southern section), entailed the demolition of the hospital of San Carlo. [53] [54] Several minor buildings were demolished to allow the reconstruction of Palazzo Alicorni, located between Borgo S. Spirito and St. Peter's Square and destroyed in 1930, while other late-Renaissance houses after the junction with Via dei Penitenzieri were demolished for the construction of the Curia Generalizia dei Gesuiti (the headquarter of the Jesuite order), located on the slopes of the Palazzolo hill. [8] This new building replaced Villa Cecchini, [55] a picturesque building from whose garden one could enjoy a famous view of the Borgo and St. Peter's. [43]
On the north side of the street, the Della Rovere and Serristori palaces were restored, while the Cesi palace was mutilated. [56] [57] The church of San Lorenzo in Piscibus, whose apse faced the street, was brought back to its medieval state and incorporated into the southern propylaeum of Piazza Pio XII. [58] As a result of these transformations, Borgo Santo Spirito, which was already a service road due to the presence of the hospital, [59] lost almost all of its resident population. After the destruction of the nearby roads of Borgo Vecchio and Borgo Nuovo, it remains the only one of the ancient access roads to St Peter's Square that still provides the 'surprise' of discovering the square and the Basilica after having walked along a narrow street in the district.
Ponte is the 5th rione of Rome, identified by the initials R. V, and is located in Municipio I. Its name comes from Ponte Sant'Angelo, which connects Ponte with the rione of Borgo. This bridge was built by Emperor Hadrian in 134 AD to connect his mausoleum to the rest of the city. Though Pope Sixtus V changed the rione limits, so that the bridge belongs now to Borgo, not to Ponte anymore, the area has kept its name and a bridge as its coat of arms.
Borgo is the 14th rione of Rome, Italy. It is identified by the initials R. XIV and is included within Municipio I.
The pilgrim's staff is a walking stick used by Christian pilgrims during their pilgrimages, like the Way of St. James to the shrine of Santiago de Compostela in Spain or the Via Francigena to Rome. In Rome, in the Middle Ages the pilgrims used to leave their stick in the church of San Giacomo Scossacavalli, whose first denomination was San Salvatore de Bordonia, where Bordone is the Italian word for Stick. After that, they bought a new stick by sellers named Vergari, whose shops were in today's Borgo Santo Spirito near the church of Santa Maria dei Vergari.
The Via Giulia is a street of historical and architectural importance in Rome, Italy, which runs along the left (east) bank of the Tiber from Piazza San Vincenzo Pallotti, near Ponte Sisto, to Piazza dell'Oro. It is about 1 kilometre long and connects the Regola and Ponte Rioni.
Church of the Holy Spirit in the Saxon District is a 12th-century titular church in Rome, Italy. It is in Borgo Santo Spirito, a street which got its name from the church, placed in the southern part of Rione Borgo. The current holder of the titulus is Cardinal-Deacon Dominique Mamberti. It has been the official sanctuary of Divine Mercy since 1994.
Via della Conciliazione is a street in the Rione of Borgo within Rome, Italy. Roughly 500 metres (1,600 ft) in length, it connects Saint Peter's Square to the Castel Sant'Angelo on the western bank of the Tiber River. The road was constructed between 1936 and 1950, and it is the primary access route to the Square. In addition to shops, it is bordered by a number of historical and religious buildings – including the Palazzo Torlonia, the Palazzo dei Penitenzieri and the Palazzo dei Convertendi, and the churches of Santa Maria in Traspontina and Santo Spirito in Sassia.
The Hospital of the Holy Spirit is the oldest hospital in Europe, located in Rome, Italy. It now serves as a convention center. The complex lies in rione Borgo, east of Vatican City and next to the modern Ospedale di Santo Spirito. The hospital was established on the site of the former Schola Saxonum, a part of the complex houses of the Museo Storico.
Porta Santo Spirito is one of the gates of the Leonine walls in Rome (Italy). It rises on the back side of the Hospital of the same name, in Via dei Penitenzieri, close to the crossing with Piazza della Rovere.
Palazzo Cesi-Armellini, sometimes known plainly as Palazzo Cesi, is a late Renaissance building in Rome. It is considered important for historical and architectural reasons. The palace, which should not be confused with Palazzo Cesi-Gaddi, Palazzo Muti-Cesi, or the destroyed Palazzo Cesi, placed also in Borgo near the southern Colonnade of St. Peter's square, is one of the few Renaissance buildings of the rione Borgo to have survived the destruction of the central part of the neighborhood due to the 20th century construction of Via della Conciliazione, the avenue leading to St. Peter's Basilica. Today, it is owned by the Society of the Divine Savior and part of it is used as their motherhouse.
Palazzo Serristori is a Renaissance building in Rome, important for historical and architectural reasons. The palace is one of the few Renaissance buildings of the rione Borgo to have outlived the destruction of the central part of the neighborhood due to the building of Via della Conciliazione, the grand avenue leading to St. Peter's Basilica.
Palazzo dei Convertendi is a reconstructed Renaissance palace in Rome. It originally faced the Piazza Scossacavalli, but was demolished and rebuilt along the north side of Via della Conciliazione, the wide avenue constructed between 1936 and 1950, which links St Peter's Basilica and the Vatican City to the centre of Rome. The palace is famous as the last home of the painter Raphael, who died there in 1520.
San Giacomo Scossacavalli was a church in Rome important for historical and artistic reasons. The church, facing the Piazza Scossacavalli, was built during the early Middle Ages and since the early 16th century hosted a confraternity which commissioned Renaissance architect Antonio da Sangallo the Younger to build a new shrine. This was richly decorated with frescoes, painted by mannerist artist Giovanni Battista Ricci and his students. The church was demolished in 1937, when Via della Conciliazione was built and the piazza and central part of the Borgo rione were demolished. Many decorative elements still exist, since they were preserved from demolition.
Palazzo Alicorni is a reconstructed Renaissance building in Rome, important for historical and architectural reasons. The palace, originally lying only a few meters away from Bernini's Colonnades in St. Peter's square, was demolished in 1931 in the wake of the process of the border definition of the newly established Vatican City state, and rebuilt some hundred meters to the east. According to the stylistic analysis, his designer had been identified as Giovanni Mangone, a Lombard architect active in Rome during the 16th century.
The Palazzo Rusticucci-Accoramboni is a reconstructed late Renaissance palace in Rome. Erected by the will of Cardinal Girolamo Rusticucci, it was designed by Domenico Fontana and Carlo Maderno joining together several buildings already existing. Due to that, the building was not considered a good example of architecture. Originally lying along the north side of the Borgo Nuovo street, after 1667 the building faced the north side of the large new square located west of the new Saint Peter's Square, designed in those years by Gian Lorenzo Bernini. The square, named Piazza Rusticucci after the palace, was demolished in 1937–40 because of the erection of the new Via della Conciliazione. In 1940 the palace was dismantled and rebuilt with a different footprint along the north side of the new avenue, constructed between 1936 and 1950, which links St Peter's Basilica and the Vatican City to the center of Rome.
Borgo Nuovo, originally known as via Alessandrina, also named via Recta or via Pontificum, was a road in the city of Rome, Italy, important for historical and architectural reasons. Built by Pope Alexander VI Borgia for the holy year of 1500, the road became one of the main centers of the high Renaissance in Rome. Borgo Nuovo was demolished together with the surrounding quarter in 1936–37 due to the construction of Via della Conciliazione.
Borgo Vecchio, also named in the Middle Ages Via Sancta, Carriera Sancta or Carriera Martyrum, was a road in the city of Rome, Italy, important for historical and architectural reasons. The road was destroyed together with the adjacent quartier in 1936–37 due to the construction of Via della Conciliazione.
Piazza Scossacavalli, also named Piazza di San Clemente, Piazza di Trento, Piazza d'Aragona, Piazza Salviati, was a square in Rome, Italy, important for historical and architectonic reasons. The square was demolished together with the surrounding quarter in 1937 due to the construction of Via della Conciliazione.
The Palazzo del Governatore di Borgo, also called Palazzo delle Prigioni di Borgo, Palazzo del Soldano, or Palazzo dal Pozzo, was a Renaissance palace in Rome, important for artistic and historical reasons. Designed by Antonio da Sangallo the Younger, it was demolished in 1936 for the opening of Via della Conciliazione.
Santa Maria della Purità was a church in Rome, important for historical and artistic reasons. Consecrated between 1530 and 1538, the building was demolished together with the surrounding district in 1937-40 during the works for the opening of via della Conciliazione.
{{cite book}}
: |work=
ignored (help){{cite book}}
: |work=
ignored (help){{cite book}}
: |work=
ignored (help){{cite book}}
: |work=
ignored (help)