130 Pictures Saint Peter's Basilica and the Vatican

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Saint Peter's Basilica and the Vatican Museums

Saint Peter's Basilica St. Peter's square, one of the most beautiful and famous in the world, is surrounded by Bernini's imposing colonnade that seems to "embrace" it with its 284 columns (1656-67).
Visiting hours:
Basilica, 7am-7pm (winter 6pm);
Dome, 8 to sunset.
In the center stands a 26-meter tall Egyptian obelisk from Heliopolis; at its sides two beautiful fountains by Maderno and D. Fontana; everything is grandiose and at the same time extremely harmonious. In the background, the massive structure of the Basilica with its gigantic façade (114 meters by 45). From the year 1452, when B. Rossellino undertook the construction, many architects among the most illustrious of their times contributed to make the new temple of Christianity the most majestic in the world: Bramante, Giuliano da Sangallo, Raphael, Antonio da Sangallo the Younger, Michelangelo, Pirro Ligorio, Vignola, Della Porta, D. Fontana and Maderno.
The new St. Peter's Church was consecrated by Pope Urban VIII in 1626. The vestibule introduces to the 5 bronze doors: the last one to the right is the Holy Door, and it is only opened in occasion of Jubilees. The interior, extending for 186 meters, culminates under the dome with the Confession Altar and the Papal Altar (covered with the sumptuous bronze baldachin by Bernini) and the apse, aglow with golden mosaic. In addition to many sculptures and monuments by Bernini and other great artists, do not miss to contemplate Michelangelo's tender, touching "Pietà" (first chapel on the right).
It is worthwhile to climb up to the Dome designed by Bramante and Michelangelo and completed by C. Della Porta and D. Fontana in 1589.
   
Tesoro di S. Pietro Museum
Visiting hours:
9am-6:30pm;
Oct. to March, 9am-2:30pm
The entrance is from the interior of the Basilica. Of great historic and artistic interest, it houses sacred vestments and precious objects offered to the Vatican Basilica.
Fine ciborium by Donatello; monument to Pope Sixtus IV by Pollaiolo: the "Sarcophagus of Giunio Basso"; the Cross of the Emperor Justin II (6th c.).
   
The Vatican Grottoes
Visiting hours:
7am-6pm (winter 5:30pm).
The Vatican Grottoes, underneath the Basilica, form an interesting monumental complex, containing 2,000 years of historical, civil and Christian memories.
Among other exhibits: Early-Christian sarcophagi, remains of the ancient 4th-c. church, works by Melozzo da Forlì, Pollaiolo, Arnolfo; mosaics (one attributed to Giotto), tombs of various Popes and of the queen Christine of Sweden.
   
The Vatican Necropoli
Visiting hours:
Open weekdays 9am -noon and 2-5pm
Below the Grottoes and basilica spreads a pagan necropolis with Christian tombs. To visit the Necropolis address a written request to the "Ufficio Scavi della Rev.da Fabbrica di S. Pietro", Arco delle Campane.
   
Vatican Museums The astonishingly rich collections - a veritable citadel of museums - offer the opportunity to follow every itinerary of art and history. Some departments sometimes are are closed for rearrangement or restoration: scholars who wish to visit them may apply to the Direction.
We list below the sectors in which the museums are divided:
Visiting hours:
Open: 9am-2pm;
July, Aug., Sept. and Easter 8:45am-5pm;
Last Sun. of the month 9am-2pm;
for information call 06/6984613.
   
Museo Gregoriano-Egizio
Important findings from ancient Egypt: mummies, sarcophagi, sculptures, bronzes, stelae, Roman statues inspired to the Egyptian art (from Hadrian's Villa); also documentation on Mesopotamia, Assyria and Palestine.
   
Museo Gregoriano-Etrusco
Oedipus and the Sphinx Founded by Gregory XVI in 1837, it contains items from Southern Etruria and other archeological material: sarcophagi, materials from burial chambers, bronzes, urns, architectural terracottas, all kinds of vases; Roman glassware; Etruscan and Roman objects. Also some Greek originals such as a beautiful fragment from the Parthenon.
   
Musei Gregoriano-Profano, Pio Cristiano and Missionario-Etnologico
Sambun (Hook) - Papua New Guinea These museums contain the most recent sections where the collections of the former Lateran Museums are arranged. The Gregoriano-Profano holds architectural fragments, mosaics, sarcophagi. reliefs and other valuable items of the Greek and Roman period; in the epigraphy section there is the richest collection of Christian inscriptions from the ancient cemeteries of Rome, Ostia and Porto). The Pio Cristiano houses Christian antiquities from the catacombs. The third museum features ethnographic collections with noteworthy items from China, Tibet, Japan and Polynesia.
   
Museo Pio-Clementino
Laocoonte The museum displays a splendid collection of Greek and Roman sculptures; among them, some of the best-known statues in the world: the "Apollo Belvedere", "Hermes", the famous group "Laocoon" (late-Hellenic work by sculptors from Rhodes). "Meleager", "the Sleeping Ariadne", "Wounded Amazon", the "Cnidia Venus", the "Belvedere Torso", a series of busts, sarcophagi, reliefs, vases, mosaics and three statues by Canova.
   
Pinacoteca
Melozzo da Forlì - Angel playing musical instrument Started in the late 1700s by Pope Pius V the gallery features a huge collection of paintings, mainly by Italian artist (from the Byzantine period to the 18th c., with special attention to Renaissance and Baroque) and 10 remarkable tapestries manufactured in Bruxelles in 1515 from Raphael's designs. Here again we find great names: Giotto, Lorenzetti, S. Martini, Daddi, L. Monaco, Gentile da Fabriano, Angelico, Filippo Lippi, Gozzoli, Melozzo da Forlì (beautiful "Musician Angels"), Palmezzano, de Roberti, Crivelli, N. Alunno, Perugino, A. Vivarini, Pinturicchio, Raphael (among other works, the unfinished "Transfiguration", completed by his assistants), Leonardo, Giambellino, Veronese, Moretto, Vasari, Carracci, Domenichino, Caravaggio ("Deposition"), Reni, Guercino, Crespi, Titian. Also foreign artists: Cranach, Poussin, van Dyck, Ribera, Lawrence.
   
Collezione d'Arte Religiosa Moderna
Some 800 paintings, sculptures and graphic works, donated to the Holy See by artists and collectors from all over the world: Goya, Morandi, De Pisis, Sironi, Modigliani, Rosai, Carrà, Soffici, Matisse, Rouault, Gauguin, Utrillo, Chagall, Redon, Braque, Klee, Moore, Casorati, De Chirico, Munch, Campigli, Leger, Foujita, Ben Shahn, Feininger, Nolde, Severini, Dali, Ortega, Bacon, Picasso (pottery). Among the sculptors: Manzù, Minguzzi, Greco, Marini, Messina, Rodin.
   
Vatican Palaces The palaces themselves form an irregular mass of three-story and four-story buildings, built on long, plain lines and broken by additions and alterations. The papal residence and offices occupy the portion near the colonnade, and the rest is given over to museums and the Vatican Library.
Visiting hours:
Open: 9am-2pm;
July, Aug., Sept. and Easter 8:45am-5pm;
Last Sun. of the month 9am-2pm;
for information call 06/6984613.
   
Stanze di Raffaello
The School of Athens (Raphael portrait) The Four Raphael Rooms were decorated by Perugino, Lotto, Sodoma and Peruzzi . In 1508 Pope Julius 11 commissioned Raphael to complete the works. The result is one of the masterpieces of painting of all times. The scenes represent: "Fire in Borgo", "Dispute of the Sacrament", "School of Athens', the "Pamassus', "Pope Leo stops Attila", "Miracle of Bolsena", "Heliodorus banished from the Temple", "Liberation of S. Peter From Prison", famous for the effects of light; after Raphael's death in 1520 the frescoes of the last ball were completed by Giulio Romano, the most renowned of his pupils, and by F. Penni.
   
Loggia di Raffaello
Raphael and Donato Bramante worked on the loggia, frescoed with "Scenes of the Old and New Testament".
   
Cappella di Niccolò V
You pass into the chapel of Nicholas V through the Chiaroscuro Room and Constantine's Room. The enchanting frescoes by Fra Angelico depict scenes of the lives of St. Laurence and St. Stephen.
   
Appartamento Borgia
The residence was named after Pope Alexander VI Borgia, who lived in it and commissioned Pinturicchio and his pupils to decorate it (1492-95). The rooms are included in a complex of 55 halls where the Modern Collection is housed (see below).
   
Cappella Sistina (Sistine Chapel)
Sistina Chapel - The Creation of Adam
The Popes' official private chapel, where election conclaves are held, is a gem among gems. Built under Sixtus IV in 1475-81, it owes its fame to the extraordinary frescoes that decorate it. On the side walls the greatest Renaissance artists (Pinturicchio, Perugino, Botticelli, Rosselli, Ghirlandaio, Signorelli, Piero di Cosimo) narrated the events of the "Lives of Moses and Jesus". In 1508 Pope Julius II commissioned Michelangelo to fresco the chapel's ceiling. The result is "The Creation of the Universe" and the "History of Humanity", a stunningly harmonious composition with myriads of figures, in a miraculous synthesis of plastic, architectural and pictorial elements. Decades later Pope Paul III ordered the aged artist to decorate the wall above the altar: between 1535 and 1541 Michelangelo painted the dramatic scenes of "The Last Judgment": among a crowd of 293 figures, Christ sits as the Supreme Judge of Good and Evil. The incomparable ensemble, stemmed from the Florentine's titanic genius, is considered by visitors of all times the highlight of their journey to Rome.
   
Other Galleries and Museums
Galleria dei Candelabri
The gallery is about 80 meters long, it is subdivided by arcades from which hang pairs of candelabra; it contains also Greek and Roman statues and sculptures.

Galleria degli Arazzi
Magnificent 16th-c. Flemish tapestries executed from Raphael's designs.

Galleria delle Carte Geografiche
The 120-meter long gallery is hung with interesting maps.

Museo delle Carrozze
Sedan-chairs, coaches of Popes and prelates, uniforms and documents of the pontifical army corps, the first automobiles used by the Popes.
   
Giardini Vaticani (Vatican Gardens)
Italian style gardens laid out in the 16th c., with thickets, lawns, fountains, artificial grottoes. The beautiful fountains "of the Kite" and "of the Sacrament" are by the Dutch architect C. Vasanzio; of special architectural interest is the splendid "Casina di Pio IV", built in 1558 by Pirro Ligorio and Sallustio Peruzzi (two stucco-decorated buildings with columns and statues).

(for guided visits and reservations, which should be made some days in advance, inquire with "Ufficio Informazioni Pellegrini e Turisti". Piazza San Pietro)
For more information:
Vatican Museums official website

Officially known in Italian as the Basilica di San Pietro in Vaticano and colloquially called Saint Peter's Basilica, ranks second among the five major basilicas of Rome and its Vatican City enclave. Possibly the largest church in Christianity, it covers an area of 23,000 m² and has a capacity of over 60,000 people. One of the holiest sites of Christendom, it is believed to be the site of crucifixion and burial of the basilica namesake Saint Peter, one of the twelve apostles of Jesus and first Bishop of Antioch and later first Bishop of Rome. Tradition holds that his tomb is below the baldochino and altar. Popes have been buried there, too. Construction of the basilica began in 1506 and was completed in 1626.

Contrary to popular belief, the basilica does not hold the distinction in the Roman Catholic Church of being the ecumenical motherchurch, as it is not the cathedral of the Pope (in fact, it is not a cathedral at all). That distinction belongs to the Basilica di San Giovanni in Laterano. However, due to the proximity of the Papal residence, most Papal ceremonies take place at St. Peter's. The basilica also holds a relic of the Cathedra Petri, the episcopal throne of the basilica's namesake when he led the Roman church, but which is no longer used. These are the sources of the confusion.

History

The Second Vatican Council convened in the Basilica of Saint Peter. The high canopy or baldocchino was designed by Bernini.
The Second Vatican Council convened in the Basilica of Saint Peter. The high canopy or baldocchino was designed by Bernini.

The current location is probably the site of the Circus of Nero in the first century. After Emperor Constantine officially recognized Christianity he started construction in 324 of a great basilica in this exact spot, which had previously been a cemetery for pagans as well as Christians.

In the mid-15th century it was decided that the old basilica should be rebuilt. Pope Nicholas V asked architect Bernardo Rossellino to start adding to the old church. This was abandoned after a short while. In the late 15th century Pope Sixtus IV had the Sistine Chapel started nearby. . The basilica in itself is an artwork composed of many valuable artistic elements. Construction started under Pope Julius II in 1506 and was completed in 1615 under Pope Paul V. Donato Bramante was to be the first chief architect. Many famous artists worked on the "Fabbrica di San Pietro" (as the complex of building operations were officially called). Michelangelo, who served as main architect for a while, designed the dome. After the death of Julius II building was halted until Pope Paul III asked Michelangelo to design the rest of the church. After Michelangelo's death his student Giacomo della Porta continued with the unfinished portions of the church. Carlo Maderno became the chief architect later on, and designed the entrance.

  • Circus of Nero and the old and new Basilicas superimposed, showing the tomb of Peter (http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/Europe/Italy/Lazio/Roma/Rome/_Texts/Lanciani/LANPAC/3*.html#sec16)

Details

Directly to the east of the church is the elliptical St. Peter's Square (Piazza San Pietro), built between 1656 and 1667, in the center of which is a 25.5 meter tall obelisk. The obelisk was moved to its present location in 1585 by order of Pope Sixtus V. The obelisk dates back to the 13th century BC in Egypt, and was moved to Rome in the 1st century to stand in Nero's Circus some 275 yards away. Including the cross on top and the base the obelisk reaches 40m. On top of the obelisk there used to be a large bronze globe allegedly containing the ashes of Julius Caesar, this was removed as the obelisk was erected in St. Peter's Square. There are also two fountains in the square, the south one by Maderno (1613) and the northern one by Bernini (1675).

The dome designed by Michelangelo was completed by Giacomo della Porta in 1590.
The dome designed by Michelangelo was completed by Giacomo della Porta in 1590.

The dome or cupola was designed by Michelangelo, who became chief architect in 1546. At the time of his death (1564), the dome was finished as far as the drum, the base on which domes sit. The dome was vaulted between 1585 and 1590 by the architect Giacomo della Porta with the assistance of Domenico Fontana, who was probably the best engineer of the day. Fontana built the lantern the following year, and the ball was placed in 1593.

As built, the double dome is brick, 42.3 metres in interior diameter (almost as large as the Pantheon), rising to 120 metres above the floor. In the early 18th century cracks appeared in the dome, so four iron chains were installed between the two shells to bind it, like the rings that keep a barrel from bursting. (Visitors who climb the spiral stairs between the dome shells can glimpse them.) The four piers of the crossing that support it are each 60 feet (18 meters) across. It is not simply its vast scale (136.57 meters from from the floor of the church to the top of the added cross) that makes it extraordinary. Michelangelo's dome is not a hemisphere, but a parabola: it has a vertical thrust, which is made more emphatic by the bold ribbing that springs from the paired Corinthian columns, which appear to be part of the drum, but which stand away from it like buttresses, to absorb the outward thrust of the dome's weight. The grand arched openings just visible in the illustration but normally invisible to viewers below, enable access (not to the public) all around the base of the drum; they are dwarfed by the monumental scale of their surroundings. Above, the vaulted dome rises to Fontana's two-stage lantern, capped with a spire.

The egg-shaped dome exerts less outward thrust than a lower hemispheric one (like Mansart's at Les Invalides) would have done. The dome conceived by Donato Bramante at the outset in 1503, was planned to be carried out with a single masonry shell, a plan that was discovered not to be feasible. San Gallo came up with the double shell, and Michelangelo improved on it. The piers at the crossing which were the first masonry to be laid, which were intended to support the original dome, were a constant concern, too slender in Bramante's plan, they were redesigned several times as the dome plans evolved.

Light streams down into the sanctuary from the dome cupola.
Light streams down into the sanctuary from the dome cupola.

Other domes around the world built since, are always compared to this one: Saint Joseph's Oratory in Montreal, Quebec, St Paul's Cathedral in London, Les Invalides in Paris, United States Capitol in Washington, DC, Harrisburg, PA (http://www.pbase.com/yardbird/image/26416677) , and the more literal reproduction at the Basilica of Our Lady of Peace of Yamoussoukro, Cote d'Ivoire.

Above the main entrance is the inscription IN HONOREM PRINCIPIS APOST PAVLVS V BVRGHESIVS ROMANVS PONT MAX AN MDCXII PONT VII (In honor of the prince of apostles; Paul V Borghese, pope, in the year 1612 and the seventh year of his pontificate). The façade is 114,69 metres wide and 45,55 m high. On top are statues of Christ, John the Baptist, and eleven of the apostles; St. Peter's statue is inside. Two clocks are on either side of the top, the one on the left is electrically operated since 1931, with its oldest bell dating to 1288.

Between the façade and the interior is the portico. Mainly designed by Maderno, it contains an 18th century statue of Charlemagne by Cornacchini to the south, and an equestrian sculpture of Emperor Constantine by Bernini (1670) to the north. Entering The southernmost door, designed by Giacomo Manzù, is called the "Door of the Dead". The door in the center is by Antonio Averulino (1455), and preserved from the previous basilica.

The northernmost door is the "Holy Door" in bronze by Vico Consorti (1950), which is by tradition only opened for great celebrations such as Jubilee years. Above it are inscriptions. The top reads PAVLVS V PONT MAX ANNO XIII, the one just above the door reads GREGORIVS XIII PONT MAX. In between are white slabs commemorating the most recent openings:

IOANNES PAVLVS II P.M.
PORTAM SANCTAM
ANNO IVBILAEI MCMLXXV
A PAVLO PP VI
RESERVATAM ET CLAVSAM
APERVIT ET CLAVSIT
ANNO IVB HVMANE REDEMP
MCMLXXXIII – MCMLXXIV

IOANNES PAVLVS II P.M.
ITERVM PORTAM SANCTAM
APERVIT ET CLAVSIT
ANNO MAGNI IVBILAEI
AB INCARNATIONE DOMINI
MM-MMI

PAVLVS VI PONT MAX
HVIVS PATRIARCALIS
VATICANAE BASILICAE
PORTAM SANCTAM
APERVIT ET CLAVSIT
ANNO IVBILAEI MCMLXXV


In the jubilee year of human redemption 1983-4, John Paul II, Pontifex Maximus, opened and closed again the holy door closed and set apart by Paul VI in 1976. John Paul II, Pontifex Maximus, again opened and closed the holy door in the year of the great jubilee, from the incarnation of the Lord 2000-2001. Paul VI, Pontifex Maximus, opened and closed the holy door of this patriarchal Vatican basilica in the jubilee year of 1975.

Interior

The Holy Doors are opened during jubilees proclaimed by the Pope.
The Holy Doors are opened during jubilees proclaimed by the Pope.

Walking along the right aisle of the basilica, there are several noteworthy monuments and memorials. The first is Michelangelo's Pietà, located immediately to the right of the entrance. After an incident in 1972 when an individual damaged it with an axe, the sculpture was placed behind protective glass. Up the aisle is the monument of Queen Christina of Sweden, who abdicated in 1654 in order to convert to Catholicism. Further up are the monuments of popes Pius XI and Pius XII, as well as the altar of St Sebastian. Even further up is the Chapel of the Blessed Sacrament, which is open during religious services only. Inside it is a tabernacle on the altar resembling Bramante's Tempietto at San Pietro in Montorio. Bernini sculpted this gilded bronze tabernacle in 1674. The two kneeling angels were added later. Further still are the monuments of popes Gregory XIII (completed in 1723 by Carlo Rusconi) and Gregory XIV.

In the northwestern corner of the nave sits the statue of St. Peter Enthroned, attributed to late 13th century sculptor Arnolfo di Cambio (with some scholars dating it back to the 5th century). The foot of the statue is eroded due to centuries of pilgrims kissing it. Along the floor of the nave are markers with the comparative lengths of other churches, starting from the entrance (not an original detail). Along the pilasters are niches housing 39 statues of saints who founded religious orders.

Walking down the left aisle there is the Altar of Transfiguration. Walking down towards the entrance are the monuments to Leo XI and Innocent XI followed by the Chapel of the Immaculate Virgin Mary. After that come the monuments to Pius X and Innocent VIII, then the monuments to John XXIII and Benedict XV, and the Chapel of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin. After that comes the Monument to the Royal Stuarts, directly opposite the one to Maria Clementina Sobieska. Symmetrically, the two monarchs who gave up their thrones for their Catholic faith in the 17th century, are honored side by side in the most important church in Catholicism. Finally, right before the end of the church, is the Baptistry.

The right transept contains three altars, of St. Wenceslas, St. Processo and St. Martiniano, and St. Erasmus. The left transept also contains three altars, that of St. Peter's Crucifixion, St. Joseph and St. Thomas. West of the left transept is the monument to Alexander VII by Bernini. A skeleton lifts a fold of red marble drapery and holds an hourglass symbolising the inevitability of death. He is flanked on the right by a statue representing religion, who holds her foot atop a globe, with a thorn piercing her toe from the British Isles, symbolizing the pope's problems with the Church of England.

Over the main altar stands a 30 m (90 ft.) tall baldachin held by four immense pillars, all designed by Bernini between 1624 and 1632. The baldachin was built to fill the space beneath the cupola, and it is said that the bronze used to make it was taken from the Pantheon. Underneath the baldachin is the traditional tomb of St. Peter. In the four corners surrounding the baldachin are statues of St Helena (northwest, holding a large cross in her right hand), St Longinus (northeast, holding his spear in his right hand), St Andrew (southeast, spread upon the cross which bears his name) and St Veronica (southwest, holding her veil). The statue of Longinus is by Bernini (1639) and the others are by his followers. Each of these statues represents a relic associated with the person, respectively, a piece of The Cross, the Spear of Destiny, St Andrew's head (as well as part of his cross) and Veronica's Veil. In 1964, St Andrew's head was returned to the Greek Orthodox Church by the Pope. It should be noted that the Vatican makes no claims as to the authenticity of several of these relics, and in fact other Catholic churches also possess "the same" relics. Along the base of the inside of the dome is written, in letters 6 ft. (2 m) high, TV ES PETRVS ET SVPER HANC PETRAM AEDIFICABO ECCLESIAM MEAM. TIBI DABO CLAVES REGNI CAELORVM (Vulgate, from Matthew 16:18-19 (http://php.ug.cs.usyd.edu.au/~jnot4610/bibref.php?book=%20Matthew&verse=16:18-19&src=4); "...you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church. ... I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven...."). Near the top of the dome is another, smaller, circular inscription: S. PETRI GLORIAE SIXTVS PP. V. A. M. D. XC. PONTIF. V. (To the glory of St. Peter; Sixtus V, pope, in the year 1590 and the fifth year of his pontificate).

The Chair of Saint Peter, Cathedra Petri, is hoisted onto an altar in the basilica apse.
The Chair of Saint Peter, Cathedra Petri, is hoisted onto an altar in the basilica apse.

At the apse of the church is the Triumph of the Chair of Saint Peter (1666) by Bernini, a focus of the Feast of Cathedra Petri celebrated annually on February 22 in accordance to the calendar of saints. The triumph is topped by a yellow window in which is a dove, portraying the Holy Spirit, surrounded by twelve rays, symbolising the apostles. Beneath it is the bronze encasing of the relic of the chair of St. Peter, given to the Vatican from Charles the Bald in 875. To the right of the chair are St Ambrose and St Augustine (fathers of the Latin church), and to the left are St Athanasius and St John Chrysostom (fathers of the Greek church). Further to the right is the monument to Urban VIII, by Bernini, and further to the left is the monument to Paul III.

Miscellaneous

Despite a frequent confusion due to the similar names, the church of San Pietro in Vincoli (famous for hosting the precious Michelangelo's "Moses") is a different church, situated on the other side of the Tiber river.

The Guinness Book of Records currently lists Basilica of Our Lady of Peace of Yamoussoukro - which was largely inspired by St. Peter's Basilica - as the largest church, surpassing St. Peter's when it was completed in 1989. The validity of this, however, continues to be debated.

The Emirates Palace hotel entrance hall dome in Dubai is said to surpass St. Peter's Basilica in height.

External links