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    The Vatican: Spirit and Art of Christian Rome

    Posted By: TimMa
    The Vatican: Spirit and Art of Christian Rome

    The Vatican: Spirit and Art of Christian Rome
    Metropolitan Museum of Art H.N. Abrams | 1982 | ISBN: 0870993488, 0810917114 | English | PDF | 398 pages | 91.3 Mb

    The Vatican is a unique domain. The world's smallest independent city state, it is the seat of the papacy—and thus the spiritual headquarters of one of the world's great religions, Roman Catholicism—and at the same time it is among the largest and most distinguished complexes of architectural and artistic treasures in the West.

    To the ancient Romans, the Vaticanum was a swampy and ill-defined region along the bank of the Tiber. It was the site of the Vatican Circus—begun by Caligula and finished by Nero—and the place where the apostle Peter, the first bishop of Rome, was crucified and buried. Less than three centuries later, the Holy Roman emperor Constantine erected a monumental basilica over the site of Peter's tomb, a church that stood for more than twelve hundred years until it was torn down, beginning in the 1500s, to make way for the magnificent Renaissance basilica that is today the focal point of Christendom.

    This great church, built by Bramante, Michelangelo, Raphael, and other Renaissance and Baroque architects, is at the heart of the independent city state, created in 1929, whose boundaries are determined by the walls built by four popes between 1540 and 1640. Inside this walled enclave, encompassing barely 100 acres within the city of Rome, are the administrative offices of the Church, the residence of the pope, and libraries and museums that form one of the richest treasuries of art in the world. The Vatican Museums house collections that range from Etruscan, Greek, and Roman works of art, through a series of Renaissance masterpieces, to renowned ethnological objects and modern religious art. Wholly self-sufficient, the Vatican City has its own railway station, post office, radio network, and daily newspaper.

    This volume, written by distinguished historians and by curators of the Vatican collections, provides an authoritative and up-to-date survey of all aspects of the Vatican, including essays on the organization of the Church, its evolution, its councils, and its architecture and art. The growth of the papal museums and libraries is traced, and highlights of the Vatican's collections are shown in the more than 280 color-plates that illustrate the text. These plates serve to graphically emphasize the splendor of Saint Peter's Basilica, Bernini's great colonnade, the papal palaces adorned by Raphael and other famed artists, as well as the Sistine Chapel with its magnificent frescoes by Botticelli, Pinturicchio, and Michelangelo. In addition, the reader will find among these pages privileged glimpses into private rooms and apartments in the palaces and into secluded areas in the courtyards and gardens not usually accessible to the tourist.

    This volume also treats the extraterritorial holdings of the Vatican that lie across the Tiber, such as the Lateran Palace and the Cancelleria, the latter a supreme example of quattrocento architecture in Rome. The six pilgrimage churches and the Roman Catacombs are also illustrated and discussed.In sum, this volume—the result of collaboration by many experts and endorsed by the Vatican—is the most authoritative and comprehensive book ever published on the Vatican.
    Message from Pope John Paul II

    Historical Note
    John Daley

    The Government of the Church
    Alfons M. Stickler

    The Vatican City State
    José M. Sánchez de Muniáin

    The Instruments of Social Communication
    Virgilio Levi

    The Vatican Radio
    Roberto Tucci

    The Press Office of the Holy See
    Federico Alessandrini

    Saint Peter's

    The Tomb of Peter and the Constantinian Basilica
    José Ruysschaert

    New Saint Peter's
    Ennio Francia

    The Wooden Cathedra
    Michele Maccarrone

    The Apostolic Palace
    Deoclecio Redig de Campos

    Other Buildings and the Vatican Gardens
    Eva-Maria Jung-Inglessis

    The Vatican Museums

    Introduction
    Deoclecio Redig de Campos

    The Museo Pio-Clementino
    Georg Daltrop

    The Museo Chiaramonti
    Georg Daltrop

    The Museo Gregoriano Etrusco
    Francesco Roncalli

    The Museo Gregoriano Egizio
    Gianfranco Nolli

    The Museo Gregoriano Profano
    Georg Daltrop

    The Museo Pio Cristiano
    Enrico Josi

    The Museo Missionario Etnologico
    Jozef Penkowski

    The Pinacoteca Vaticana
    Maria Donati Barcellona

    The Museo Storico
    Annunzio Gandolfi and Carlo De Vita

    The Collezione d'Arte Religiosa Moderna
    Mario Ferrazza and Patrizia Pignatti

    The Apostolic Vatican Library
    José Ruysschaert

    The Vatican Secret Archive
    Martino Giusti

    The Pilgrimage Basilicas

    Introduction
    John Daley

    San Giovanni in Laterano
    Ennio Francia

    San Paolo fuori le Mura
    Ennio Francia

    Santa Maria Maggiore
    Ennio Francia

    San Lorenzo fuori le Mura
    John Daley

    Santa Croce in Gerusalemme
    John Daley

    San Sebastiano fuori le Mura
    John Daley

    The Catacombs
    Umberto Fasola

    Palaces of the Holy See in Rome

    The Lateran Palace
    John Daley

    The Cancelleria
    John Daley

    The Palazzo di Propaganda Fide
    John Daley

    Plan of Old Saint Peter's
    Map of the Catacombs
    Saint Peter and His Successors
    List of Illustrations
    Selected Bibliography
    Photo Credits


    The Vatican: Spirit and Art of Christian Rome