Victor Emmanuel II Monument

Coordinates: 41°53′41″N 12°28′59″E / 41.894599°N 12.483092°E / 41.894599; 12.483092
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Victor Emmanuel II National Monument
Monumento Nazionale a Vittorio Emanuele II
Victor Emmanuel II Monument is located in Rome
Victor Emmanuel II Monument
Location within Rome
Alternative names"(Mole del) Vittoriano
"Il Vittoriano"
"Altare della Patria"
General information
TypeNational monument
Architectural styleNeoclassical with eclectic influences
LocationRome, Italy
AddressPiazza Venezia
Coordinates41°53′41″N 12°28′59″E / 41.894599°N 12.483092°E / 41.894599; 12.483092
Construction started1885
Completed1935
InauguratedJune 4th, 1911
OwnerMinistry of Cultural Heritage and Activities
Height81 m (266 ft)
Dimensions
Other dimensions135 m (443 ft) across x 130 m (427 ft) deep
Technical details
Floor area717,000 m2 (7,717,724 sq ft)
Lifts/elevators1
Grounds17,550 m2 (188,907 sq ft)
Design and construction
Architect(s)Ettore Ferrari
Pio Piacentini
Giuseppe Sacconi

The Victor Emmanuel II National Monument (Italian: Monumento Nazionale a Vittorio Emanuele II) or (Mole del) Vittoriano, improperly called Altare della Patria (English: Altar of the Fatherland), is a national monument built in honor of Victor Emmanuel II, the first king of a unified Italy, located in Rome, Italy.[1] It occupies a site between the Piazza Venezia and the Capitoline Hill. It is currently managed by the Polo Museale del Lazio and is owned by the Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities.

From an architectural point of view it was conceived as a modern forum, an agora on three levels connected by stairways and dominated by a portico characterized by a colonnade. The complex process of national unity and liberation from foreign domination carried out by King Victor Emmanuel II of Savoy, to whom the monument is dedicated, has a great symbolic and representative value, being architecturally and artistically centered on the Italian unification: for this reason the Vittoriano is considered one of the national symbols of Italy.

It also preserves the Altar of the Fatherland (Italian: Altare della Patria), first an altar of the goddess Rome and then also a shrine of the Italian Unknown Soldier, thus adopting the function of a lay temple consecrated to Italy. Because of its great representative value, the entire Vittoriano is often erroneously called the Altare della Patria, although the latter constitutes only a part of it.

Located in the center of ancient Rome and connected to the modern one thanks to streets radiating from Piazza Venezia, it has been consecrated to a wide symbolic value representing - thanks to the call of the figure of Victor Emmanuel II and the realization of the Altar of the Fatherland - a lay temple metaphorically dedicated to a free and united and celebrating Italy - by virtue of the burial of the Unknown Soldier - the sacrifice for the homeland and for the connected ideals.

General description

The Vittoriano
View of the artistic and architectural works present in the Vittoriano

The Vittoriano is located on the hill of the Capitoline Hill, in the symbolic center of ancient Rome, and is connected to the modern one thanks to roads that radiate from Piazza Venezia.[2]

Its design is a neoclassical interpretation of the Roman Forum. It features stairways, Corinthian columns, fountains, an equestrian sculpture of Victor Emmanuel II, and two statues of the goddess Victoria riding on quadrigas. On its summit there would have been a majestic portico characterized by a long colonnade and two imposing propylaea, one dedicated to the "unity of the homeland" and the other to the "freedom of the citizens", concepts metaphorically linked to the figure of Victor Emmanuel II.[2]

The base houses the museum of Italian Unification[3][4] and in 2007 a lift was added to the structure, allowing visitors to ride up to the roof for 360-degree views of Rome.[5] This terrace, which is the highest of the monument, can also be reached via 196 steps that start from the portico.[6]

The structure is 135 m (443 ft) wide, 130 m (427 ft) deep and 70 m (230 ft) high.[2][7] If the quadrigae and Winged Victorys are included, the height reaches 81 m (266 ft).[3] It has a total area of 17,550 square metres and possesses, thanks to the conspicuous development of the interior spaces, a floor area of 717,000 square meters.[2][7]

One of the architecturally predominant elements of the Vittoriano are the external staircases, which are constituted in the complex by 243 steps, and the portico situated on the top of the monument, which is inserted between two lateral propylae.[2] The entrance stairway is 41 m (135 ft) meters wide and 34 m (112 ft) meters long, the terrace where the Altar of the Fatherland is located is 66 m (217 ft) meters wide.[7] The maximum depth of the Vittoriano underground reaches 17 m (56 ft) meters below street level. The colonnade is formed by columns 15 m (49 ft) meters high and the length of the porch is 72 m (236 ft) meters.[2]

The Basilica of Santa Maria in Ara Coeli. On the left you can see the Vittoriano

The allegories of the monument mostly represent the virtues and feelings, very often rendered as personifications, also according to the canons of the neoclassical style, which animated the Italians during the Italian unification, or from the revolutions of 1820 to the capture of Rome (1870), through which national unity was achieved.[8] The complex process of unification undertaken by Victor Emmanuel II throughout the second half of the 19th Century: for this reason the Italians gave him the epithet of Father of the Fatherland (Italian: Padre della Patria). The only non-allegorical work is the equestrian statue of Victor Emmanuel II,[2] which is the architectural center of the Vittoriano.[7]

The entrance stairway of Vittoriano

The monument, on the whole, appears as a sort of marble covering of the northern slope of the Capitoline Hill:[2] it was therefore thought of as a place where it is possible to make an uninterrupted patriotic walk (the path does not in fact have an architectural end, given that the entrances to the highest part are two, one for each propylaeus) among the works present, which almost all have allegorical meanings linked to the history of Italy.[7] Different are the vegetal symbols present, among which the palm, which recalls the "victory", the oak (the "strength"), the laurel (the "victorious peace"), the myrtle (the "sacrifice") and the olive tree (the "concord").[9]

From a stylistic point of view, the architecture and works of art that embellish the Vittoriano have been conceived with the aim of creating a "national style" to be replicated in other areas.[10] It was designed to communicate the imperial splendours of ancient Rome.[11] Above all, for the realization of the Vittoriano, Giuseppe Sacconi took inspiration from the Neoclassical architecture - the reborn heir of the classical Greek and Roman architecture, on which Italic elements were grafted and eclectic influences added.[7]

The Vittoriano is regarded as a national symbol of Italy and every year it hosts important national celebrations.[1] The largest annual celebrations are Liberation Day (April 25), Republic Day (Italian: "Festa della Repubblica Italiana") (June 2), and Armed Forces Day (Italian: "Giornata dell'Unità Nazionale e delle Forze Armate") (November 4). During these celebrations, the Italian President and the highest government officials pay tribute to the Italian Unknown Soldier and those who died in the line of duty by laying a laurel wreath.[7]

History

The Quadriga of Unity on the summit of one of the two propylaea
The façade of the Pergamo Altar, inspired by Ettore Ferrari and Pio Piacentini for the general project of the Vittoriano

After the death of Victor Emmanuel II of Savoy on January 9, 1878, many initiatives were destined to raise a permanent monument that celebrated the first king of a united Italy, creator of the process of unification and liberation from foreign domination (so much so) which is indicated by historiography as "Father of the Fatherland" also thanks to the political work of the President of the Council of Ministers of the Kingdom of Sardinia Camillo Benso, Count of Cavour and to the military contribution of Giuseppe Garibaldi. The goal was therefore to commemorate the entire Italian unification season ("Risorgimento") through one of its protagonists.[9][8]

For this purpose the Italian government approved the construction of a monumental complex on the Northern side of Rome’s Capitoline Hill. The monument would celebrate the legacy of the first king of a united Italy and would become a symbol of national patriotism. The rough draft of this monument in an eclectic style was designed by Ettore Ferrari and Pio Piacentini in 1884, while the detail project was realized by Giuseppe Sacconi in 1885.[7]

The project by Ettore Ferrari and Pio Piacentini was inspired by the great Hellenistic sanctuaries, such as the Pergamon Altar and the Sanctuary of Fortuna Primigenia in Palestrina.[7] The Vittoriano was conceived as a vast and modern forum[8] open to citizens, situated on a sort of elevated square in the historic center of Rome organized as an agora on three levels connected by tiers, with conspicuous spaces reserved for visitors' strolling.[2][11]

The demolition area on a map from 1870: the Victorian erection and the future Piazza Venezia are marked in black

To erect the Vittoriano it was necessary, between the last months of 1884 and 1899,[2] to proceed with numerous expropriations and extensive demolitions of the buildings that were located in the construction site area.[2] The place chosen was in the heart of the historic center of Rome and was therefore occupied by ancient buildings arranged according to urban planning that dated back to the Middle Ages.[12] This was considered necessary because the Vittoriano should have been built in the heart of the historic center of Rome, in a modern urban context, in front of a new large square (the future Piazza Venezia) which at the time was just a narrow open space in front of the Palazzo Venezia.[13]

The general objective was also to make Rome a modern European capital that rivaled Berlin, Vienna, London and Paris[11] overcoming the centuries-old pontifical town planning.[11] In this context the Vittoriano would have been the equivalent of the Brandenburg Gate of Berlin, of the Admiralty Arch of London and of the Opéra Garnier of Paris: these buildings are in fact all united by a monumental and classical aspect that metaphorically communicates pride and the power of the nation that erected them.[11]

It would then become one of the symbols of the new Italy, joining the monuments of ancient Rome and those of the popes' Rome.[7][9][7] Having then been conceived as a large public square, the Vittoriano, in addition to representing a memorial dedicated to the person of Victor Emmanuel II, was invested with another role: a modern forum dedicated to the new free and united Italy.[14]

Piazza Venezia seen from the Vittoriano terraces

Established Italian sculptors, such as Leonardo Bistolfi, Manfredo Manfredi, Giulio Monteverde, Francesco Jerace, Augusto Rivalta, Lodovico Pogliaghi, Pietro Canonica, Ettore Ximenes, Adolfo Apolloni, Mario Rutelli and Angelo Zanelli, made its sculptures nationwide.[15] It was inaugurated on June 4, 1911 and completed in 1935.[10] The partly completed monument was inaugurated on June 4, 1911 on the occasion of the Turin International world's fair and the 50th anniversary of Italian Unification. Construction continued throughout the first half of the 20th Century; in 1921 the body of the Italian Unknown Soldier was placed in the crypt under the statue of goddess Roma and in 1935 the monument was fully completed amidst the inauguration of the Museo Centrale del Risorgimento Italiano.[3]

The decision to include an altar dedicated to the homeland in the Vittoriano was taken by Giuseppe Sacconi only after the planning phase, during the construction of the monument.[7] The place and the dominant subject were immediately chosen: a large statue of the goddess Rome that would have been placed on the first terrace after the entrance to the monument, just below the equestrian statue of Victor Emmanuel II.[7] Thus the Altar of the Fatherland, at least initially and before the burial of the body of the Unknown Soldier, was thought of as a chapel of the deity.[2] In this way the greatness and majesty of Rome was celebrated, elected to the role of legitimate capital of Italy.[12] This reference was not an exception: in the Vittoriano there are numerous artistic works that recall the history of ancient Rome.[11]

Detail of the portico and one of the two propylaea

After the First World War the Vittoriano was chosen to house the tomb of the Unknown Soldier, or the burial of an Italian soldier who died during the First World War whose identity remains unknown due to the serious injuries that made the body unrecognizable: just for this reason it represents all the Italian soldiers who died during the wars.[16] The reason for his strong symbolism lies in the metaphorical transition from the figure of the soldier to that of the people and finally to that of the nation: this transition between increasingly broader and generic concepts is due to the indistinct traits of the non-identification of the soldier.[7]

The Vittoriano was thus consecrated to its definitive symbolic value becoming - thanks to the call of the figure of Victor Emmanuel II of Savoy and the presence of the Altar of the Fatherland - a lay temple metaphorically dedicated to free and united and celebrating Italy - by virtue of burial of the Unknown Soldier - sacrifice for the homeland and national ideals.[10][8][7]

With the rise of Fascism in 1922, the Vittoriano became the setting for the military parades of the authoritarian regime of Benito Mussolini. After World War II, with the institution of the Italian Republic in 1946, the monument was stripped of all its Fascist symbols and reassumed its original function as a secular temple dedicated to the Italian nation and its people.[7] Throughout the second half of the 20th century, however, its significance as a symbol of national identity started declining as the public opinion started perceiving it as a cumbersome relic representing a nation superseded by its own history.[1] At the turn of the 21st Century, Italy's President Carlo Azeglio Ciampi pushed for a revaluation of national symbols of Italy, including the Vittoriano.

Tomb of Unknown Soldier

The former United States Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta pays tribute to the Tomb of Unknown Soldier (16 January 2013)

The monument holds the Tomb of the Italian Unknown Soldier with an eternal flame, built under the statue of goddess Roma after World War I following an idea of General Giulio Douhet.[16] The body of the unknown soldier was chosen on 28 October 1921 from among 11 unknown remains by Maria Bergamas, a woman from Gradisca d'Isonzo whose only child was killed during World War I.[16] Her son's body was never recovered. The selected unknown was transferred from Aquileia, where the ceremony with Bergamas had taken place, to Rome and buried in a state funeral on 4 November 1921.[16]

His tomb is a symbolic shrine that represents all the fallen and missing in the war.[9] The side of the tomb of the Unknown Soldier that gives outward at the Altar of the Fatherland is always guarded by a guard of honor and two flames that burn perpetually in braziers.[17] The guard is provided with military personnel of the various weapons of the Italian Armed Forces, which alternate every ten years.[16]

The allegorical meaning of the perpetually burning flames is linked to their symbolism, which is centuries old, since it has its origins in classical antiquity, especially in the cult of the dead. A fire that burns eternally symbolizes the memory, in this case of the sacrifice of the Unknown Soldier moved by patriotic love, and his everlasting memory of the Italians, even in those who are far from their country: not by chance on the two perennial braziers next to the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier is placed a plaque whose text reads "Italians Abroad to the Motherland" in memory of donations made by Italian emigrants between the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century for the construction of the Vittoriano.[18]

The names by which the Vittoriano is known

A view from the Piazza Venezia, looking towards Vittoriano from the North-West

The Victor Emmanuel II National Monument is indicated with two other names: "(Mole del) Vittoriano" and "Altare della Patria", which then as today are the most used names to call the monument.[7]

From 1921, when the Unknown Soldier was buried under the statue of the goddess Rome in the part of the Vittoriano that is called "Altare della Patria", the expression began to indicate not only the place of burial of the soldier, personification of all the fallen and lost in war, but the whole structure: this happened thanks to the strong popular sentiment for the symbolic Unknown Soldier.[7]

Vittoriano plan

  1. Vittoriano entrance with artistic gate by Manfredo Manfredi;
  2. Sculptural group The Thought by Giulio Monteverde;
  3. Sculptural group The Action by Francesco Jerace;
  4. Adriatic Fountain by Emilio Quadrelli;
  5. Sculptural group The Force by Augusto Rivalta;
  6. Sculptural group The Concord by Lodovico Pogliaghi;
  7. Tyrrhenus Fountain of Pietro Canonica;
  8. Sculptural group The Sacrifice by Leonardo Bistolfi;
  9. Sculptural group The Right by Ettore Ximenes;
  10. A statue on the side of the sculptural group
    Winged Lion by Giuseppe Tonnini;
  11. Entrance stairway;
  12. Winged Victory on naval ram by Edoardo Rubino;
  13. Winged Victory su naval ram by Edoardo De Albertis;
  14. Tomb of the Italian Unknown Soldier;
  15. Statue of Goddess Rome by Angelo Zanelli;
  16. Statues of fourteen Italian cities by Eugenio Maccagnani;
  17. Equestrian statue of Victor Emmanuel II by Enrico Chiaradia;
  18. Winged Victory on triumphal column by Nicola Cantalamessa Papotti;
  19. Winged Victory on triumphal column by Adolfo Apolloni;
  20. Propylaeus with colonnade on top of which is present
    the Quadriga of Unity by Carlo Fontana;
  21. Winged Victory on triumphal column by Mario Rutelli;
  22. Winged Victory on triumphal column by Cesare Zocchi;
  23. Propylaeus with colonnade on top of which is present
    the Quadriga of Freedom by Paolo Bartolini;
  24. Portico with colonnade whose upper cornice is decorated
    rom the statues representing the regions of Italy. In front of
    stylobate, towards the equestrian statue of Victor Emmanuel II ,
    there is a terrace of the cities redeemed.
Schematic map of the Vittoriano
Schematic map of the Vittoriano

Architectural and artistic works

The fountains of the two seas

The fountain of Adriatic

Set against the external base of the Vittoriano, on the sides of the entrance to Piazza Venezia, are the "fountains of the two seas" which are dedicated to the Adriatic sea and the Tyrrhenian Sea. Both are inserted in a flower bed and possess, from the beginning, a hydraulic system that recycles the water avoiding waste. At one time a 500,000 liter water cistern was also active, then abandoned, located in the basement of the monument.[2] The two fountains therefore represent the two major Italian seas and, therefore, in this perspective the Vittoriano is assimilated to the Italian Peninsula. This way the whole country is represented, even geographically.[10]

External staircases and terraces

The exterior staircases of the Vittoriano adapt to the ascending sides of the northern slope of the Capitoline Hill and lead, starting from the entrance of Piazza Venezia, to the terrace of the Altar of the Fatherland, then to the terrace of the redeemed cities (the one immediately below the colonnade of the portico) and finally to the terraces of the two propylaea, which are flanked by the portico constituting the two entrances.[11][2][7]

View of the terrace of the equestrian statue of Victor Emmanuel II

At the entrance there is an imposing staircase leading to the terrace of the Altar of the Fatherland and of the Italian Unknown Soldier and which represents the first raised platform of the Vittoriano, as well as its symbolic center.[7] The path along the staircase continues even beyond the tomb of the Unknown Soldier to symbolically represent a continuous and uninterrupted procession of Italians that continues its walk up to the highest point of the construction: the portico and the propylaea.[10]

The artistic gate of access to the Vittoriano, which is the work of Manfredo Manfredi, has the particularity of being "hidden", that is, of being able to slide vertically underground thanks to the tracks. The plant that allows the lowering of the railing, originally hydraulic, was considered at the time of its construction among the most technologically advanced in the world. The entrance gate has a length of 40 m (131 ft) and a weight of 10 500 tons.[2]

On both sides of the entrance stairway there are a series of sculptures that accompany the visitor towards the Altar of the Fatherland.[7] The first sculptures that meet are two sculptured groups in gilded bronze,[9] with subjects inspired by the thought of Giuseppe Mazzini,[10] The Thought e The Action (respectively, to the left and right of the staircase for those coming from Piazza Venezia), followed by two sculptural groups (also in this case one on each side) depicting as many Winged Lions and finally, on the top of the staircase, before the beginning of the terrace of the Altar of the Fatherland, two Winged Victorys.[7]

The presence of these figures is not accidental, given that they have a precise meaning. In fact, Thought and Action have been fundamental in the Italian unification process, since they are necessary to change the course of history and to transform a society. The overall shape of the two sculptural groups recalls the intrinsic characteristics of the two concepts: The Action has a triangular and angular profile, while The Thought has a circular shape.[19]

The equestrian statue of Victor Emmanuel II, located at the architectural center of the Vittoriano, above the Altar of the Fatherland, which is instead its symbolic center

The two Winged Lions represent the initiation of the patriots who decide to join the Italian unification enterprise motivated by ardor and strength, which also control their instinctive side: otherwise the patriots would slide towards the obfuscation of their abilities if the instinct were left completely free.[19][20] The Winged Victories, in addition to recalling the military and cultural successes of the Roman era, symbolize allegorically the good luck of national unity.[19]

At the end of the entrance stairway, immediately after the statues of the Winged Victories, opens the terrace of the Altar of the Fatherland, the first raised platform of the Vittoriano, which is dominated centrally by the statue of the goddess Rome and the shrine of the Unknown Soldier.[7] On the terrace of the Altar of the Fatherland there are also the Botticino marble sculptural groups that symbolize the moral values of the Italians, or the ideal principles that make the nation firm.[9] The four groups have a height of 6 meters and are located to the right and left of the entrance to the terrace of the Altar of the Fatherland (two on each side), sideways to the statues of The Thought and of The Action and in correspondence of the fountains of two seas, along the parapets that overlook Piazza Venezia.[7] This is no accident: the concepts expressed by these four sculptural groups, The Force, The Concord, The Sacrifice and The Right, are the tangible emanation of The Thought and The Action.[19]

The right propylaeum, dedicated to the freedom of citizens. Under one of the two doors leading to the interior spaces

At the sides of the Altar of the Fatherland the staircase resumes dividing into two symmetrical ramps parallel to the tomb of the Unknown Soldier.[21] Both reach a pronaos where two large doors open (one on each side, both positioned symmetrically and laterally to the Unknown Soldier and each in correspondence with one of the two propylaea) that lead to the interior spaces of the Vittoriano. Above each door there are two statues: on the left door The Politics and The Philosophy, while on the right door there are two statues depicting The War and The Revolution.[7]

From the two shelves where the doors open to give access to the interior spaces, two further flights of stairs start that converge, exactly behind the Altar of the Fatherland, towards the base of the equestrian statue of Victor Emmanuel II: the latter is located on the second large elevated platform, in order of height, of the Vittoriano.[7] Behind it the stairway resumes its ascent in the direction of the portico reaching a small shelf, from which two staircases start laterally leading, each, to the entrance of a propylaeum. Before reaching the entrances of the propylaea, each of the two staircases is interrupted, creating a small intermediate shelf, which allows access to the terrace of the redeemed cities, the third large and last elevated platform of the Vittoriano, which is exactly behind the equestrian statue of Victor Emmanuel II and immediately below the colonnade of the portico.[21]

The redeemed cities are those united to Italy following the Treaty of Rapallo (1920) and the Treaty of Rome (1924), peace agreements at the end of the First World War: these municipalities are Trieste, Trento, Gorizia, Pola, Fiume and Zara.[7] Following the Paris treaties of 1947, Pola, Fiume and Zara moved on to Yugoslavia and - after the dissolution of the latter - to Croatia. After the conflict, Gorizia was divided into two: one part remained in Italy while the other, which was renamed "Nova Gorica", passed first to Yugoslavia and then to Slovenia.[22] Each redeemed city is represented by an altar against the back wall, which bears the corresponding municipal coat of arms.[10][7] The six altars were placed on the terrace between 1929 and 1930.[7]

The colonnade of the portico illuminated in a night photo

At the center of the row of altars of the redeemed cities, engraved on the stylobate, is a monumental inscription carved on the occasion of the solemn ceremony of the Unknown Soldier (November 4, 1921) which contains the text of the Victory Bulletin, an official document written after the Armistice of Villa Giusti with which the general Armando Diaz, supreme commander of the Royal Army, announced, on November 4, 1918, the surrender of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the victory of Italy in the First World War.[7]

At the base of the text of the Victory Bulletin there are two other altars similar to those of the redeemed cities but which have, instead of the municipal coat of arms of the municipalities, a helmet: these two altars bear the inscription: "Et Facere Fortia" the one on the left and "Et Pati Fortia" the one on the right. They echo the Latin phrase et facere et pati fortia Romanum est ("It is the attribute of a Roman to perform as well as to suffer mighty things") written by Livy in the History of Rome, book 11; in the work the phrase is pronounced by Scaevola towards Lars Porsena.[7]

The Altar of the Fatherland

The Altar of the Fatherland, symbolic center of the Vittoriano, with the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. Above the statue of goddess Roma it can be seen the equestrian statue of Victor Emmanuel II of Savoy, the first king of a unified Italy
One of the two braziers that burn perpetually on the sides of the tomb of the Unknown Soldier. At their base there is a plaque bearing the inscription "Gli italiani all'estero alla Madre Patria" ("Italians abroad to the Motherland")

The Altar of the Fatherland is the most famous part of the Vittoriano and is the one with which it is often identified.[7] Located on the top of the entrance stairway, it was designed by the Brescian sculptor Angelo Zanelli, who won a competition specially held in 1906.[9][7] It is formed from the side of the Tomb of Italian Unknown Soldier that gives the outside of the building (the other side, which gives inside the Vittoriano, is located in a crypt), from the sacellum of the statue of the goddess Rome (which is exactly above the tomb of the Unknown Soldier) and two vertical marble reliefs that descend from the edges of the aedicula containing the statue of the goddess Rome and which run downwards, laterally to the tomb of the Unknown Soldier.[9]

The statue of the goddess Rome present at the Vittoriano interrupted a custom in vogue until the 19th century, which wanted the representation of this subject with exclusively warlike traits: Angelo Zanelli, in his work, decided to further characterize the statue also providing the reference to Athena, Greek goddess of wisdom and the arts, as well as of war.[19] The great statue of the deity emerges from a golden background.[7] The presence of the goddess Roma in the Vittoriano wants to underline the irremissible will of the Unification of Italy patriots to have the Rome as the capital of Italy, an essential concept, according to the common feeling, from the history of the peninsula and the islands of Italian culture.[10][11]

The general conception of the bas-reliefs located laterally to the statue of the goddess Rome, one to his left and the other to his right, recalls Virgil's Bucolics and Georgics, which complete the triptych of the Altar of the Fatherland with the statue of the Roman divinity.[7]

The allegorical meaning of the bas-reliefs that are inspired by the works of Virgil is linked to the desire to conceptually render the Italian soul.[23] In the Georgics the reference to the Aeneid is in fact present and in both the works the industriousness in the work of the Italians is recalled.[10][23]

The bas-relief on the left of the Altar of the Fatherland represents the Triumph of Labor and the one on the right symbolizes the Triumph of the Patriotic Love: both converge scenically towards the statue of the goddess Rome.[10][9][12]

The equestrian statue of Victor Emmanuel II

The equestrian statue of Victor Emmanuel II, architectural center of the Vittoriano, whose marble base the statues of the Italian noble cities are carved

After passing the Altar of the Fatherland, continue up the stairs and meet the equestrian statue of Victor Emmanuel II, a bronze work by Enrico Chiaradia and architectural center of the Vittoriano.[7] The personifications of the noble Italian cities are carved on the marble base of the statue.[10] The statue is bronze, 12 m (39 ft) high and 10 m (33 ft) long and weighs 50 tons.[7] Including the marble base, the entire sculptural group is 24.80 m (81 ft) high.[7]

The equestrian statue of Victor Emmanuel II is the only non-symbolic representation of the Vittoriano, given that it is the representation of the homonymous monarch.[9] The choice to represent it on horseback is not accidental, since the equestrian statues have, since ancient times, a precise symbolism. In classical antiquity the equestrian statues were aimed at the exaltation of the portrayed subject, whose warlike virtues were emphasized. Furthermore, riding and controlling a steed, the character's ability to control primordial instincts was communicated: in this way the subject was also recognized as civic virtues.[24]

Also the placement of the statue at the architectural center of the Vittoriano, above the Altar of the Fatherland and in front of the colonnade of the portico, is not fortuitous: in classical antiquity the equestrian statues were often situated in front of colonnades, public squares, temples or along the triumphal streets; in places, therefore, fundamental for their centrality. Finally, the presence of the basement on which the personifications of the noble cities are carved is linked to the same archaic traditions.[24]

Statues of noble cities

On the base of the equestrian statue of Victor Emmanuel II, as already mentioned, there are sculptural depictions of fourteen Italian noble cities, or rather the capitals of Italian states founded before the Savoy monarchy.[25]

It is therefore not a question of the statues of the most important cities of Italy, but of those once capitals of ancient Italian pre-unification monarchies, or of maritime republics, all of which are precedent and therefore historically converging towards the Savoy monarchy: for this reason they are considered "mothers noble"s of Unification of Italy.[25]

The fourteen sculptural representations of the noble cities are deliberately placed at the base of the equestrian statue of Victor Emmanuel II: metaphorically this choice symbolizes the nature of historical foundations of Italy. In a broader sense they also represent the concept that the unity of the homeland, on the whole, rests on a basis constituted by the municipalities.[26] Unlike those dedicated to the regions of Italy, the statues depicting the fourteen cities are all the work of the same sculptor: Eugenio Maccagnani.[9]

The portico and the propylaea

The Vittoriano at sunset: you can see the propylaea and the quadrigas

Continuing to climb the stairway beyond the equestrian statue of Victor Emmnauel II, we arrive at the most imposing and striking architectonic element: the large portico with Corinthian-style columns, slightly curved, located on the top of the monument, inserted between two temple propylaea and which it is called "sommoportico" due to its elevated position.[27] The propylaea are the two small porticos projecting with respect to the portico which are located at its lateral ends, constituting the entrances.[2]

The portico is 72 m (236 ft) long[7] and is centrally supported by sixteen 15 m (49 ft) tall columns surmounted by Corinthian capitals, embellished by the face of the Italia turrita (located in the center) and acanthus leaves.[7] The cornice above the colonnade is instead decorated with statues representing the sixteen allegorical personifications of the Italian regions: each statue is found in correspondence of a column.[10] Giuseppe Sacconi was inspired by the Temple of Castor and Pollux, which is located in the Roman Forum and not far from the Vittoriano.[7]

A part of the interior decorations of the ceiling of one of the propylaea

Each propylaeum has a bronze statue depicting quadrigae, each one hosting a Winged Victory; the architectural and expressive synergies of the triumphal arches are thus re-proposed: the allegorical meaning of the "quadriga", since ancient times, is in fact that of success.[28] This concept is reinforced by the presence of the Winged Victories, messengers descended from heaven by the divinities who flank the winner of a military battle as their favorite.[29]

The two quadrigae, as the Latin inscriptions placed on the pediments of the underlying propylaea expressly declare, symbolize the freedom of the citizens ("Civium Libertati", right) and the unity of the homeland ("Patriae Unitati", left), the two concepts pivots that inform the entire monument and are attributed to the sovereign Victor Emmmanuel II.[9] The implicit message is that Italy, once again a single political group and gained independence, leaving behind the glories of Rome and the pomp of the papal court, is ready to spread a new Italian Renaissance articulated on the moral virtues represented allegorically in the Vittoriano.[8]

View of the internal decorations of the front wall to the colonnade of the portico. Above the pediment of the colonnade you can see the statues of the Italian regions

The concepts "freedom of citizens" and "unity of the homeland" also summarize the fundamental themes[9] that characterized the beginning and the end of the contribution given by Victor Emmanuel II to the Unification of Italy. Having ascended the throne for a few months, he published the proclamation of Moncalieri (20 November 1849) which confirmed the survival of the liberal regime even in the repressive period following the wave of revolutions of 1848. His political work had a happy ending with the capture of Rome (September 20, 1870) which became the capital, although the unification of Trentino-Alto Adige and Julian March (annexed only in 1919 after the First World War) were still missing.[7] The quadrigas, already planned in the original project, were built and positioned in 1927.[9] Inside the pediments of the two propylaea there are sculptural groups that have the same theme as the respective quadrigas above.[2]

The interior spaces of the portico and the propylaea can be accessed through two triumphal entrance stairways located at each propylaeum. The two entrance staircases are located on a small shelf that can be reached via a short staircase that joins the terrace of the redeemed cities.[21] At the base of the entrance stairway of the propylaea are located four statues of Winged Victories on triumphal columns: made in 1911, two are at the entrance to the right propylea and two at the entrance to the left one.[9]

The Vittoriano seen at night
The artistic gate that closes the entrance to the Vittoriano

Each entrance leads to a large quadrangular vestibule, in dialogue with the outside thanks to a colonnade; from the vestibules one enters the interior spaces of the portico.[21] These rooms are decorated with mosaics, important works of floral Liberty and pictorial symbolism, which cover the lunettes and the two domes of the propylaea.[30] Even the mosaics have as their subject the metaphorical representation of virtues and feelings, very often rendered as allegorical personifications, which animated Italians during the Unification of Italy.[8] The interiors of the portico are decorated with the allegories of the sciences, while the doors that connect the propylaea and the portico are embellished with depictions on the arts.[30]

The decoration of the ceiling of the left propylaeum was entrusted to Giulio Bargellini; in these mosaics he adopted innovative technical devices, such as the use of materials of various kinds and tiles of different sizes and inclined so as to create studied reflections of light; it is also worth noting that the lines of the mosaic representations continue towards those of the columns below.[30] The mosaics of Bargellini along the highest part of the walls represent figuratively The Faith, The Force, The Work and The Wisdom.[30] The decoration of the ceiling of the right propylaeum was instead entrusted to Antonio Rizzi. Rizzi dedicated himself, along the highest part of the vertical walls, to The Law, The Value, The Peace, The Union and The Poetry.[30]

The internal doors leading from the two propylaea to the portico are decorated with allegorical sculptures representing The Architecture and The Music, which are found in the vestibule on the left and which are the work of Antonio Garella, and the The Painting and The Sculpture, which are located in the vestibule on the right and which were made by Lio Gangeri.[30] The interior of the portico has a polychrome marble floor[31] and a coffered ceiling: the latter, which was designed by Gaetano Koch, is called the "ceiling of the sciences".[30]

The ceiling owes its name to the bronze sculptures of Giuseppe Tonnini placed inside the portico, collectively known as The Allegories of The Sciences. They are all made up of female personifications:[30] The Geometry, The Chemistry, The Physics, The Mineralogy, The Mechanics, The Astronomy and The Geography. The vertical wall opposite the columns is decorated at the top with mosaics at gilded background, after 1925. Other sculptures present inside the portico are the trophy of arms, that is to say a vast set of shields, cuirasses, halberds, spears, flags, arrows and quivers; in a trophy the crown of Italy is shown, the eagle with the crusader shield and the collar of the Annunciation: the emblems of the House of Savoy.[31]

The statues of the regions

The staircase leading to the terrace of the redeemed cities is the best point of observation of the statues of the Italian regions, since the latter are found on the cornice of the portico, each in correspondence of a column.[32] The presence of metaphorically depicting statues of the Italian regions is inspired by the allegorical personifications of the Roman provinces, often placed on commemorative monuments during the imperial era.[33] The number of statues placed on the top of the portico is equal to sixteen, given that at the time of the drafting of the construction project sixteen Italian regions were identified: each statue is five meters high and was entrusted to a different sculptor, almost always a native of the region of which he would have carved the image.[9] The cornice is also embellished with friezes consisting of eagles and lion heads.[7]

The internal crypt of the Unknown Soldier

The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier visible from the internal crypt

The crypt of the Italian Unknown Soldier is a place located under the equestrian statue of Victor Emmanuel II which can be accessed from the Shrine of the Flags museum, from where it is possible to see the side of the shrine of the Unknown Soldier that gives towards the interior spaces of the Vittoriano.[7] It is therefore located at the Altar of the Fatherland, from which instead you can see the side of the tomb that gives towards the outside of the building.[7]

The crypt of the Unknown Soldier is the work of the architect Armando Brasini. It is a room in the shape of a Greek cross with a domed vault which is accessed via two flights of stairs. A short tunnel starts from the crypt and reaches the niche of the chapel of the Unknown Soldier. The niche is inserted in an arcosolium inspired by the style of early Christian buildings, especially the catacombs. The ceiling of the crypt instead recalls the Roman architecture, alternating cross vaults and barrel vaults.[7] The room, built in bricks, is characterized by the presence of round arches and niches.[7] There is also a small altar for religious services.[7]

The walls of the crypt are decorated with a mosaic of Byzantine style, by Giulio Bargellini, of a religious nature. The crucifixion of Jesus is located above the tomb of the Unknown Soldier, on the walls stand instead the patron saints of the Italian Armed Forces: Saint Martin patron of the infantry, Saint George for the cavalry, Saint Sebastian for the local police and Saint Barbara for the Italian Navy, bomb squad and military engineers. Finally, in the dome there is the Madonna of Loreto, patron saint of the Italian Air Force.[7]

Parts of the crypt and sepulcher were made with stone materials from the mountains that were the scene of the battles of the First World War: the floor is in Karst marble, while the small altar was made from a single block of stone from Mount Grappa.[7]

Museums

One of the two gates to the propylaea, a gateway to the internal exhibition spaces

Inside the Vittoriano there are some museums dedicated to the history of Italy, especially the Unification of Italy ("Risorgimento"): the Central Museum of the Risorgimento (Italian: Museo Centrale del Risorgimento) with an adjoining study institute, the Flag of Italy Memorial (Italian: Sacrario delle bandiere) and an area that hosts temporary exhibitions of artistic interest, historical, sociological and cultural called "ala Brasini".[34][35]

Access to the Central Museum of the Risorgimento is on the left side of the monument, at the back of the Santa Maria in Ara Coeli, along via di San Pietro in Carcere.[36] Illustrates a period of Italian history, between the end of the 18th century and the First World War, through the display of memorabilia, paintings, sculptures, documents (letters, diaries and manuscripts), drawings, engravings, weapons and prints.[37][38][39]

Entrance to the Central Museum of the Risorgimento from via di San Pietro in Carcere

On the entrance stairway of the Central Museum of the Risorgimento are visible engravings related to some significant episodes for the birth of the Risorgimento movement, from the seed thrown by the French Revolution to the Napoleonic Wars, in order to better frame and remember the national history included between the reform of the ancient Italian states and the end of the First World War. Along the walls other marble engravings show some pieces of texts enunciated by prominent personalities, which better testify and describe this part of Italian history.[37][40]

A Regiment "Lancieri di Montebello" (8th) honor guard salutes the flag of the Logistic Regiment "Sassari" as it leaves the Shrine of the Flags

The Central Museum of the Risorgimento also includes the Shrine of the Flags, a museum where the war flags of dissolved military units and decommissioned ships from the Italian Army, Italian Air Force, Italian Navy, Carabinieri, Polizia di Stato, Penitentiary Police and Guardia di Finanza are collected and temporarily stored. In case a unit is reformed the flags are retrieved by the unit.[35] Access to the shrine is located along Via dei Fori Imperiali: in this museum space are also kept memorabilia, relating mainly to the Risorgimento wars, in which the Italian Armed Forces took part.[41]

The "ala Brasini", reserved for temporary exhibitions, is dedicated to Armando Brasini, the main promoter of the Central Museum. The wing has three exhibition rooms: the "large exhibition hall", with a surface area of 700 m2 (7,535 sq ft) and generally hosting art exhibitions, which are those that usually require more space; the "central hall" of 400 m2 (4,306 sq ft) and the "jubilee hall", which has an area of 150 m2 (1,615 sq ft).[42]

Gallery

References

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  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Maria Rosaria Coppola, Adriano Morabito e Marco Placidi, Il Vittoriano nascosto, Ministero per i beni e le attività culturali, 2005, ISBN 978-88-240-1418-2.
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  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax Tobia, Bruno (2011). L'altare della patria (2nd ed.). Bologna: Il mulino. ISBN 978-8-81523-341-7. OCLC 742504798.
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External links