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Database: Palazzo dei Conservatori: Difference between revisions

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One of the structures that comprises the [[Capitoline Hill|Campidoglio]], this [[Palazzo dei Conservatori|Palazzo]] served as the seat of the [[Rome|Roman]] magistrate responsible for administrating the city, or as the Pope liked to call them, his "party-planning committee". By the end of the 15th century, they had very little actual power, the Pope ran the city from the [[Vaticano District|Vatican]].
[[File:ACB_DB_Palazzo_dei_Conservatori.png|right|250px]]
One of the structures that comprises the [[Capitoline Hill|Campidoglio]], this [[Palazzo dei Conservatori|Palazzo]] served as the seat of the [[Rome|Roman]] magistrate responsible for administrating the city, or as the [[Papacy|Pope]] liked to call them, his "party-planning committee". By the end of the 15th century, they had very little actual power, the Pope ran the city from the [[Vaticano District|Vatican]].


In the mid-16th century, [[Michelangelo]] got his talented little hands on the building, re-designing the facade and adding gigantic Corinthian pilaster strips on high pedestals to make it a little less ostentatious. [[Shaun Hastings|I]]'m not certain he succeeded.
In the mid-16th century, [[Michelangelo]] got his talented little hands on the building, re-designing the facade and adding gigantic {{Wiki|Corinthian order|Corinthian}} pilaster strips on high pedestals to make it a little less ostentatious. [[Shaun Hastings|I]]'m not certain he succeeded.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Palazzo dei Conservatori}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Palazzo dei Conservatori}}
[[Category:Animus 2.01 database entries]]
[[Category:Animus 2.01 database entries]]
[[Category:Database: Locations]]
[[Category:Database: Locations]]

Latest revision as of 10:47, 11 April 2019

One of the structures that comprises the Campidoglio, this Palazzo served as the seat of the Roman magistrate responsible for administrating the city, or as the Pope liked to call them, his "party-planning committee". By the end of the 15th century, they had very little actual power, the Pope ran the city from the Vatican.

In the mid-16th century, Michelangelo got his talented little hands on the building, re-designing the facade and adding gigantic Corinthian pilaster strips on high pedestals to make it a little less ostentatious. I'm not certain he succeeded.