Corsia Sistina - Complesso Monumentale Santo Spirito in Sassia
Corsia Sistina - Complesso Monumentale Santo Spirito in Sassia
Corsia Sistina - Complesso Monumentale Santo Spirito in Sassia
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dapper777
Monaco66 011 bidrag
okt. 2023 • Par
The "Corsia Sistina" (Sistine Ward) is located in The Monumental Complex of Santo Spirito in Saxia in Rome (Borgo Santo Spirito Street), not so far from St.Peter's Basilica and the Vatican City.
It was erected in the late 15th centurry by Sixtus IV - the Pope of the Sistine Chapel - after sacks and fires had ruined the old hospital.
The Corsia Sistina is now the hospital's main historical building. It is adorned with a cycle of frescoes commemorating the history of the former hospital, its rebuilding and the biography of this famous Franciscan Pope, on one side, and the history of Sixtus IV, on the other side.
Surmounted by an octagonal tower, the Corsia is an immense hall, 120 metres long, divided into two sections separated by the Tiburio (lantern): the two rooms were called Lower Wing and Upper Wing.
In its centre, you can admire an altar attributed to Andrea Palladio, probably the only Roman work, with a painting by Carlo Maratta (seventeenth century).
Under the lantern there was the altar of St. Job, which was later covered by a small temple with a marble frieze attributed to Andrea Palladio. In front of it, there was a pipe organ which, during meal time, used to spread harmonies to give relief to the patients. In fact the music exerts a positive influence, mitigating the suffering, inducing drowsiness, causing relaxation of nerves.
In the second half of the nineteenth century the Sistine Ward’s two rooms were named Sala Lancisi and Sala Baglivi after the two renowned doctors who worked in the hospital (Giovanni Maria Lancisi and Giorgio Baglivi).
On the occasion of the Jubilee of 1650 the Preceptor Stefano Vaio performed embellishments and paintings in the Church of the Santo Spirito, and made the Sistine Ward cleaned up. A small window was then open from the Commendator's apartment (located where today the Library is): it looks onto the Sistine Ward to oversee the performance of the Hospital at any time.
At the entrance from Borgo Santo Spirito, Sala Lancisi is on the right and Sala Baglivi on the left.
Beautiful.
It was erected in the late 15th centurry by Sixtus IV - the Pope of the Sistine Chapel - after sacks and fires had ruined the old hospital.
The Corsia Sistina is now the hospital's main historical building. It is adorned with a cycle of frescoes commemorating the history of the former hospital, its rebuilding and the biography of this famous Franciscan Pope, on one side, and the history of Sixtus IV, on the other side.
Surmounted by an octagonal tower, the Corsia is an immense hall, 120 metres long, divided into two sections separated by the Tiburio (lantern): the two rooms were called Lower Wing and Upper Wing.
In its centre, you can admire an altar attributed to Andrea Palladio, probably the only Roman work, with a painting by Carlo Maratta (seventeenth century).
Under the lantern there was the altar of St. Job, which was later covered by a small temple with a marble frieze attributed to Andrea Palladio. In front of it, there was a pipe organ which, during meal time, used to spread harmonies to give relief to the patients. In fact the music exerts a positive influence, mitigating the suffering, inducing drowsiness, causing relaxation of nerves.
In the second half of the nineteenth century the Sistine Ward’s two rooms were named Sala Lancisi and Sala Baglivi after the two renowned doctors who worked in the hospital (Giovanni Maria Lancisi and Giorgio Baglivi).
On the occasion of the Jubilee of 1650 the Preceptor Stefano Vaio performed embellishments and paintings in the Church of the Santo Spirito, and made the Sistine Ward cleaned up. A small window was then open from the Commendator's apartment (located where today the Library is): it looks onto the Sistine Ward to oversee the performance of the Hospital at any time.
At the entrance from Borgo Santo Spirito, Sala Lancisi is on the right and Sala Baglivi on the left.
Beautiful.
Skrevet 25. oktober 2023
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
Stefo&Vivi
Roma, Italia33 357 bidrag
nov. 2022
Il cantiere è stato definitivamente chiuso e l'antico complesso, che ha subìto importanti lavori di restauro, è stato riaperto al pubblico.
Le Corsie Sistine fanno parte dell'Ospedale di Santo Spirito in Sassia, con una tradizione di ospitalità lunga undici secoli. Originariamente utilizzato per il ricovero degli ammalati, è stato utilizzato anche come lazzaretto fino agli anni '80 del XX secolo.
In questo imponente edificio, lungo 120 metri e largo 13, si può ammirare la magnificenza degli ambienti e il ciclo di affreschi, la cui estensione è seconda solo alla Cappella Sistina in Vaticano.
Infatti, dopo la sorpresa iniziale, la mia beata ignoranza mi ha quasi portato a credere di trovarmi nel Sacellum Sixtinum, la sala del Conclave.
Non avevo idea che ci fosse tanta gloria, qui!
Le Corsie Sistine fanno parte dell'Ospedale di Santo Spirito in Sassia, con una tradizione di ospitalità lunga undici secoli. Originariamente utilizzato per il ricovero degli ammalati, è stato utilizzato anche come lazzaretto fino agli anni '80 del XX secolo.
In questo imponente edificio, lungo 120 metri e largo 13, si può ammirare la magnificenza degli ambienti e il ciclo di affreschi, la cui estensione è seconda solo alla Cappella Sistina in Vaticano.
Infatti, dopo la sorpresa iniziale, la mia beata ignoranza mi ha quasi portato a credere di trovarmi nel Sacellum Sixtinum, la sala del Conclave.
Non avevo idea che ci fosse tanta gloria, qui!
Skrevet 6. november 2022
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
Stefo&Vivi
Roma, Italia33 357 bidrag
mai 2022
Santo Spirito in Sassia è considerata la più antica istituzione ospedaliera di Roma.
A causa della sua estensione, le origini si fondono con quelle del rione Borgo che la ospita.
Costruita dai Sassoni per accogliere i pellegrini in visita alla tomba di Pietro, fu poi trasformata nel primo nosocomio per anziani e infermi da papa Innocenzo III.
La Ruota degli Esposti, collocata all'esterno dell'edificio, testimonia ancora oggi che qui venivano abbandonati i nascituri.
Attualmente, il vecchio complesso monumentale è oggetto di importanti lavori di consolidamento e restauro.
Spero, per una volta, e per il decoro della zona, che il perenne cantiere venga chiuso al più presto.
A causa della sua estensione, le origini si fondono con quelle del rione Borgo che la ospita.
Costruita dai Sassoni per accogliere i pellegrini in visita alla tomba di Pietro, fu poi trasformata nel primo nosocomio per anziani e infermi da papa Innocenzo III.
La Ruota degli Esposti, collocata all'esterno dell'edificio, testimonia ancora oggi che qui venivano abbandonati i nascituri.
Attualmente, il vecchio complesso monumentale è oggetto di importanti lavori di consolidamento e restauro.
Spero, per una volta, e per il decoro della zona, che il perenne cantiere venga chiuso al più presto.
Skrevet 24. mai 2022
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
dapper777
Monaco66 011 bidrag
mai 2022 • Venner
Sooner or later, if you pass in front of Castel Sant'Angelo and you go to St. Peter's square, you will see a big building that from the outside, with its portal and façade, might look like a church, but which was instead a large hospital.
It is the Monumental Complex of Santo Spirito in Sassia. The entrance is dominated by a wonderful marble portal, called 'Entrance to Heaven' and is attributed to the school of Andrea Bregno.
The Santo Spirito in Sassia complex in Rome was built during the first decades of 700 AD, in the period in which the king of the Saxons, Ine of Wessex, gave life to the Schola Saxonum, from which the term Saxia derives.
The Schola Saxonum was conceived by the king as a sort of welcome center, a hostel for (Anglo-)Saxon pilgrims, for his compatriots, who every year came to Rome on pilgrimage to visit the tomb of St. Peter.
In 1198 Pope Innocent III was granted permission by King John Lackland to build a hospital on the site of the former hostel; the new institution was placed under the protection of the Holy Spirit.
The reconstruction works were necessary following the fires and looting that had seriously damaged the structures of the complex.
The Pope decided to instruct the Order of the Hospitallers of the Holy Spirit to found a sort of hospital to house the poor, the infirm and protect all children unwanted and abandoned by their mothers.
In 1470 a fire damaged the hospital. Pope Sixtus IV realized that the old structure was more appropriate to a jail, than to a place where the sick could recover their health and he decided to build a brand new complex. The new hospital was completed in 1478. The architect Baccio Pontelli was involved in the project.
Corsia Sistina consisted of a very long rectangular hall having at its centre an octagonal dome.
The cycle of frescoes of the the Corsia Sistina is due to the initiative of Sixtus IV and depicts the history of the ancient hospital and its Sistine refoundation
It had a façade at the end of the hall which was reconstructed in 1938 based on one of the 46 frescoes in the interior of the building which portray events associated with the history of the hospital.
The Corsia Sistina is divided in two by an octagonal lantern and houses inside an altar attributed to architect Andrea Palladio and a painting by Carlo Maratta. During the pontificate of Pius V, the complex was enlarged and the Palazzo del Commendatore was ordered and built, the work of the architect Giovanni Lippi known as Nanni di Baccio Bigio.
In the nineteenth century, the two wings that make up the Sistine Corsia were called Sala Lancisi and Sala Baglivi, named after two well-known doctors.
It is closed to the public and cannot be visited.
On one very rare occasion, we happened to find an open door and we snuck inside to take some photos.
Interesting,
It is the Monumental Complex of Santo Spirito in Sassia. The entrance is dominated by a wonderful marble portal, called 'Entrance to Heaven' and is attributed to the school of Andrea Bregno.
The Santo Spirito in Sassia complex in Rome was built during the first decades of 700 AD, in the period in which the king of the Saxons, Ine of Wessex, gave life to the Schola Saxonum, from which the term Saxia derives.
The Schola Saxonum was conceived by the king as a sort of welcome center, a hostel for (Anglo-)Saxon pilgrims, for his compatriots, who every year came to Rome on pilgrimage to visit the tomb of St. Peter.
In 1198 Pope Innocent III was granted permission by King John Lackland to build a hospital on the site of the former hostel; the new institution was placed under the protection of the Holy Spirit.
The reconstruction works were necessary following the fires and looting that had seriously damaged the structures of the complex.
The Pope decided to instruct the Order of the Hospitallers of the Holy Spirit to found a sort of hospital to house the poor, the infirm and protect all children unwanted and abandoned by their mothers.
In 1470 a fire damaged the hospital. Pope Sixtus IV realized that the old structure was more appropriate to a jail, than to a place where the sick could recover their health and he decided to build a brand new complex. The new hospital was completed in 1478. The architect Baccio Pontelli was involved in the project.
Corsia Sistina consisted of a very long rectangular hall having at its centre an octagonal dome.
The cycle of frescoes of the the Corsia Sistina is due to the initiative of Sixtus IV and depicts the history of the ancient hospital and its Sistine refoundation
It had a façade at the end of the hall which was reconstructed in 1938 based on one of the 46 frescoes in the interior of the building which portray events associated with the history of the hospital.
The Corsia Sistina is divided in two by an octagonal lantern and houses inside an altar attributed to architect Andrea Palladio and a painting by Carlo Maratta. During the pontificate of Pius V, the complex was enlarged and the Palazzo del Commendatore was ordered and built, the work of the architect Giovanni Lippi known as Nanni di Baccio Bigio.
In the nineteenth century, the two wings that make up the Sistine Corsia were called Sala Lancisi and Sala Baglivi, named after two well-known doctors.
It is closed to the public and cannot be visited.
On one very rare occasion, we happened to find an open door and we snuck inside to take some photos.
Interesting,
Skrevet 17. mai 2022
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
The Spanish Steps Apartment
Roma, Italia34 263 bidrag
mar. 2022
This is a massive complex originally built in the 8th century to provide shelter and assistance to Germanic pilgrims. Later it became a hospital (one of the oldest in Europe). On the side, look for the “baby hatch” where abandoned babies were left (there a big wooden drum, behind a metal grate, where you could leave an unwanted baby; next to it is a little place for donations). Currently the complex is under restoration.
Skrevet 15. mars 2022
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
Joyrayd
Genova, Italia1 817 bidrag
nov. 2018
Durante una delle tante esplorazione della città, a due passi dal Tevere, abbiamo incontrato questo complesso. L'abbiamo visto solo esternamente, sembra molto interessante. Soprattutto cercandone un pò la storia, la curiosità era tanta.Torneremo senz'altro in altra occasione.
Skrevet 19. oktober 2019
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
kenken1010
Kawasaki, Japan8 021 bidrag
mai 2018 • Par
サン・ピエトロ大聖堂をめざしてヴィットリオ・エマヌエーレ2世橋を渡るとすぐ左手にありました。建物の正面に建物の名前が書かれた看板があるのですが、その上にお知らせが貼られていました。修復工事中のようなので、それについて書かれているようでした。このため見学はできないので、サン・ピエトロ大聖堂へ急ぐことにしました。8世紀に巡礼者の宿泊施設として建てられ、12世紀後半に貧困層や身寄りのない人そして孤児などの収容施設、病人のために病院などになった複合施設のようで、それらを全体としてコルシア・システィーナ (Corsia Sistina) と呼ばれているようです。
Skrevet 31. desember 2018
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
Deomogan
Roma, Italia11 703 bidrag
mar. 2018 • Alene
Trovato chiuso per lavori di restauro presumo, non ci sono indicazioni chiare e comunque trovo ridicolo chiudere l'intera struttura quando potevano tenerla aperta ristrutturarla poco per volta
Skrevet 14. mars 2018
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
JeanPaulBelmondo
Basel, Sveits727 bidrag
apr. 2017 • Alene
Befindet sich im Borgo Santo Spirito und der Komplex beinhaltet das erste Krankenhaus von Rom für Alte, Invaliden und Kinder ohne Eltern. Es ist 1204 vom damaligem Papst Innocenyo III gewollt worden und dort gebaut worden wo früher die Schola Saxonum, gegründet von einem Sachsenköingi, stand und von wo auch der Name stammt (Sassia von Sassoni - Sachsen).Das heutige Krankenhaus das dahinter liegt heisst Santo Spirito in Sassia.
Skrevet 18. september 2017
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
furiopa
Roma, Italia2 873 bidrag
mai 2017 • Par
Le origini del Complesso del Santo Spirito in Saxia risalgono al 727 d.C. quando il re dei Sassoni INA istituì la "Schola Saxonum" (da cui deriva la parola "Saxia"), quale centro di accoglienza per i propri connazionali che giungevano in pellegrinaggio a Roma presso la tomba dell' Apostolo Pietro. Il Complesso, costituito dalla Corsia Sistina, dai Chiostri dei Frati, delle Monache e del Pozzo e nonché dal Palazzo del Commendatore, si trova nell'area occupata in epoca romana dalla villa di Agrippina
Skrevet 28. juni 2017
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Estamos planeando una visita a Roma. ¿Se puede visitar el Hospital?. He leído sobre él y me parece interesante.Gracias.
Skrevet 2. oktober 2015
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