Chiesa di S. Caterina della Ruota (original) (raw)
Chiesa di S. Caterina della Ruota (Vasi at work in the Grand View of Rome)
Links to this page can be found in Book 6, Map C2, Day 7, View D6 and Rione Regola.
The page covers: [The plate by Giuseppe Vasi](#The Plate) Today's view [S. Girolamo della Carit�](#S. Girolamo della Carit�) - [Cappella Spada](#Cappella Spada in S. Girolamo della Carit�) - Cappella Antamoro [S. Caterina della Ruota](#S. Caterina alla Ruota) [S. Tommaso di Canterbury (and Corte Savella)](#S. Tommaso di Canterbury) [Palazzo Mastrozzi and Palazzo cieco](#Palazzo Mastrozzi) [S. Maria in Monserrato](#S. Maria in Monserrato) [S. Giovanni in Ayno](#S. Giovanni in Ayno) [Palazzo Ricci](#Palazzo Ricci) Courtyards and Madonnelle in Via di Monserrato Casa di Pietro Paolo della Zecca
#### The Plate (No. 111)
Giuseppe Vasi published in 1756 a book of etchings showing the parish churches of Rome. In some instances, e.g. [S. Maria in Campitelli](Vasi117.html#The Plate), they had a monumental aspect, but often they were rather small and uninteresting. In these cases Vasi gave more relevance to other buildings near them as he did in this plate in which S. Girolamo della Carit�, a church belonging to a rich brotherhood, is in the foreground whereas S. Caterina della Ruota, the parish church, is depicted in the background. The two churches are located at the beginning of Via di Monserrato (from Piazza Farnese). This street followed the route of an ancient road leading to [Ponte Trionfale](Vasi87.htm#The Plate); it eventually became one of the streets used by pilgrims to reach [Ponte Sant'Angelo](Vasi85a.htm#The Plate) and from there [S. Pietro](Vasi41.htm#The Plate). It was known as Via di Corte Savella, because of the prison which existed near the square shown in the plate; after this prison was closed in 1652 the street was named after S. Maria di Monserrato which is located further down the street. The view is taken from the green dot in the small 1748 map here below. In the description below the plate Vasi made reference to: 1) S. Girolamo della Carit�; 2) S. Caterina della Ruota; 3) Palazzo Mastrozzi; 4) Palazzo cieco (blind). The small map shows also: 5) S. Tommaso di Canterbury; 6) S. Maria di Monserrato; 7) S. Giovanni in Ayno; 8) Palazzo Ricci; 9) Casa di Pietro Paolo della Zecca.
#### Today
## (left) The view over S. Girolamo della Carit� and Palazzo Mastrozzi in July 2009; (right) the view over S. Caterina della Ruota and the street leading to [Via Giulia](Vasi71.htm#The Plate) with Palazzo cieco in January 2009
Via di Monserrato is a rather narrow street and the churches are exposed to sunlight only in the period near the summer solstice; Vasi showed S. Girolamo della Carit� in the afternoon, but in that period of the day the church is shaded by the opposite building, so the image above was taken in the morning. In order to show both S. Caterina della Ruota and Palazzo cieco it is necessary to wait for a winter day having a soft light. Apart from this analysis of the difference between drawing and taking photos and without noticing the parked cars, this corner of Rome is "as it was".
#### S. Girolamo della Carit�
## (left) Detail of the fa�ade; (right) portal
I went to St. Girolamo della Charita, a Church and House of good Priests, and most of them Gentlemen, living of their own expences, yet all in Community. S. Philipp Neri instituted them, and lived among them thirty years. Richard Lassels' The Voyage of Italy, or a Compleat Journey through Italy in ca 1668 In 1524 an old church dedicated to St. Jerome was assigned by [Pope Clement VII](Storia20.html#Clememt VII) to Arciconfraternita della Carit�, a brotherhood he had founded when he was Cardinal Giulio de' Medici; its members mainly belonged to the Florentine community and St. Philip Neri (who came from Florence) lived in the adjoining hospital for many years. In 1647, thanks to a substantial legacy by Fantino Renzi, one of its members, the brotherhood began a total renovation of the church with the assistance of Domenico Castelli (until 1657) and of Carlo Rainaldi.
## (left) Interior; (right) Cappella Marescotti or di S. Giovanni Battista: details of its decoration with the joint coat of arms of the Marescotti (left) and of the Farnese (right)
The interior of the church strikes the viewer because of its rich decoration which was made possible by the legacy of Renzi and by the families who had their funerary chapels in the church. The Marescotti were Counts of Vignanello, a small town which Sforza Marescotti acquired by marrying Ortensia Farnese, a relative of Pope Paul III. Eventually the Marescotti changed their surname into Ruspoli, having inherited the properties of that family. Their name is associated with [Palazzo Maffei Marescotti](Vasi77.htm#Palazzo Marescotti) and [Palazzo Rucellai Ruspoli](Vasi68.htm#Palazzo Ruspoli).
#### Cappella Spada
## (left) Front view; (right) Monument to Bernardino Lorenzo Spada (d. 1543) by Ercole Ferrata, see a similar earlier monument by Nicolas Cordier
(Borromini's minor works:) About 1660, Capp. Spada in S. Girolamo della Carit� laid out with colourful marble decorations. Here the 'bizarre' idea of replacing the balustrade of the chapel by kneeling angels who hold a piece of (marble) cloth between them (allusion to Christ's pall?). Rudolf Wittkower - Art and Architecture in Italy 1600-1750 Penguin Books 1958 The chapel of the Spada family was thoroughly redesigned by Virgilio Spada, brother of Cardinal Bernardino Spada, who commissioned Francesco Borromini some improvements to his [palace](Vasi131.htm#Palazzo Spada); because of this link many art historians believe that Borromini was involved in the design of the chapel. All the statues are works by pupils of Gian Lorenzo Bernini: two angels by Antonio Giorgetti hold a long marble cloth: they seem to block the access to the chapel, but the wings of the angel to the right are made of wood and are movable. You may wish to see more baroque angels.
## (left) Marble floor; (right-above) portraits of ancestors of the Spada; (right-below) Monument to Giovanni Spada (d. 1247) who was portrayed as an ancient Roman senator by Cosimo Fancelli
#### Cappella Antamoro
## (left) Front view; (centre) St. Philip Neri by Pierre Legros; (right) detail of the ceiling; it brings to mind the decoration of S. Andrea al Quirinale
Filippo Juvarra, a Sicilian architect, came to Rome in 1703 at the age of 25; in the nine years he spent in Rome he had only one opportunity to show his skills. The Antamoro were very wealthy, but definitely not a major Roman family (their palace is known for a fountain by Bernini). Their chapel was very small, but Juvarra, who had studied the works by both Borromini and Bernini, made excellent use of the limited space. During his stay in Rome he published a book of engravings showing the finest coats of arms of the Popes; he then left for Turin where he was able to fully express his talent. You may wish to see Basilica di Superga, perhaps his masterpiece.
#### S. Caterina della Ruota
## (left) Fa�ade; centre) inscription celebrating Giuseppe Vasi; (right) ceiling from Cappella di S. Francesco d'Assisi with the heraldic symbols of [Pope Sixtus V](Storia23.html#Sixtus V)
This medieval church was redesigned in the XVIth century while its fa�ade is an XVIIIth century work; in origin it was dedicated to the Virgin Mary and to distinguish it from the others it was called S. Maria in Caterina, perhaps the name of the founder; over time the exact meaning of this reference was lost and the church was eventually dedicated to St. Catherine of the Wheel, (S. Caterina dei Funari is another church dedicated to this saint). The interior houses an inscription celebrating Giuseppe Vasi which was written by his son Mariano. There is a reference to Palermo (he was born at Corleone, a town near Palermo). He is described as an architect, sculptor, painter and then his work as etcher and writer of a guidebook is mentioned. Vasi was buried in [S. Gregorio ai Quattro Capi](Vasi92.htm#S. Gregorio). The image used as background for this page shows his coat of arms.
## Details of the fa�ade after it was repainted with a light colour which replaced the dark one; see a page on the old colours of Rome
#### S. Tommaso di Canterbury
## (left) Fa�ade; (right) bell tower
Hard by stands the English Colledge, once an Hopital for the English, and built by the English Merchants in Rome, to receive English Pilgrims in; because a poor English Woman had been found worryed by Dogs, in the night, for want of a Lodging. In the Church of this Colledge lies buried, Cardinal Alan, the last English Cardinal of our Nation. Lassels. You may wish to read a [1594 account by Fynes Moryson, a Protestant, about the help he received from Cardinal William Allen](Morison.html#Collegio Inglese) or excerpts from Roma Sancta, a 1581 description of Christian Rome by Gregory Martin, an assistant to Cardinal Allen. S. Tommaso di Canterbury (St. Thomas Becket) stands opposite S. Caterina della Ruota. A house with a church for the English pilgrims was built here in 1363. The buildings were modified and enlarged several times; in 1654 the Jesuits in charge of Collegio Inglese (the English Seminar) bought Corte Savella, one of the prisons of Rome, which stood next to their property and in 1685 they completed the construction of a new seminar, a very large building; also the bell tower was built at that time (it clearly shows the influence of Borromini). This major effort was due to Philip Thomas Howard who was created cardinal in 1675 and is also known as the Cardinal of Norfolk; he hoped to promote the conversion of his country by increasing the number of English Roman Catholic priests who had the opportunity of receiving an in-depth theological education.
## (left) Interior; (right) Monument to Martha Swinburne, a girl of nine who died in Rome in 1778, by Cristopher Hewetson, an Irish sculptor who spent most of his life in Rome. Martha was one of the daughters of Henry Swinburne, an English travel writer best known for "Travels in the Two Sicilies. 1777-1780" who wrote a very long obituary (it opens in another window)
In 1798 the church was occupied by [French troops](Storia28.html#Roman Republic) and it was turned into a stable and later on it was damaged by fire. It was almost entirely rebuilt in 1866-1888; the entrance to the church from Piazza S. Caterina della Ruota is a neo Romanesque work by Pietro Camporese the Younger who is best known for having redesigned [Palazzo del Vicegerente](Vasi22.htm#Palazzo del Vicegerente). The interior retains a small number of the monuments and gravestones it had before 1798.
## (left) Monument to Sir Thomas Dereham; (right) Religion and Faithfulness by Filippo della Valle (see a page on the iconography of Virtues)
Sir Thomas Dereham was a close adviser to James Frances Edward Stuart (James III of England and James VIII of Scotland) aka the Old Pretender who set his residence in Rome in 1719 at [Palazzo Muti Papazzurri](Vasi63.htm#Palazzo Muti). The monument was designed in 1739 by Ferdinando Fuga. The two statues representing Religion and Faithfulness are a fine work by Filippo della Valle. You may wish to see a directory of national churches in Rome or see some images of the Brompton Oratory, a very Roman church in London.
#### Palazzo Mastrozzi and Palazzo cieco
## (left) Overall view; (right) portal
Palazzo Mastrozzi is a late XVIIth century palace with a very elaborate stucco decoration; it was a palazzo da appartamenti, a building split into flats which were rented. You may wish to see a page on this kind of buildings.
## Details of the windows
The windows were decorated with a variety of subjects (shells, masks, young women, etc.) and not with the heraldic symbols of the family owning the palace. Palazzo Mastrozzi, similar to S. Caterina della Ruota and many other more or less famous buildings of Rome, was recently repainted using the lighter tints which were in fashion in the XVIIIth century.
## (left) Palazzo cieco; (right) detail of its decoration
Vasi mentions in the plate also a XVIIth century small palace (Palazzo cieco) with a fine shell decoration. He calls it cieco (blind) because the portal was walled (and still is).
#### S. Maria in Monserrato
## (left) Overall view; (right) detail of the relief above the entrance
S. Maria in Monserrato is another of the "national" churches of Rome and more exactly the church of the inhabitants of Aragon, Catalonia and Valencia living in Rome. It is dedicated to Montserrat, the sanctuary near Barcelona which means "sawed mountain", thus Giovanni Battista Contini, the architect who worked at the completion of the church in 1673, designed a statue showing the Infant Jesus sawing a rock. The fa�ade was initiated by Francesco da Volterra in 1593, Contini completed its lower part, whilst its upper part was added in the XIXth century, but in a way which is not consistent with the original project as depicted in a 1588 Guide to Rome.
## (left) Interior; (right) Cappella di Monserrato
Similar to S. Tommaso di Canterbury the church was closed and damaged during the French occupation of Rome. In 1822 it was restored and some works of art which decorated [S. Giacomo degli Spagnoli](Vasi26.htm#S. Giacomo degli Spagnoli), the church of the Spaniards from Castile and Leon were moved there. Other changes were made in 1929. Cappella di Monserrato reflects the troubled history of the church: it was designed at the beginning of the XVIIth century. The elaborate decoration of the main altar is attributed to Carlo Francesco Bizzaccheri, an architect of the early XVIIIth century, chiefly known for the design of Fontana della Bocca della Verit�. The wooden statue on the altar is a 1950 copy of that which is worshipped at Montserrat.
## (left) Madonna and Child with St. Anne by Maso del Bosco aka Tommaso Boscoli, a Florentine sculptor who helped Michelangelo in the completion of the Monument to Pope Julius II. It comes from a chapel at S. Giacomo degli Spagnoli; (centre) Cappella di Monserrato: St. Raymond of Penyafort sailing on his cloak towards Barcelona by Giovanni Battista Ricci; (right) 1881 monument containing the mixed ashes of the two Borgia popes (Calixtus III and Alexander VI) by Filippo Moratilla. They were buried in [S. Pietro Vecchio](Vasi41.htm#S. Pietro), but their ashes were moved to this church in 1610
#### S. Giovanni in Ayno
## (above-left) Fa�ade; (above-right) sacred image on the adjoining building; (below) inscription on the portal
S. Giovanni in Ayno was a parish church until 1824. It was deconsecrated in 1895 and all its internal decoration is lost. The reference to Ayno has never been explained. It existed already in the XIIth century and it was larger than it is today; in the XVIth century it was downsized to make room for Palazzo Ricci and then rebuilt by Giusto Bonanni from S. Gimignano in Tuscany; the house of the parish priest was located in the adjoining building which is decorated with a fine XVIIIth century "madonnella".
#### Palazzo Ricci
## (left) Overall view; (right) details of its graffito paintings
Palazzo Ricci is named after Giulio Ricci, who bought it in 1577; he was a nephew of Cardinal Giovanni Ricci who began the construction of [Villa Medici](Vasi188.html#Villa Medici). His son Orazio built a small house in Rione Parione. The palace was built in the late XVth century and its decoration is due to Polidoro da Caravaggio, a pupil of Raphael, who became famous for being able to paint entire buildings; it must be said that in 1525 when he worked at this palace he was in his twenties so he was full of energy; after the 1527 [Sack of Rome](Storia20.html#Clement VII) he left the city and went to Naples and Sicily where he reverted to traditional painting. Most of his Roman works are lost, but some are known through sketches and engravings (you may wish to see another building decorated by Polidoro in [Via della Maschera d'Oro](Vasi108.htm#Palazzo di Via della Maschera d'Oro) or his frescoes at S. Silvestro al Quirinale). The remaining paintings of Palazzo Ricci were recently restored; they show episodes of the history of Ancient Rome. The [rear of Palazzo Massimi retains a painted wall](Vasi76.htm#The Rear of the Palace) of the same period. Today the building is split into apartments. Mario Praz, a professor of English Literature at the University of Rome lived in one of them until 1969. You may wish the extraordinary collection of furniture and other items of the early XIXth century which he gathered there.
#### Courtyards and Madonnelle in Via Di Monserrato
## Courtyards: (left) Palazzo D'Aste Pericoli Sterbini; (right) Palazzo Incoronati Sacripante
Via di Monserrato provides additional material for the pages on the Fountains in the Courtyards of Rome and on the Roman "madonnelle".
## Courtyard of Palazzo Capponi Antonelli: (left) stairs; (right) a wall decorated with graffito paintings
The courtyard of this palace most likely replaced a very short alley which branched off Via di Monserrato and led to a painted house.
## (left) Near Palazzo Ricci; (centre) opposite Palazzo Incoronati; (right-above) in Palazzo Podocatari; (right-below) Roman inscription at the end of Via di Monserrato stating that Emperor Claudius enlarged the "pomerium" (the sacred boundary) of the City of Rome (see other similar inscriptions)
#### Casa di Pietro Paolo della Zecca
## (left) Overall view: on the left Via del Pellegrino and on the right Via di Monserrato; (right) details of the paintings in Via del Pellegrino; (inset) coat of arms of the Habsburgs
Another Renaissance painted building is the house of Pietro Paolo Francisci, called della Zecca (Mint) as he was in charge of the mint during the pontificate of Pope Paul II. Similar to Palazzo Ricci it was painted with scenes from the history of Ancient Rome. The paintings are almost entirely lost, but the building is still interesting for its design at the junction between Via del Pellegrino and Via di Monserrato. The two streets continue in [Via dei Banchi Vecchi](Vasi109.htm#Banchi Vecchi). Pietro Paolo della Zecca hosted in his home Eleanor of Portugal who married Austrian Emperor Frederic III of Habsburg in 1462: in memory of the event a relief with the Habsburg's double-headed eagle was walled on the right side of the building. In the XIXth century however the double-headed eagle became a symbol of the Austrian domination in Italy and soon after 1870, when Rome became the capital of Italy, the relief was moved to the courtyard of [S. Maria dell'Anima](Vasi121.htm#S. Maria dell' Anima). The letters AEIOU below the eagle stand for Austriae Est Imperare Orbi Universo (it is the role of Austria to rule over the whole world). You may wish to see some pages on Vienna, the City of the Last Roman Emperors.
Next plate in Book 6: [S. Maria in Monticelli](Vasi112.htm#The Plate). Next step in Day 7 itinerary: [Palazzo Sacchetti](Vasi71.htm#The Plate). Next step in your tour of Rione Regola: Palazzo Montoro.
Excerpts from Giuseppe Vasi 1761 Itinerary related to this page:
###### [Chiesa di s. Caterina della Ruota](#S. Caterina alla Ruota)
##### Molto antica e ricca dovette essere questa piccola chiesa, poich� del 1166. fu da Alessandro III. unita al Capitolo di s. Pietro. Dicevasi prima s. Maria in Caterina, e s. Maria e Caterina, e per� in essa fu trasportata la statua di detta Santa, che era nell'antichissimo monastero, atterrato per la fabbrica dell'Anfiteatro Vaticano, e prese il titolo di s. Caterina della Ruota, a distinzione di quella di Siena. Sono in essa delle pitture a fresco del Muziani, e di altri.
###### Chiesa di s. Girolamo della Carit�
##### A destra � questa venerabile chiesa eretta, come si crede, nella casa di s. Paola matrona Romana, perch� vi abitasse per qualche tempo il s. Dottore. Fu gi� collegiata, e poi vi stettero i frati Osservanti di s. Francesco fino all'anno 1519. allorch� Leone X. la conced� alla confraternita della Carit�, la quale esercita varie opere di misericordia verso i poveri, specialmente co' poveri carcerati pagando loro le spese della carcerazione, e tenendo un Avvocato, ed un Curiale per le loro difese, anco civili. Mantiene per servigio della chiesa alcuni Preti dotti ed esemplari, fra' quali si annovera s. Filippo Neri, che vi abit� 33.anni, e si conserva ancora la sua stanza, in cui oper� molti prodigj, e convers� con s. Carlo Borromeo, con s. Ignazio di Lojola, e con s. Felice Cappuccino, onde � ridotta ora in cappella ornata di marmi e di pitture. Fu rinnovata la chiesa l'anno 1660. col disegno di Domenico Castelli; il prospetto per� fu fatto a spese di Fantino Renzi, il quale fece ancora l'altare maggiore con architettura del Cav. Rainaldi, ornato di marmi, di metalli, e di pietre dure, in cui � il famoso quadro di s. Girolamo dipinto dal Domenichino. La cappella a destra ornata tutta di marmi, metalli, e stucchi dorati, � disegno del Cav. Javarra, e la statua di s. Filippo Neri � scultura di Mons� le Gros. Le pitture nella cappella dall'altra parte sono di Durante Alberti; le sculture nella [cappella](#Cappella Spada in S. Girolamo della Carit�) accanto alla porta sono di Ercole Ferrata, il quadro di s. Pietro nella cappella incontro � del Muziani; il s. Carlo Borromeo nell'altra cappella � di un Torinese, e quello nell'oratorio annesso � del Romanelli. Indi passeremo alla vicina
###### [Chiesa di s. Tommaso degli Inglesi](#S. Tommaso di Canterbury)
##### Fu questa da prima dedicata alla ss. Trinit�, secondo che si legge, da Offa Re d'Inghilterra l'an. 630. e vi era unito uno spedale per i pellegrini di quella nazione: ma essendo dipoi cambiato da Gregorio XIII. in collegio di studenti della medesima nazione, il Card. di Nortfolche nel 1575. rifabricollo di nuovo, e si vedono nella sala i ritratti di alcuni, che nelle persecuzioni di Enrico VIII. e della Regina Elisabetta furono fatti morire. Quindi voltando a destra, evvi dopo pochi passi la
###### [Chiesa di s. Maria di Monserrato](#S. Maria in Monserrato), e di [s. Giovanni in Aino](#S. Giovanni in Ayno)
##### I nazionali di Aragona avevano fin dall'an. 1350. qu� presso uno spedale; ma poi nel 1495. unendosi con quei di Catalogna, e di Valenza edificarono questa chiesa in onore della santissima Vergine sotto il titolo di Monteserrato, che si venera in Catalogna. Antonio da Sangallo ne fece il disegno, fuor che il prospetto, rimaso perci� non compito. Carlo V. affinch� restasse provvisto lo spedale, si assegn� 500. ducati annui nel Regno di Napoli, e per� vi sta un convitto di Preti di quelle nazioni, che ufiziano la chiesa ancora. Poco pi� oltre evvi la piccola chiesa parrocchiale di s. Gio. in Aino, ed appresso il [palazzo Ricci](#Palazzo Ricci)colla facciata ornata di pitture in chiaro e scuro fatte dal celebre Polidoro, e Maturino da Caravaggio, ma ridotte in stato quasi invisibile.