Altare della Patria

Altare della Patria

The Altare della Patria.
Location within Rome
Alternative names "Monumento Nazionale a Vittorio Emanuele II"
"Il Vittoriano"
General information
Type Monument
Location Rome, Italy
Coordinates 41°53′41″N 12°28′59″E / 41.894599°N 12.483092°E / 41.894599; 12.483092Coordinates: 41°53′41″N 12°28′59″E / 41.894599°N 12.483092°E / 41.894599; 12.483092
Construction started 1885
Completed 1925
Inaugurated 1911
Height 70 m (230 ft)
Design and construction
Architect Giuseppe Sacconi

The Altare della Patria ([alˈtaːre della ˈpaːtrja]; English: "Altar of the Fatherland"), also known as the Monumento Nazionale a Vittorio Emanuele II ("National Monument to Victor Emmanuel II") or Il Vittoriano, is a monument built in honour of Victor Emmanuel, the first king of a unified Italy, located in Rome, Italy. It occupies a site between the Piazza Venezia and the Capitoline Hill.

The eclectic structure was designed by Giuseppe Sacconi in 1885; sculpture for it was parceled out to established sculptors all over Italy, such as Leonardo Bistolfi and Angelo Zanelli.[1] It was inaugurated in 1911 and completed in 1925.[2]

The Vittoriano features stairways, Corinthian columns, fountains, an equestrian sculpture of Victor Emmanuel and two statues of the goddess Victoria riding on quadrigas. The structure is 135 m (443 ft) wide and 70 m (230 ft) high. If the quadrigae and winged victories are included, the height reaches 81 m (266 ft).[2] It has a total area of 17,000 square meters.

The base of the structure houses the museum of Italian Unification.[2][3] In 2007, a panoramic elevator was added to the structure, allowing visitors to ride up to the roof for 360 degree views of Rome.[4]

Unknown soldier

Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, under the statue of goddess Roma, with the eternal flame on the right

The monument holds the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier with an eternal flame, built under the statue of goddess Roma after World War I following an idea of General Giulio Douhet. The body of the unknown soldier was chosen on 26 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. 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.

Military colours

The flags of disbanded units of the Italian Armed Forces, as well as the flags of ships stricken from the naval register of the Italian Navy are stored at the Vittoriano in the so-called Shrine of the Flags (Sacrario delle Bandiere). The oldest flag on display is the flag of the 19th-century frigate Giuseppe Garibaldi.

Controversy

The Quadriga dell'Unità on the summit

The monument, the largest in Rome, was controversial since its construction destroyed a large area of the Capitoline Hill with a Medieval neighbourhood for its sake.[5] The monument itself is often regarded as conspicuous,[5] pompous and too large.[3][6][7]

It has been described as being "chopped with terrible brutality into the immensely complicated fabric of the hill".[8]

It is clearly visible to most of the city of Rome despite being boxy in general shape and lacking a dome or a tower.[2] The monument is also glaringly white, built from "corpse-white marble" imported from Botticino in Brescia, making it highly conspicuous amidst the generally brownish buildings surrounding it.

References

  1. Sandra Berresford, Italian Memorial Sculpture, 1820-1940: A Legacy of Love56.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Vidotto, Vittorio. "The Invention of Two Capital Cities. Archaeology and Public Spaces in Athens and Rome" (PDF). European Association for Urban History. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 February 2007. Retrieved 26 February 2007.
  3. 1 2 d'Aquino, Niccolò (February 2001). "Capitals: Rome". Europe (403): 36–38.
  4. Vittoriano, su con l'ascensore da oggi le terrazze con vista
  5. 1 2 Hughes, R (2012). Rome: A Cultural, Visual, and Personal History. Random House. pp. 372–4. ISBN 0375711686.
  6. Atkinson, David; Cosgrove, Denis (March 1998). "Urban Rhetoric and Embodied Identities: City, Nation, and Empire at the Vittorio Emanuele II Monument in Rome, 1870-1945". Annals of the Association of American Geographers 88 (1): 28–49. doi:10.1111/1467-8306.00083.
  7. Peter Davey (October 1996). "Outrage". The Architectural Review 200 (1196): 25.
  8. Davey, P (1996). "Outrage - the Vittorio Emanuele II monument in Rome". The Architectural Review. October, 1996.

External links

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