Palazzo Falconieri
{{Short description|Palace in Rome, Italy}}
{{About|the palace in Rome|the villa in Frascati|Villa Falconieri}}
{{More citations needed|date=August 2024}}
{{Infobox building
|name=Palazzo Falconieri
|native_name=
|image=Regola - pal Falconieri verso Tevere 1200340.JPG
|caption=Borromini facade facing the Tiber
|architectural_style=Renaissance
|architect=Francesco Borromini
}}
The Palazzo Falconieri is a palace in Rome, Italy formed in the seventeenth century as a result of remodelling by the Baroque architect Francesco Borromini. It is the home of the Hungarian Academy Rome (which is the Rome office of the Balassi Institute), since its foundation in 1927. It is located between Via Giulia and Lungotevere, with entrances to both; it is near Palazzo Farnese and a few houses down and across Via Giulia from the church of {{ill|Santa Caterina della Rota|it|Chiesa di Santa Caterina della Rota}} in the Rione of Regola. From 1814, it was occupied by cardinal Joseph Fesch, Napoleon's uncle.
In 1638, Orazio Falconieri purchased a palace on the Via Giulia which had a small courtyard facing the River Tiber.[https://books.google.com/books?id=P5YtoVKyzhcC Rome: The Biography of a City] by Christopher Hibbert (Penguin UK, 2001) He bought an adjacent property in 1645 and in 1646 and appointed the architect Francesco Borromini to remodel and refurbish the two. Some of Borromini’s work was lost in the nineteenth century development of Lungotevere, the embankment and road between the Tiber and the buildings which overlook it, but parts remain.
The surviving parts of Borromini’s work include the façade to the Via Giulia, the Belvedere overlooking the Tiber and the decorative work in several rooms.[https://books.google.com/books?id=j8LlONLlf-cC Borromini] by Anthony Blunt (Harvard University Press, 1979) On the façade, the number of bays was increased from seven to eleven and at either end, tall inverted fluted pilasters were placed terminating in falcons heads, a reference to the family name, that each look back at the façade. Overlooking the Tiber, Borromini added a Belvedere, a three bay loggia with Serliana openings, that stands above the surrounding buildings. On the interior, some of the rooms are ornamented with stucco work designed by Borromini, with the frequent use of heraldic devices and symbolic motifs.
{{Coord|41.8948|N|12.4694|E|source:kolossus-ruwiki|display=title}}
References
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External links
- [https://nolli.stanford.edu/#%5B12.4693%2C41.8945%5D Interactive Nolli Map Website]
{{Francesco Borromini}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Falconieri, Palazzo}}