Montecitori Palace

4.1/5 β˜… based on 8 reviews

Contact Montecitori Palace

Address :

Piazza di Monte Citorio, 00186 Roma RM, Italy

Phone : πŸ“ž +97
Website : http://www.camera.it/leg17/585%3Fraccolta%3D129%26rcgrp%3DPalazzo%2BMontecitorio%26Palazzo%2BMontecitorio%2B/%2BSale%2Be%2Bcorridoi
Categories :
City : Roma
Description : Elegant 17th-century palace used as the Chamber of Deputies for Italy's parliament.

Piazza di Monte Citorio, 00186 Roma RM, Italy
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Dr. Faisal Kabir on Google

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Amazing view
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Jivko Velev on Google

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This palace is now the Italian parliament. The building looks very nice and it is not allowed to enter.
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Stanislav Milanovic on Google

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The Palazzo Montecitorio is a palace in Rome and the seat of the Italian Chamber of Deputies. The palace's name derives from the slight hill on which it is built, which was claimed to be the Mons Citatorius, the hill created in the process of clearing the Campus Martius in Roman times. The building was originally designed by Gian Lorenzo Bernini, and it was completed by the architect Carlo Fontana, who modified Bernini's plan with the addition of a bell gable above the main entrance. The excavated obelisk of the Solarium Augusti, now known as the Obelisk of Montecitorio, was installed in front of the palace by Pius VI in 1789.
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Karl 1974 on Google

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The Palazzo Montecitorio is a palace in Rome and the seat of the Italian Chamber of Deputies. The palace's name derives from the slight hill on which it is built, which was claimed to be the Mons Citatorius, the hill created in the process of clearing the Campus Martius in Roman times. The building was originally designed by Gian Lorenzo Bernini for the young Cardinal Ludovico Ludovisi, nephew of Pope Gregory XV. However, with the death of Gregory XV by 1623, work stopped, and was not restarted until the papacy of Pope Innocent XII (Antonio Pignatelli), when it was completed by the architect Carlo Fontana, who modified Bernini's plan with the addition of a bell gable above the main entrance. The building was designated for public and social functions only, due to Innocent XII's firm antinepotism policies which were in contrast to his predecessors. In 1696 the Curia apostolica (papal law courts) was installed there. Later it was home to the Governatorato di Roma (the city administration during the papal period) and the police headquarters. The excavated obelisk of the Solarium Augusti, now known as the Obelisk of Montecitorio, was installed in front of the palace by Pius VI in 1789. With the Unification of Italy in 1861 and the transfer of the capital to Rome in 1870, Montecitorio was seized by the Italian government and chosen as the seat of the Chamber of Deputies, after consideration of various possibilities. The former internal courtyard was roofed over and converted into a semi-circular assembly room by Paolo Comotto. The Chamber was inaugurated on 21 November 1871. But the building proved wholly inadequate: the acoustics were terrible, it was very cold in winter and very hot in summer. As a result of extensive damage from water seepage, the palace was condemned in 1900. An attempt to build a new palace for the Chamber of Deputies on the Via Nazionale failed, and a provisional meeting hall was built on the Via della Missione. Only in 1918 was the Chamber definitively returned to the Palazzo Montecitorio. The return of the Chamber of Deputies to the palace followed extensive renovations, which left only the facade intact. The architect, Ernesto Basile, was an exponent of Art nouveau, known in Italy as the "Liberty" style. He reduced the courtyard, demolished the wings and rear of the palace, constructing a new structure dominated by four red-brick and travertine towers at the corners. Basile also added the so-called Transatlantico, the long and impressive salon which surrounds the debating chamber and now acts as the informal centre of Italian politics. The debating chamber is characterized by numerous decorations in the Art Nouveau style: the impressive canopy of coloured glass (the work of Giovanni Beltrami), the pictorial frieze entitled The Italian People (by Giulio Aristide Sartorio) which surrounds the chamber, the bronze figures flanking the presidential and government benches, and the panels depicting The Glory of the Savoy Dynasty by Davide Calandra.
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Bryan Williams on Google

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A little off the beaten tourist path...near the best gelato in Roma!
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Jacopo Bassanello on Google

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Italy's most famous building after the Coliseum and the leaning tower of Pisa. Beautiful architecture. It is a safe place for tourists, Police officiers and security guards are always nice and smiling. In certain rare days, you may encounter also people actually working inside the building. There is a bar and a restaurant but it isn't open to the public. Worth a visit, if not only to do a "photobomb" to local news TVs on-air from the plaza.
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Fabio Degani on Google

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This Is how politicians in Italy are looked After.... I never seen a building in such prestigious conditions
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Rio Jer on Google

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Montecitori Palace or the federal government Palace Such a beautiful building from 17th century that converted to be the Italian federal government in Roma

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