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Chiesa di S. Carlo al Corso

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  SS. Carlo e Ambrogio al Corso
  (Vasi at work in the Grand View of Rome)

Links to this page can be found in Book 7, Map B2, Day 1, View C5 and Rione Campo Marzio.

The page covers:
The plate by Giuseppe Vasi
Today's view
S. Carlo al Corso (SS. Ambrogio e Carlo)
S. Giacomo in Augusta or degli Incurabili
Casa del Canova
Gesù e Maria
Palazzo Rondinini
Casa di Goethe

The Plate (No. 140)

This 1756 etching by Giuseppe Vasi shows the northern section of Via del Corso which ends at Piazza del Popolo; until the mid of the XVIIth century it had a rather rural appearance and the hospital of S. Giacomo degli Incurabili was the only large building along the street; in 1665 Pope Alexander VII demolished Arco di Portogallo, an ancient Roman arch across Via del Corso which was regarded as the actual entrance to the urban part of Rome; this led to the development of the northern section of Via del Corso with the enlargement of SS. Ambrogio e Carlo and of Ges� e Maria and with the construction of many new buildings, the flats of which were rented to the foreigners who visited Rome (the eastern side of Via del Corso was part of the Strangers' Quarter).
The view is taken from the green dot in the small 1748 map below. In the description below the plate Vasi made reference to: 1) Deanery of S. Carlo al Corso; 2) Spedale de' Milanesi; 3) S. Giacomo degli Incurabili; 4) SS. Ges� e Maria. The map shows also 5) SS. Ambrogio e Carlo al Corso; 6) Casa del Canova; 7) Palazzo Rondinini; 8) Casa di Goethe; 9) Mausoleo di Augusto which is covered in another page.

Today

(left) The view in June 2010; (right) enlargement showing Obelisco Flaminio and Porta del Popolo

We established ourselves at No. 43, Via degli Otto Cantoni, Corso. This situation is bad. The Corso is the Bond-street of Rome; - but it is also the Billingsgate. There are two fish-stalls under my window, the people belonging to which commence their vociferations as soon as it is light. (..) But the worst objection to our lodgings is their height. We are on the quarto piano; - a hundred and four steps from the ground - though this objection relates only to convenience; for it is by no means mauvais ton in Rome, to live in the upper story, which does not at all answer to our garret. Here, - your approach to heaven does not in the least detract from your gentility.
Henry Matthews - Diary of an Invalid - 1817/1818
In the 1930s the area around Mausoleo di Augusto was entirely redesigned and all the houses surrounding the ancient mausoleum were pulled down; this development had an impact on Via del Corso with the construction of two huge (white and brown) buildings between SS. Ambrogio e Carlo and S. Giacomo degli Incurabili which replaced the house mentioned by Matthews.
Via del Corso continues to attract foreigners; not so much for its hotels and restaurants, but because it is part of a shopping district centred on Via Condotti.

S. Carlo al Corso

(left) Fa�ade; (right) dome and apse

In 1471 Pope Sixtus IV assigned a small medieval church to the Lombards who lived in Rome; this church was rebuilt in 1513-1520 and it was dedicated to St. Ambrose, the patron saint of Milan, a bishop of that city who was very influential in Emperor Theodosius' decision to declare the Christian faith the sole religion of the Roman Empire.
In 1610, on the occasion of the canonization of St. Charles Borromeo, the brotherhood of the Lombards decided to build a larger church and to dedicate it also to St. Charles Borromeo, who had been Archbishop of Milan for twenty years. As a matter of fact the church is commonly known as S. Carlo al Corso, to distinguish it from S. Carlo alle Quattro Fontane and S. Carlo ai Catinari. You may wish to see Karlskirche, the imposing church which was dedicated to St. Charles Borromeo in Vienna in 1715-1739.
The construction of the new church lasted until 1684 when the fa�ade was completed; several architects were involved in the design of the building; among them Pietro da Cortona who designed the dome and part of the decoration of the interior; you may wish to compare this dome with that of SS. Luca e Martina, also by Cortona. The heavy fa�ade was designed by Cardinal Luigi Omodei who financed the completion of the church, as he did not like the project developed by Carlo Rainaldi.

(left) Interior; (right) stucco reliefs portraying saints from Lombardy by Jacopo and Cosimo Fancelli based on sketches by Cortona. Cosimo Fancelli worked for Cortona at the decoration of Cappella Chigi in S. Maria della Pace, of the ceiling of S. Maria in Vallicella and of the underground chapels of S. Maria in Via Lata

In SS. Ambrogio e Carlo, Pietro da Cortona, who was highly regarded as a painter, played a managerial role very similar to that of Gian Lorenzo Bernini, i.e. he coordinated the activities of painters, sculptors and decorators.

(left) Ceiling designed by Pietro da Cortona which surrounds "Fall of the Rebel Angels", a painting by Giacinto Brandi; (right) altar to St. Charles Borromeo in the crypt housing his heart; painting by Giacinto Brandi; above it the crown of the Borromeo and "Humilitas", their family motto (it is shown in the image used as background for this page)

Today Giacinto Brandi is rarely mentioned by art historians. Rudolf Wittkower, in Art and Architecture in Italy - 1600-1750 - Penguin Books 1958, dedicated only a footnote to him to say that his contribution to good painting was negligible. Yet his works can be found in many Roman churches and in 1668 he was elected Principe dell'Accademia di S. Luca, i.e. chairman of the guild of the Roman painters, sculptors and architects. In this website you can see his paintings at Chiesa dell'Angelo Custode, S. Silvestro in Capite and at Collegiata dell'Assunta in Valmontone.

(left) St. Sebastian by Francesco Cavallini; (right) Giuditta by Pietro Pacilli (but some sources attribute it to Andr� Jean Lebrun)

The interior was decorated in 1678-1682 with a series of stucco statues by Francesco Cavallini; when working with stucco, sculptors tended to emphasize the torsion of bodies and other aspects of the subjects they portrayed; it is possible that the stucco statues were expected to be replaced by more composed marble works.
The statue of Judith was added in the 1760s and it shows a change in taste which anticipates Neoclassicist patterns, although the gruesome subject is consistent with the baroque tendency to explicitly portray death scenes.
You may wish to see a directory of national churches in Rome.

S. Giacomo degli Incurabili

(left) Fa�ade; (right) detail with the coat of arms of Cardinal Antonio Maria Salviati

Spedale di S. Giacomo was the third large Roman hospital to be founded after those of S. Spirito in Sassia and S. Giovanni in Laterano; it was built in 1339 by Cardinal Pietro Colonna to provide assistance to the pilgrims who entered Rome at Porta del Popolo. It was known as S. Giacomo in Augusta because the neighbourhood was named after nearby Mausoleo di Augusto; in 1515 Pope Leo X officially named it Ospedale degli Incurabili because it focused on assisting those affected by mal francese, a venereal disease which spread into Italy towards the end of the XVth century and for which no cure was found (later on it was called syphilis). The hospital has a mortuary chapel, S. Maria in Porta Paradisi, which was designed by Antonio da Sangallo the Younger and has inscriptions making reference to the disease.
In 1583 Cardinal Antonio Maria Salviati promoted the reconstruction of the hospital and of its church along Via del Corso; the new buildings were designed by Francesco Capriani da Volterra and after his death in 1599 by Carlo Maderno, who in particular completed the fa�ade and added two small bell towers which are not visible from the street (you may wish to see them from il Pincio). The hospital was almost entirely rebuilt in the XIXth century and only its rear entrance in Via di Ripetta was not modified.

Elliptical interior

The Church of St. Jacomo degli Incurabili is a neat round Church belonging to the Hospital here, where they that are afflicted with incureable Diseases, are entertain'd and well tended.
Richard Lassels' The Voyage of Italy, or a Compleat Journey through Italy in ca 1668
You may wish to see a 1714 elaborate marble altarpiece by Pierre Le Gros, the most interesting work of art inside the church.

Casa del Canova

(left) Side opposite S. Giacomo degli Incurabili; (centre/right) reliefs on the walls (some of them are copies)

Via di S. Giacomo was the name of the street which linked Via del Corso with Via di Ripetta along the southern side of the hospital; it was renamed Via Antonio Canova because the great sculptor had his studio in a building opposite the hospital. Canova was the most celebrated sculptor of the Neoclassic period; his fame was such that he was not affected by the political changes which took place during his life. He was praised by the Roman noble families, by the popes, by the Austrian emperors and by the Kings of England, as well as by Napoleon (see the statue of his sister Paolina), their fiercest enemy.
Canova played important roles as an archaeologist (he started the excavations of Via Appia Antica) and as a diplomat (he recovered several masterpieces which Napoleon had confiscated and brought to Paris). Pope Pius VII rewarded him with the title of Marquis of Ischia di Castro. His studio was very large, a sort of small factory, where the plaster statues he modelled were copied on marble blocks by his assistants, who used a sophisticated system of pantographs. At the peak of his fame, Canova gave just the final touch to the statues "manufactured" in his studio. The walls of the building are decorated with small reliefs and statues he found in Via Appia Antica.
You may wish to visit the houses/studios of Hendrik Christian Andersen and Pietro Canonica, two early XXth century sculptors.

Ges� e Maria

(left) Fa�ade; (right) interior

At the beginning of the XVIIth century a small church was built almost opposite S. Giacomo degli Incurabili; with the development of this section of Via del Corso, Giorgio Bolognetti and Camillo del Corno, two rich prelates, made major donations for the enlargement and embellishment of the church; in return they were allowed to build the funerary monuments for themselves and their relatives in the nave, rather than in a side chapel; for this reason Ges� e Maria is also known as il Cappellone, the big chapel; Carlo Rainaldi designed the new building which has a rather simple fa�ade, but a very decorated interior which was inaugurated in 1680.

(left) One of the confessionals; (right) monument to Giorgio Bolognetti by Francesco Cavallini

Other funerary monuments of this church can be seen in pages dealing with Representation of Death in Baroque Rome (del Corno family) and Baroque Statues in the act of praying (Bolognetti family).
The Bolognetti had palaces opposite Chiesa del Ges�, opposite Palazzo Venezia and at Vicovaro.

Palazzo Rondinini

(left) Fa�ade; (centre) detail of the courtyard with a relief portraying Medusa and Roman inscriptions; (right) staircase leading to the main halls

The Rondinini (aka Rondanini) were a family of Lombard descent; their Roman branch established bonds with many important families and became part of the Roman aristocracy; in 1744 Marquis Giuseppe Rondinini bought a small palace which had belonged to Cavalier d'Arpino, a famous painter of the early XVIIth century.
Giuseppe Rondinini had gathered an important collection of antiquities and he decided to enlarge his new property with the objective of properly displaying his collection (similar to what Cardinal Alessandro Albani was doing in his villa at the same time). The new palace was designed by Alessandro Dori and the walls of the courtyard were decorated with inscriptions and small reliefs, while the finest pieces were placed in the rooms where Giuseppe Rondinini lived and entertained his guests.

(left) Marble inlay with the Rondinini heraldic symbols: swallows (It. rondini) and a golden sieve; (right) clock in the courtyard which indicated the "Italian hour"

In 1786 J. W. Goethe lived in the house opposite Palazzo Rondinini, which he visited on more than one occasion; he was particularly impressed by an over-lifesize mask of a Medusa in which the fearful rigidity of death is admirably portrayed. I own a good cast of it, but nothing is left of the magic of the original. The yellowish stone, which is almost the colour of flesh, has a noble, translucent quality.
J. W. Goethe - Italian Journey - Translation by W. H. Auden and E. Mayer - Collins 1962.
This piece of the collection, which is very similar to the Gorgons which decorated the Temple to Apollo at Didyma, is now in Munich, while Piet� Rondanini, the last (unfinished) known work by Michelangelo, which also belonged to Giuseppe Rondinini, is now in Milan (Sforza Castle). You can see them in another window. Giuseppe Rondinini chose to be buried in a rather gruesome monument at S. Onofrio.

Musei Vaticani - from the Rondinini collection: Ist century AD relief depicting Menander, a IVth century BC Greek writer of comic plays holding a theatrical mask and to the right a Muse (see the same subject in a mosaic at Thuburbo Majus and a similar one at Sousse)

Casa di Goethe

(left) Casa di Goethe seen from Palazzo Rondinini; (right) a nearby building which has retained its XVIIIth century appearance

I am called the Baron gegen Rondanini uber (the baron who lives opposite the Palazzo Rondanini). Goethe
In April 1788 Goethe rented an apartment on the second floor of the house where he had stayed since his arrival on November 1, 1786; he was very happy about his new accommodation: The upper rooms were like the lower ones, except that they enjoyed a delightful view of our garden and of neighbouring gardens in all directions, for our house stood on a corner. From my windows I looked down on many gardens of different sizes, separated by walls of equal height, and displaying an infinite variety of trees and flowers. From this paradise architectural forms of a noble simplicity emerged everywhere - garden pavilions, balconies, terraces and on the higher houses in the background, loggias.
"Casa di Goethe" is a German cultural institution which has arranged a permanent exhibition of documents and prints related to Goethe's stay in Rome in the very rooms where he lived. Temporary exhibitions and other cultural events are promoted from time to time, similar to what occurs at the Keats-Shelley House in Piazza di Spagna.

You have completed Book 7! Move to Book 8: Immacolata Concezione di Campo Marzio.
Next step in Day 1 itinerary: Chiesa della SS. Trinità.
Next step in your tour of Rione Campo Marzio: Piazza del Popolo.

Excerpts from Giuseppe Vasi 1761 Itinerary related to this page:

Chiesa di S. Giacomo degl'Incurabili
Per un Legato del Card. Giacomo Colonna fu eretta quivi la chiesa collo spedale per li poveri infermi circa l'anno 1338. e se ne vede ancora la porta nel cantone del vicolo laterale con architettura molto rozza, e collo stemma di Casa Colonna. Si disse da principio in Augusta per il celebre mausoleo di Augusto, che l'era vicino; ora dicesi degl' Incurabili, per li morbi di tale specie, che in questo spedale si curano. Il Card. Antonio Salviati l'anno 1600. essendone protettore, ingrand� lo spedale, e rifece la chiesa con disegno di Francesco da Volterra, terminata poi da Carlo Maderno, in figura ovale con cupola, e due campanili. Sono in ella delle pitture, e sculture riguardevoli; il quadro nella prima cappella a destra � del Roncalli; il grande bassorilievo in marmo nella seconda, e gli Angioli con altri ornati di stucco sono opere di Mons� le Gros, e li due quadri laterali sono di Giuseppe Passeri; il battesimo del Signore nella terza � del Passignani; la Cena con gli Apostoli nell'altare maggiore, e le pitture nella volta di Gio. Batista Novara, il quale dipinse ancora il Dio Padre nella cupola. La Nativit� del Signore nella cappella, che siegue, � di Anteveduto Grammatica; la statua di s. Giacomo nell'altra � scultura in marmo del Buzio, ed il quadro nell'ultima � del Zucchi.
E' notabile, che s. Filippo Neri frequentando la visita di questo spedale degl'incurabili, soleva dire, che se la giovent� dissoluta visitasse questo, ed osservasse la variet� de' mali causati dalla libidine, non cos� facilmente viverebbe immersa in quelle laidezze; in questo medesimo spedale ebbe i principi della sua perfezione s. Cammillo de Lollis, istitutore de' Ministri degl'infermi.
Chiesa di Ges� e Maria
Quasi incontro alla descritta chiesa evvi quella, di cui sono per accennarvi il pregio, ed il decoro. I Frati riformati di s. Agostino comprarono quivi un palazzo dal Card. Flavio Orsino, e circa l'anno 1640. vi eressero il convento, e la chiesa in onore de' ss. nomi di Ges� e Maria con disegno di Carlo Milanese, ma poi fu terminata la chiesa con magnificenza dal Cav. Rainaldi per mezzo de' grossi soccorsi di Monsig. Giorgio Bolognetti vescovo di Rieti. Ella � ad una nave con sette altari, ed ornata tutta di marmi, sculture, pitture, e stucchi dorati, con varj depositi. Il primo deposito a destra della porta � opera di Domenico Guidi, e quello, che siegue con i busti de' Sig. Bolognetti � di Francesco Aprile. Il s. Niccol� nella seconda cappella � pittura di Basilio Francese, ed il terzo deposito � del Cavallini. La coronazione della ss. Vergine sul magnifico altare maggiore � di Giacinto Brandi, il quale fece ancora le pitture in alto; le due statue per� ne' laterali sono di Giuseppe Mazzoli, e li due Angioli, che reggono il globo di Paolo Naldini, e gli altri del suddetto Cavallini, il quale fece ancora il deposito, che siegue del mentovato Monsig. Bolognetti. Il quadro della ss. Vergine, e s. Giuseppe nella cappella contigua col resto delle pitture sono del suddetto Brandi, ed il deposito accanto � opera di Mons� Michele. Il s. Tommasso di Villanova, e altre pitture nell'ultima cappella sono di Felice Ottone, e l'ultimo deposito a sinistra della porta � di Ercole Ferrata. Le statue e putti di stucco, che sono in alto, furono fatti da' medesimi scultori, e le pitture nella volta sono dell' antidetto Giacinto Brandi.
Chiesa de' SS. Ambrogio e Carlo al Corso
Sulla strada del Corso � quella chiesa, la quale per la magnificenza meriterebbe piuttosto il nome di tempio, o di basilica, non vi mancando altro, che un collegio di Canonici, in vece del convitto de' Preti. Ne tiene cura la nazione Milanese, perch� fin dall'anno 1471 ebbe quivi una piccola chiesa, che dicevasi s. Niccol� del Toss, la quale avendo rifatta da' fondamenti nell'anno 1612. la dedicarono al loro protettore, e vescovo sant' Ambrosio nobile Romano; ma dipoi canonizato che fu s. Carlo Borromeo, colle copiose limosine di molti Porporati e nazionali, e molto pi� con i soccorsi del Re Cattolico allora dominante nel Milanese, vi fu eretto il gran tempio col disegno di Onorio Lunghi, eseguito poi da Martino suo figliuolo; la cupola per� � disegno di Pietro da Cortona. Si vede sull'altare maggiore il celebre quadro dipinto da Carlo Maratti, e nella tribuna, negli angoli della cupola, e nella volta le pitture di Giacinto Brandi, con intorno delli stucchi fatti da Cosimo, e Giacomo Fancelli, tutti messi a oro, tantoch� per accompagnare � stato tutto il resto dipinto ad uso di pietra; appunto come li pensa di farla a suo tempo. Nelle due navi laterali si vedono varie pitture a fresco, fra le quali, ve ne sono del Cav. Benesiani, di Giuseppe Chiari ed altri; le statue nelle nicchie sono del Cavallini, ed il modello nella crociata � disegno di Paolo Posi, per farlo nell'altare incontro con lavori di marmi.