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Villa Imperiale

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Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Villa Imperiale
Phone:
+39 338 262 9372

Address:
Str. dei Cipressi, 5, 61121 Pesaro PU, Italy

The Villa Imperiale of Pesaro is a suburban palatial house outside of Pesaro, built and decorated by artists of the late-Renaissance or Mannerist period. It is now a private residence but the frescoed rooms and elaborate gardens are available for touring. A castle existed at the site, supposedly built starting in 1452 by Alessandro Sforza when visited by Holy Roman Emperor Frederick III. Construction continued until 1469. After various disputes, in 1521 Pesaro was conquered by Francesco Maria I Della Rovere. He commissioned the painter and architect Girolamo Genga to transform the castle into an elegant Villa di Delizia. His wife, Eleonora Gonzaga later commissioned further refurbishment by Pietro Bembo, including completing the cortile d’onore . The property includes terraced and intricate Renaissance style gardens The interior frescoes employed a number of major Mannerist painters including Dosso and Battista Dossi; Camillo Mantovano; Raffaellino del Colle; Bronzino; and Francesco Menzocchi. Topics include the Labors of Hercules, Story of the Rovere family, Hall of Calumny, and caryatids, amorini, and other decorations. In 1635, the villa became part of the Medici with the marriage of Ferdinando II with Vittoria della Rovere.Falling into disrepair, in 1763, the custody of the villa went to the Camera Apostolica of the Catholic church. In 1777 it was ceded by Pope Pius VI to Prince Orazio Albani, brother of the former pope Pope Clement XI, and father of cardinal Alessandro Albani. In the 19th-century, many of the frescoes were restored by Giuseppe Gennari. Much of this work was removed during the restorations in the 1970s.
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