Additions to the Vatican Museums: a Timeline
As the church’s wealth has grown over the years, so has the state’s museum and collection, with each Pope making a contribution as listed below:
1492 – 1503: Alexander VI
Fra Angelico & Pinturicchio decorate the private apartments of the Popes.
The beginnings of the Vatican Museums sculpture collection in the Octagonal Court.
1572 – 1585: Gregory XIII
“Most Noble” Italy represented in the Gallery of Maps.
The founding of the Pio Clementino Museum.
The inauguration of the Chiaramonti Museum and the New Wing.
The opening of 3 new museums: the Etruscan, the Egyptian, and the Profano Lateranense.
The Pius-Christian Museum and the Jewish Lapidarium are created in the Lateran Palace.
The founding of the Missionary-Ethnological Museum and the new Vatican Pinacoteca.
The Lateran collections come to the Vatican Museums.
1978 – 2005: John Paul II
From major restoration of the Sistine Chapel to the Jubilee of the year 2000.
2005 - 2013: Benedict XVI
2013 - Present: Francis I
What to see in the Vatican Museums
First, we should clarify that the Vatican Museums is comprised of many smaller museums. Their collection is extensive with 20,000 pieces on display, has 9 miles of art, worth an estimated $15 billion. Undoubtedly, the size and depth can be overwhelming, but there are a few must-see sections and masterpieces as listed below:
Cortile Belvedere
The Cortile del Belvedere, the Belvedere Courtyard, designed by Donato Bramante from 1506 onward, was a major architectural work of the High Renaissance at the Vatican Palace in Rome; its concept and details reverberated in courtyard design, formalized piazzas and garden plans throughout Western Europe for centuries. Conceived as a single enclosed space, the long Belvedere court connected the Vatican Palace with the Villa Belvedere in a series of terraces connected by stairs, and was contained on its sides by narrow wings.
Bramante did not see the work completed, and before the end of the sixteenth century it had been irretrievably altered by a building across the court, dividing it into two separate courtyards.
Galleria degli Arazzi
These Flemish tapestries, realized in Brussels by Pieter van Aelst’s School from drawings by Raphael’s pupils during the pontificate of Clement VII (1523-1534), hang on the walls. Each tapestry, either showing the life of Jesus and Pope Urban VIII, took many years to make and were made from a variety of materials, including gold and silver thread. They were first shown in the Sistine Chapel in 1531, and then arranged for the exhibition in this Gallery in 1838.
Gallery of Maps
As Liam Moloney of the Wall Street Journal wrote, “In the days when pontiffs rarely left Rome, Pope Gregory XIII commissioned giant maps depicting all of Italy—so that he could explore the peninsula without leaving the city’s safety. The paintings had an almost 3-D effect, with city landmarks, mountain valleys and the white crests of ocean waves clearly visible.”
It takes its name from the 40 maps frescoed on the walls, which represent the Italian regions and the papal properties at the time of Pope Gregory XIII (1572-1585). They were painted between 1580 and 1585 on drawings by Ignazio Danti, a famous geographer of the time. Considering the Apennines as a partition element, on one side the regions surrounded by the Ligure and Tyrrhenian Seas are represented; on the other, the regions surrounded by the Adriatic Sea. The map of the main city accompanies each regional map.
Pio Clementino Museum
The nucleus of the pontifical collections of classical sculpture dates back to the original collection of Pope Julius II (1503-1513) which was housed in the Cortile delle Statue (today the Octagonal Court). During the second half of the 18th century the pontifical collections were enormously expanded both as a result of excavations being carried out in Rome and Lazio, and by donations from collectors and antiquaries.
The influence of Enlightenment thinking resulted in the inauguration of a museum in the modern sense, open to the public and explicitly charged with the task of safeguarding antique works of art, and promoting the study and understanding of them.
The Museum is called Pio Clementino after the two popes who oversaw its foundation, Clement XIV Ganganelli (1769-1774) and Pius VI Braschi (1775-1799). The museum fills several large exhibition halls which were obtained by adapting pre-existing rooms with new constructions both within and adjacent to the small Belvedere Palace of Innocent VIII (1484-92).
Antique sculptures were brought here and ancient Roman pieces often had their missing parts completely restored. The neo-classical architecture was realized under the direction of Alessandro Dori, Michelangelo Simonetti, and Giuseppe Camporese, embellished by the work of a large number of painters and decorators.
With the Treaty of Tolentino (1797) the Papal States were forced to give up the principal masterpieces in the Museum to Napoleon and they were transported to Paris. Much later, following the defeat of Napoleon and the Congress of Vienna (1815), and thanks to the diplomatic efforts of Antonio Canova, the greater part of the works was recovered.
Egyptian Museum
The Gregorian Egyptian Museum occupies nine rooms, with a broad hemicycle that opens onto the terrace of the “Niche of the Pinecone”, in which various sculptures are located.
The collection is particularly interesting on account of its relationship with the territory, rich in material from Roman Egypt and Egyptian-influenced Rome. Indeed, many monuments from the most ancient nucleus were brought to Rome at the behest of the emperor in order to embellish buildings, shrines and villas, such as the statuary group of the Gardens of Sallust (Horti Sallustiani), now displayed in the hemicycle. There are also many Egyptian works of Roman production, which offer evidence of an important moment in the history of pharaonic culture, as in the case of the items from the splendid setting of Hadrian's Villa in Tivoli.
The final three rooms of the itinerary are dedicated to artefacts from the Ancient Near East.
Sistine Chapel
>>To discover more, read our attraction article for the
Sistine Chapel.
Raphael Rooms
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Raphael Rooms.
Pinacoteca
The Pinacoteca is arguably the best painting gallery in Rome. In room after room, there are so many masterpieces competing for space and by the greatest artists such as Da Vinci, Caravaggio, and Raphael that it seems unfair to masters such as Titian, Bellini, Lorenzetti, Fra’ Angelico, and Pinturicchio.
Such density of expertly painted work requires the interpretation of an expertly trained guide from an exclusive partner of the Vatican such as Walks Inside Rome.
Among the major masterpieces are Giotto's Stefaneschi Triptych (1320), a Perugino Madonna and Child with Saints (1496), Leonardo da Vinci's unfinished St. Jerome (1482), Guido Reni's Crucifixion of St. Peter (1605), and Caravaggio's Deposition from the Cross (1604).
Apollo Belvedere
As a Roman copy of a Greek bronze, the Apollo Belvedere shows the Greek god Apollo just after shooting an arrow. Found in the 15th century, Pope Julius II moved the Apollo Belvedere to the Vatican, making it the first piece in the Vatican's art collection. This sculpture has long been one of the most influential sculptures in antiquity among Renaissance artists, and considered a supreme example of classical sculpture.
Laocoön
Another iconic work, Laocoön is an almost pristine marble sculpture that depicts in florid, almost baroque style the agonies of the Trojan priest and his sons who were killed by serpents sent by Athena. Displayed in the Imperial palace in the 1st century AD, it was rediscovered in 1506, identified by Michelangelo, who restored a missing arm, and bought by Pope Julius II. The original arm was found in 1905 and reattached in 1957.