Puneet Varma (Editor)

Ducal Palace of Sassuolo

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Type
  
Palace

Floor count
  
3

Criteria
  
Monument

Province
  
Province of Modena

Architectural style
  
Italian Baroque

Location
  
Sassuolo Modena, Italy

Type
  
Non-movable

Floors
  
3

Phone
  
+39 0536 880801

Architect
  
Bartolomeo Avanzini

Ducal Palace of Sassuolo

Official name
  
Palazzo ducale di Sassuolo

Address
  
Piazzale della Rosa, 41049 Sassuolo MO, Italy

Client
  
Francesco I d'Este, Duke of Modena

Similar
  
Galleria Estense, Castello di Spezzano, Ducal Palace of Modena, Montegibbio Castle, Palazzo Dei Musei

Video tutorial fai giornate di primavera 2015 palazzo ducale di sassuolo


The Ducal Palace in Sassuolo is a Baroque villa located in the town of Sassuolo, near Modena, northern Italy.

Contents

History

The palace was built on the site of a medieval castle or rocca. The castle was obtained by Niccolò III d'Este from the Della Rosa family in the 15th century, and rebuilt by Borso d'Este in 1458.

The exterior facade seems to reference Tuscan villas more than those of the Veneto. In the mid-16th century, the first pleasure summer villa was built on the site. In the early 17th century, the Duke Francesco I d'Este initially commissioned the building of the present structure by the architect Bartolomeo Avanzini. Over the centuries, the palace has had many owners, but is now owned by the town.

The palace is best known for it highly decorated interior frescoes (1638-1656) by the French artist Jean Boulanger, as well as by Angelo Michele Colonna, Agostino Mitelli, Baldassare Bianchi and Giovanni Giacomo Monti. who were invited by Boulanger to work also on the palace decoration. Luca Colombi, Giovanni Lazzoni, Lattanzio Maschio, Guercino, Salvator Rosa, Ludovico Lana also contributed to the palaces artwork. The palace is also known for its gardens and fanciful Peschiera or fish-tank. The latter was designed by Cavalli, and was originally a large rectangular big "pool" surrounded by a boundary wall in the form of a ruined amphitheater, and is called familiarly the "Fontanazzo" (Rough Fountain).

Restoration of the piano nobile has allowed its use for art exhibitions.

References

Ducal Palace of Sassuolo Wikipedia