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Palazzo Chiaramonte

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Province
  
Province of Palermo

Palazzo Chiaramonte

Address
  
Piazza Marina, 61, 90133 Palermo, Italy

Hours
  
Open today · 10AM–7PMTuesday10AM–7PMWednesday10AM–7PMThursday10AM–7PMFriday10AM–7PMSaturday10AM–7PMSunday10AM–7PMMondayClosedSuggest an edit

Similar
  
Palazzo Abatellis, Palazzo Mirto, Palazzo dei Normanni, Quattro Canti, Piazza Pretoria

Palazzo chiaramonte steri il tribunale della coscienza


Palazzo Chiaramonte-Steri is a historical palace in Palermo, Sicily, southern Italy.

Contents

The building was begun in the early 14th century, and was the residence of the powerful Sicilian lord Manfredi III Chiaramonte. He commissioned the decoration of the Sala Magna ("Grand Hall"), with a painted wooden ceiling by Cecco di Naro, Simone da Corleone and Pellegrino Darena. From the late 15th century to 1517 it housed the Aragonese-Spanish viceroys of Sicily; later it was home to the Royal Customs and, from 1600 to 1782, the tribunal of the Holy Inquisition.

The palace was restored in the 20th century, with numerous elements associated with its role as a jail of the Inquisition. During the works, the grooves left by iron cages in which had been hung the severed heads of the nobles who had rebelled against emperor Charles V were discovered in the façade. The palace is now a museum; among the artworks, it houses Renato Guttuso's Vucciria.

Chanukk palazzo chiaramonte steri palermo 4 dic 2013


References

Palazzo Chiaramonte Wikipedia