View of the Palatine Hill from the Forum in Rome,…
View of the Countryside from the site of Paestum,…
Plan and Reconstruction of the Heroon in Paestum,…
The Heroon in Paestum, November 2003
Detail of the Heroon in Paestum, November 2003
Detail of the Heroon in Paestum, November 2003
The Heroon in Paestum, November 2003
Brick Peristyle in a Roman House in Paestum, 2003
BrickColumnsAtriumHouseDistancePaestum2003
Brick Columns around the Impluvium in a Roman Atri…
Brick Columns around the Impluvium in a Roman Atri…
Remains of a Greek House in Paestum, Nov. 2003
Doorjamb in a House in Paestum, 2003
Remains of Roman Houses in Paestum, 2003
Remains of a Roman House in Paestum, Nov. 2003
Peristyle in a Roman House in Paestum, 2003
A Roman Atrium House in Paestum, 2003
A Roman Atrium House in Paestum, 2003
RomanAtriumHouse3Paestum2003
RomanAtriumHouse4Paestum2003
A Roman Street in Paestum, 2003
MarbleAtriumHouseSignPaestum2003
MarbleAtriumHouseViewPaestum2003
Bocca Della Verita in Rome, Dec. 2003
Servian Wall Remains Near Termini Train Station in…
Servian Wall Remains Near Termini Train Station in…
The Crucifixion of St. Peter by Caravaggio in the…
Sculptures on the Pincio Hill in Rome, Dec. 2003
The Church of Santa Maria in Montesanto in Rome, 2…
Sculptures on the Pincio Hill in Rome, Dec. 2003
Piazza Del Popolo in Rome at Dusk, Nov. 2003
Fountain in Piazza del Popolo in Rome, 2003
Porta Del Popolo and Santa Maria Del Popolo in Rom…
Wall Painting in the Palazzo Massimo alle Terme Mu…
Detail of a Wall Painting of a Caryatid from the P…
Detail of a Wall Painting of a Caryatid in the Pal…
Wall Painting in the Palazzo Massimo alle Terme Mu…
Wall Painting in the Palazzo Massimo alle Terme Mu…
Urn Wall Painting from Livia's Villa of Prima Port…
Red Background Wall Painting in the Palazzo Massim…
Villa Floor Plan in the Palazzo Massimo alle Terme…
Detail of a Mosaic in the Palazzo Massimo alle Ter…
Mosaic in the Palazzo Massimo alle Terme Museum in…
Geometric Mosaic With a Central Insert in the Pala…
Black and White Geometric Mosaic in the Palazzo Ma…
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The Farnese Gardens on the Palatine Hill in Rome, Dec. 2003


The Farnese Gardens (Orti Farnesiani sul Palatino or "Gardens of Farnese upon the Palatine") are a garden in Rome, central Italy, created in 1550 on the northern portion of Palatine Hill, by Cardinal Alessandro Farnese. They were the first private botanical gardens in Europe (the first botanical gardens of any kind in Europe being started by Italian universities in the mid-16th century, only a short time before).
Alessandro Farnese was appointed Cardinal Deacon of the Roman Catholic Church in 1534 at the age of 14, by Paul III, his grandfather, who had been elected to the papacy two months previously. He is remembered for being an antiquarian who assembled the greatest collection of Roman sculpture assembled in private hands since antiquity. In 1550, when Farnese acquired a northern portion of Palatine hill (historically the oldest of Rome's seven hills) he had ruins from a Roman palace of Tiberius at the northwest end of the hill top filled in, and converted to a summer home. The site overlooks the Roman Forum and is near the Arch of Titus. He called this Horti Farnesiani (possibly meaning to suggest the hortus conclusus or "enclosed garden" where Mary conceived Jesus Christ). The garden was divided into the classic style of quadrants with a well or a fountain at its centre, deriving from the design of the Roman peristilium palaces of the area, as re-created by the noted architect Vignola.
Though little of the Farnese Gardens survives today, some remnant structures may be seen.
Text from: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farnese_Gardens
Alessandro Farnese was appointed Cardinal Deacon of the Roman Catholic Church in 1534 at the age of 14, by Paul III, his grandfather, who had been elected to the papacy two months previously. He is remembered for being an antiquarian who assembled the greatest collection of Roman sculpture assembled in private hands since antiquity. In 1550, when Farnese acquired a northern portion of Palatine hill (historically the oldest of Rome's seven hills) he had ruins from a Roman palace of Tiberius at the northwest end of the hill top filled in, and converted to a summer home. The site overlooks the Roman Forum and is near the Arch of Titus. He called this Horti Farnesiani (possibly meaning to suggest the hortus conclusus or "enclosed garden" where Mary conceived Jesus Christ). The garden was divided into the classic style of quadrants with a well or a fountain at its centre, deriving from the design of the Roman peristilium palaces of the area, as re-created by the noted architect Vignola.
Though little of the Farnese Gardens survives today, some remnant structures may be seen.
Text from: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farnese_Gardens
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