Rome (IT), Palazzo Venezia, Hall of the Map of the World [extant] - 1927
These inscriptions (1927) can
be read on the floor of the Hall of the Map of the World (‘Sala del Mappamondo’) of Palazzo Venezia (the name derived from the
planisphere located here at the end of the fifteenth century, lost today). The
inscriptions were authored by Corrado Ricci and Santi Muratori (Hermanin 1930–31:
468; Diebner 2016: 349).
The inscriptions are in Roman
square capitals, executed in marble letters inlaid in the floor. Inscription 1
is on the left side of the mosaic at the centre of the floor, inscription 2 on
the right side. The inlaid decorations include fasces with Fascist
dating (Anno V°) to the left and an imperial eagle to the right.
The texts are short and simple
and concern the recent history of Palazzo Venezia. Inscription 1 recalls that
the building was claimed by the Italian State after Italy’s entry into World
War I; it had housed the embassy of the Austro-Hungarian Empire since 1797 (see
also the inscription in the Consistory Hall of Palazzo Venezia). The Latin translation ingens bellum for ‘Great War’ (instead of bellum
mundanum or bellum orbis terrarum)
and the anastrophe has reddidit aedes
are notable. Inscription 2 celebrates the conclusion of the restoration of the Hall
of the Map of the World in 1927. The Fascist dating is expressed by the
uncommon wording lictoriae aetatis, which is the literal translation of the
Italian formula era fascista.
After the Italian state took
possession of the building, Palazzo Venezia was used as the theatre of victory celebrations
in the afterwar years. As Fascism exploited World War I in its propaganda to
obtain consensus, Mussolini chose it as seat of his government, and the Hall of
the Map of the World served as his personal office (Nicita 2000: 39).
The mosaic at the centre of
the floor was designed by Pietro D’Achiardi (1879–1940). It represents the rape
of Europa surrounded by sea monsters and was inspired by the mosaics of the
Bath of Neptune in Ostia Antica or, more likely, by the one found during the construction of the Ministry of Finance and there preserved (Diebner 2016: 329; Diebner 2017: 683). Palazzo Venezia was restored under the
supervision of Federico Hermanin (1868–1953), director of the Medieval and Renaissance
Museum hosted in it between 1916 and 1938.
Bibliography
Diebner, Sylvia. 2016. ‘Romanità fascista im Palazzo
Venezia in Rom inszenierung der Macht im Arbeits- und Repräsentationssaal von
Mussolini’. RIASA 71 (s. 3, 39): 325–406.
———. 2017. ‘Roma, Palazzo Venezia: la Sala del Mappamondo e il suo mosaico (1927)’. In Atti del XXII Colloquio dell’Associazione Italiana per lo Studio e la Conservazione del Mosaico, edited by Claudia Angelelli, Daniela Massara, and Andrea Paribeni, 679–88. Tivoli: Scripta Manent Edizioni.
Hermanin, Federico. 1930-31. ‘La Sala del Mappamondo nel Palazzo di
Venezia’. Dedalo 11: 457–81.
Hermanin, Federico, and Mario Salmi. 1948. Il palazzo di Venezia. Rome: La Libreria dello Stato, 115–20.
Nastasi, Antonino. 2019. Le iscrizioni in latino di Roma Capitale (1870-2018). Rome: Edizioni Quasar, 160–61.
Nicita, Paola. 2000. ‘Il museo negato. Palazzo
Venezia 1916-1930’. Bollettino d’Arte 114: 29–72.
Antonino Nastasi