The Palazzo Inghirami is an aristocratic palace with a main façade on Via Marchesi, on the corner with Piazza Martire della Liberta,[a]inVolterra, in the province of Pisa, region of Tuscany, Italy. The main façade of the palace was commissioned in the early 17th-century by Jacopo Inghirami, Admiral of the Grand-Duchy of Tuscany.
The design of the mannerist façade on Via Marchesi has been attributed to Gherardo Silvani,[1][2] but other sources suggest that it was constructed by Giovanni Battista Caccini in 1613–1618.[3] The palace extends into a stone gothic palace to the south. This wing was erected in the 19th century in a gothic revival style by the architect Giuseppe Partini, commissioned by Michelangelo Inghirami.
The palace is accessible mainly by appointment. The entrance portal is surmounted by a bust of Cosimo II de' Medici, the patron of admiral Jacopo Inghirami. In the inner courtyard are displayed a number of Etruscan funerary urns excavated from lands owned by the Inghirami family. The interior rooms of the palace contain a bust of the admiral by Felice Palma, and an archive of the family containing maps and drawings by the admiral. A replica of the Raphael Portrait of Tommaso Inghirami is on display.
Il Palazzo Inghirami [..] fù fabbricato sul disegno dell'Ar-ehitetto Gherardo Silvani
43°24′05″N 10°51′36″E / 43.40131°N 10.86009°E / 43.40131; 10.86009
This article about a palace in Italy is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |