Misplaced Pages

Palace of the Holy Office

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
This article is about the palace in Rome. For the one in Birgu, Malta, see Inquisitor's Palace. Palace in Rome, Italy
Palace of the Holy Office
Palazzo del Santo Uffizio
Façade of the Palace of the Holy Office
Former namesPalazzo Pucci
General information
StatusIntact
TypePalace
LocationRome, Italy
Coordinates41°54′4″N 12°27′22″E / 41.90111°N 12.45611°E / 41.90111; 12.45611
Current tenantsCongregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
Construction startedc. 1514
Completed1524–25
Renovated1566–67 and 1921–25
ClientLorenzo Cardinal Pucci
OwnerHoly See
Design and construction
Architect(s)Giuliano Leni
Pietro Roselli
Michelangelo
Renovating team
Architect(s)Pirro Ligorio
Giovanni Sallustio Peruzzi
Pietro Guidi

The Palace of the Holy Office (Italian: Palazzo del Santo Uffizio) is a building in Rome which is an extraterritorial property of Holy See. It houses the Holy Office of the Roman Catholic Church.

The palace is situated south of Saint Peter's Basilica near the Petrine Gate to Vatican City. The building lies outside the confines of Vatican City at the south-eastern corner of the city-state. It is one of the properties of the Holy See in Italy regulated by the 1929 Lateran Treaty signed with the Kingdom of Italy. As such, it has extraterritorial status.

The palace was first built after 1514 for Lorenzo Cardinal Pucci, and it was called Palazzo Pucci. Its façade was rebuilt in 1524–1525 by the architects Giuliano Leni, Pietro Roselli and even Michelangelo. When Pucci died in 1531, the building was still not fully completed.

In 1566–1567, the palace was purchased by Pope Pius V for 9000 scudi, and it was converted into the seat of the Holy Office. Renovation works were undertaken by Pirro Ligorio and Giovanni Sallustio Peruzzi. A complete renovation of the building was made by Pietro Guidi between 1921 and 1925.

It is where Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger formerly worked as Prefect of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith.

See also

References

  1. ^ Barbolla, Manuela; Firpo, Massimo; Marino, Mario; Petaccia, Anna Grazia; Ponziani, Daniel (3 January 2016). Rari e preziosi. Documenti dell'età moderna e contemporanea dall'archivio del Sant'Uffizio: Catalogo mostra a Roma, Museo Centrale del Risorgimento. Gangemi Editore spa. pp. 86–87. ISBN 9788849290219.
  2. Jacobson Schutte, Anne (May 1999). "Palazzo del Sant'Uffizio: The Opening of the Roman Inquisition's Central Archive". American Historical Association. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016.
Holy See
History
Sovereign
judicial entity

under
international
law

(Legal status)
Officials
Governance
Government
Foreign affairs
(Multilateral policy)
Diocese
of Rome

with universal
full communion
(Papal primacy)
Synods
Ecclesiastical
province of Rome

(Vicariate: Rome,
Vatican City)
Suburbicarian sees
Territorial abbeys
Suffragan dioceses
Properties
including
extra-
territoriality
Inside
Rome
Major basilicas
Non-
extraterritorial
Outside
Rome
Non-
extraterritorial
See also
Categories: