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Palazzo del Capitaniato

City of Vicenza and the Palladian Villas of the Veneto
Palazzo del Capitanio in Vicenza
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Location Italy Edit this on Wikidata
Criteria C (i) (ii)
Reference 712
Coordinates Coordinates: 45°32′50″N 11°32′45″E / 45.54722°N 11.54583°E / 45.54722; 11.54583
Inscription 1994 ( Session)
Palazzo del Capitaniato is located in Italy
Palazzo del Capitaniato
Location of Palazzo del Capitaniato
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The palazzo del Capitaniato, also known as loggia del Capitanio or loggia Bernarda, is a palazzo in Vicenza, northern Italy, designed by Andrea Palladio in 1565 and built between 1571 and 1572. It is located on the central Piazza dei Signori, facing the Basilica Palladiana.

The palazzo is currently used by the town council. It was decorated by Lorenzo Rubini and, in the interior, with frescoes by Giovanni Antonio Fasolo. Since 1994 the palace has been part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site of the "City of Vicenza and the Palladian Villas of the Veneto".

When one compares the Gothic arches of the Palazzo Ducale in Venice with the loggias of Palladio’s Basilica, inspired by the classical language of ancient Rome (and even more if one compares the 16th-century (Cinquecento) palazzi of Vicenza with those on the Grand Canal), the Vicentines’ desire to emphasise their cultural autonomy from the architectural models of La Serenissima becomes quite clear. Nevertheless, twenty years later, when the Citizen Council commissioned for the same piazza the refacing of the official residence of the Venetian Captain (the military head in charge of the city on behalf of the Venetian Republic), it would again fall to Palladio to undertake the work, and the contest, if any, was between two extraordinary architectures rising one in front of the other.

It is extremely rare for any architect to have the opportunity to intervene twice in the same place, after an interval of twenty years. The young architect of the Basilica, then still under the supervision of Giovanni da Porlezza, had by now become the celebrated creator of several important buildings: churches, palaces and villas for the dominant élite of the Veneto. Palladio chose not to have the two buildings converse: against the purism of the Basilica’s double-storey arcades, we find the Loggia’s colossal engaged composite columns, and while the Basilica was executed in white stone and devoid of decoration (if one ignores the design of architectural elements like the frieze, keystones and statues), the Loggia abounds in rich stucco decorations.


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