The Vatican Museums originated as a group of statues
collected by Pope Julius II (1503-1513) and placed in the "Cortile del Belvedere", what today is the Cortile
Ottagono within the museum complex.
The popes were among the first sovereigns
who opened the art collections of their palaces to the public thus promoting
knowledge of art history and culture.
As seen today, the Vatican Museums are a
complex of different pontifical museums and galleries that began under the
patronage of the popes Clement XIV (1769-1774) and Pius VI (1775-1799).
In fact,
the "Museo Pio-Clementino" was named after these two popes, who set up this first
major curatorial section.
Later, Pius VII (1800-1823) considerably expanded the
collections of Classical Antiquities, to which he added the Chiaromonti Museum
and the Braccio Nuovo gallery.
He also enriched the Epigraphic Collection,
which was conserved in the Lapidary Gallery.
Gregory XVI (1831-1846) founded the Etruscan Museum (1837) with archaeological finds
discovered during excavations carried out from 1828 onwards in southern Etruria.
Later, he established the Egyptian Museum
(1839), which houses ancient artifacts from explorations in Egypt, together with
other pieces already conserved in the Vatican and in the Museo Capitolino, and
the Lateran Profane Museum (1844), with statues, bas-relief sculptures and
mosaics of the Roman era, which could not be adequately placed in the Vatican
Palace.
The Lateran Profane Museum was expanded in 1854 under Pius IX
(1846-1878) with the addition of the Pio Christian Museum.
This museum is
comprised of ancient sculptures (especially sarcophagi) and inscriptions with
ancient Christian content.
In 1910, under the pontificate of Saint Pius X
(1903-1914), the Hebrew Lapidary was established.
This section of the museum
contains 137 inscriptions from ancient Hebrew cemeteries in Rome mostly from via
Portuense and donated by the Marquisate Pellegrini-Quarantotti. These last
collections (Gregorian Profane Museum, Pio Christian Museum and the Hebrew
Lapidary) were transferred, under the pontificate of Pope John XXIII
(1958-1963), from the Lateran Palace to their present building within the
Vatican and inaugurated in 1970.
The Museums also include the Gallery of Tapestries, a
collection of various 15th and 17th century tapestries; the Gallery of Maps,
decorated under the pontificate of Gregory XIII (1572-1585) and restored by
Urban VIII (1623-1644); the Sobieski Room and the Room of the Immaculate
Conception; the Raphael Stanze and the
Loggia, which were decorated by order of Julius II and Leo X (1513-1521); the
Chapel of Nicholas V (1447-1455), painted by Fra Angelico; the Sistine Chapel, which takes the name of its
founder, Pope Sixtus IV; the Borgia Apartment, where Pope Alexander VI lived
until his death (1492-1503); the Vatican
Pinacoteca, created under Pius XI (1922-1932) in a special building near the
new entrance to the Museums; the Missionary-Ethnological Museum which was founded
by Pius XI in 1926, arranged on the upper floors of the Lateran Palace and later
transferred, under Pope John XXIII, to the Vatican where it has been opened
again to the public in the same building which housed the former Lateran
collections.
In 1973 the Collection of Modern and Contemporary Religious Art was
added and inaugurated by Pope Paul VI (1963-1978) in the Borgia Apartment.
The
Vatican Historical Museum, founded in 1973 and transferred in 1987 to the Papal
Apartment in the Lateran Palace, houses a series of papal portraits along with
objects of the past Pontifical Military Corps and of the Pontifical Chapel and
Family and historic ceremonial objects no longer in use.
The Carriage and
Automobile Museum is a section of the Vatican Historical Museum.
In the year
2000, the Vatican Museums opened a new large entrance that provides visitor
information and other services; on display are many new artworks, two of which
were specially created for this grand entrance hall.
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