Palazzo Reale di Torino ⋆ FullTravel.it

Palazzo Reale di Torino

Palazzo Reale di Torino Torino
Redazione FullTravel
3 Min Read

In 1563, with the transfer of the capital of the duchy from Chambéry to Turin, Emanuele Filiberto of Savoy established his residence in the bishop’s palace, near the Cathedral.

Already in 1584, however, Carlo Emanuele I entrusted the architect Ascanio Vittozzi with the construction of a new building. After 1643, under the regency of Maria Cristina of France, the direction of the works passed to Carlo di Castellamonte and then to Carlo Morello.

At the same time, the furnishing of the parade halls on the first floor proceeded, characterized by the very rich carved and gilded wooden ceilings with large allegorical canvases by Jan Miel and Charles Dauphin, whose subjects exalt the virtues of the sovereign according to an iconographic program dictated by the court rhetorician Emanuele Tesauro.

In 1688 the painter Daniel Seiter was called from Rome to fresco the gallery from then on called “del Daniel.” Seiter, assisted by the Genoese painter Bartolomeo Guidobono, also worked on the ground floor apartment, later called that of Madama Felicita. At the end of the seventeenth century, the garden layout was revised and expanded by the famous French architect André Le Notre.

When Vittorio Amedeo II obtained the royal title in 1713, the so-called “command area” was created, annexed to the palace and consisting of the Secretariats, Offices, the Royal Theater, and the State Archives.

The mastermind behind these interventions was the Messina architect Filippo Juvarra, who inside the palace created the daring Scissors Staircase and the Chinese Cabinet. Several rooms are decorated with paintings by Claudio Francesco Beaumont, official painter of Carlo Emanuele III, who ascended the throne in 1730.

Upon Juvarra’s departure for Madrid, the position of first royal architect passed to Benedetto Alfieri, who defined the decorative apparatus of the second floor apartments, renovated the Daniel Gallery and arranged the new Archive rooms, frescoed by Francesco De Mura and Gregorio Guglielmi.

During the time of Carlo Alberto (1831-1849), some rooms on the main floor, such as the Swiss Hall and the Council Room, as well as part of the apartments on the second floor, were renovated under the direction of the Bolognese Pelagio Palagi.

On the eve of the Unification of Italy, in 1862, the new main staircase was built. With the transfer of the capital from Turin to Florence and then to Rome, the palace gradually lost its functions as a residence; since 1955, it has been in the custody of the Superintendence for Architectural and Landscape Heritage.

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