Castel Sant'angelo

The Castel Sant'Angelo is a building in Rome, one with a long and chequered past. Originally it was built under the Roman Empire in the 2nd century by emperor Hadrian as a funerary monument. It is located on an island in the Tiber. In the Middle Ages it was converted into a major fortification, although most of the original Roman structure was preserved. Pope Nicholas III connected the castle to St. Peter's Basilica by a covered corridor called Passetto di Borgo. The castle was involved in numerous sieges, including that of Pope Clement VII by the forces of the Holy Roman Empire, in 1527, in which Benvenuto Cellini was a participant. Sant'Angelo also served as a prison. One of its prisoners was Giordano Bruno, who had been imprisoned here for 6 years. Now the castle is a museum.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
neruda
chord (geometry)
nona gaye
william wentworth
yang guifei
air china
white river
temuco, chile
urban sociology
amanda de cadenet
halfpipe
canfor
camilo jos cela
jungsozialisten in der spd
guts
sonny tufts
pronoia
geoffrey de mandeville, 1st earl of essex
mil mascaras
george jackson (mp)
awa
softwood
william de mandeville, 3rd earl of essex
software sampler
stalham
east ruston
revolutionary united front
u.s. canada softwood lumber dispute
sant'angelo
old goa
xinhai revolution
panaji
pierre pettigrew
nithard
louis i
boston mountains
case closed
pulp and paper industry in japan
resistance techniques
potlatch corporation
demandred
trinification
law and economics
william de mandeville