Casa Romei, Cortile d'Onore
Casa Romei, Cortile d'Onore

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CLOSED FOR RESTORATION

Giovanni Romei became administrator to the lords of Ferrara and married the princess Polissena d’Este. On the Via di San Francesco he had a house built that showed his high ranking.

Today’s visitor is immediately struck by the harmonious courtyard of honour, the result of combining medieval elements (the overhanging “baldresca” on one side) with others of the Renaissance (the arches that run along the other sides). The courtyard is dominated by a large monogram of Christ in terracotta, of very graceful design that belongs to the time in which, after Romei’s death, the house became part of the adjacent Corpus Domini Monastery. Casa Romei houses an interesting museum of painting and sculpture, with works of art that come from many places that have now disappeared in Ferrara: in the Lapidary on the ground floor there are marble and brickwork friezes, sculptures, escutcheons and tombstones while on the first floor numerous frescoes removed from former churches can be admired.

Interior of Casa Romei

The ground floor room still shows the original Gothic-style decoration, in particular the Room of the Sibyls, which shows them holding prophesying scrolls among the greenery of a high hedge. The large fireplace is also original. The first floor was transformed during the 16th Century according to the wishes of Cardinal Ippolito II d’Este, who wanted a large apartment built for himself, inside the convent. The rooms are decorated with grotesque decorations on the ceilings very similar to those of the court palaces, but here, as a mark of respect to the sacred place, the design looks sober and scenes from the Bible replace the mythological ones. In the bands, visitors may admire many exotic animals, like monkeys and parrots, according to the fashion of the time. The Hall of Honour has a white eagle repeated several times, the Cardinal’s symbol. In Romei’s study we can still admire the coffered ceiling decorated with patterns printed on paper: this was a very common artifice for the time, but we only have a few examples left.

Contacts

Via Savonarola, 30 - 44121 Ferrara (Italia)

Tel. 0532 234130
drm-ero.casaromei-fe@cultura.gov.it

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