Tag Archives: Pope Pius III

The Secret Borgia Apartments

I am guest posting this week at 3 Pipe Problem, Diary of a Borgia Pope – The Tale of Johannes Burchardus , but have left you with one of my most popular posts.  Click on the art to get a real vision of what Pope Alexander VI had decorating his walls.

Entrance to Borgia Apartments, Vatican

The Borgia Apartments are not just a footnote in papal history, but an opulent group of six rooms located in the Borgia Tower inside the Vatican.

Sealed off after the death of Alexander VI, Rodrigo Borgia, (1431-1503) by Pope Pius III due to its association with the despised Borgia family; the art itself cannot be denied; the vivid colors of red and blue tempt the fingertips to touch, the scenery overwhelms the senses, all colliding in the mind of the admirer.

Depictions of the Sybils, early Saints, the Resurrection and the Magi fill the vaulted walls, the detail exquisite. The arched ceilings are intricately frescoed and the floors once covered with rare Moorish tiles, a few pieces still evident. Chambers that oversaw plans of war, marriages of dynasties, and even murder may be empty of furnishings, but the remaining art portrays the opulence and power of the time. These six rooms lay hidden in the Vatican for three hundred years preserving frescos created at the command of Alexander VI for the private apartments of the Borgia pope.

In 1492 Pinturicchio was employed by Pope Alexander VI to decorate a recently completed suite of rooms in the Vatican. The rooms are now part of the Vatican library and five of the suites retain a series of frescos.

The upper part of the walls and vaults were not only painted, but further enriched with delicate stucco work in relief, and are a masterpiece of design. The paintings used themes from medieval encyclopedias adding an eschatological layer of meaning and celebrating the supposedly divine origins of the Borgias.

Pinturicchio worked in these rooms with an army of apprentices without interruption until 1498. No contract is in evidence, the only record of his work is the payment; another line entered in the Vatican account books.

The private living rooms of the Pope at that time were the Hall of Mysteries, the Hall of the Saints and the Hall of the Liberal Arts, besides the two withdrawing rooms.

Imagination furnishes the empty chambers with all the choice objects they once contained.

The priceless majolica, the gold and silver vessels, the brocaded hangings, the ivory carvings – an ideal background for the scenes of love and revelry once lived here. The strum of music, the laughter and wit, boisterous merriment, muted conferences, the whispered plotting, the ghastly treacheries, the dying groans. In the Hall of the Sibyls, the second husband of Lucrezia, Alfonso of Aragon, was murdered. In the adjoining suite, the Pope himself died in agony. What other deeds of darkness, despair and triumphant villainy have these chaste and innocent conceptions of Pintoricchio looked down upon? Fascinations of fleurs du mal.

In 1889 Pope Leo XII reopened the rooms for restoration. Most of the rooms were in use for the Vatican Collection of Modern Religious Art, inaugurated by Pope Paul VI in 1973.

Don’t miss the final episode of the Borgia’s first season and see more of their art.

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The Borgias

Alexander VI by Pinturicchio, fresco from the Borgia apartmentRodrigo Borgia

Borgia History Written in Blood

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The Secret Borgia Apartments

Entrance to Borgia Apartments, Vatican

The Borgia Apartments are not just a footnote in papal history, but an opulent group of six rooms located in the Borgia Tower inside the Vatican.

Myth of the Bull Apis, Hall of the Saints

Sealed off after the death of Alexander VI, Rodrigo Borgia, (1431-1503) by Pope Pius III due to its association with the despised Borgia family; the art itself cannot be denied; the vivid colors of red and blue tempt the fingertips to touch, the scenery overwhelms the senses, all colliding in the mind of the admirer.

St. Catherine Disputation, Hall of the Saints

Depictions of the Sybils, early Saints, the Resurrection and the Magi fill the vaulted walls, the detail exquisite. The arched ceilings are intricately frescoed and the floors once covered with rare Moorish tiles, a few pieces still evident.  Chambers that oversaw plans of war, marriages of dynasties, and even murder may be empty of furnishings, but the remaining art portrays the opulence and power of the time.  These six rooms lay hidden in the Vatican for three hundred years preserving frescos created at the command of Alexander VI for the private apartments of the Borgia pope.

Vault Decoration, Hall of the Saints

In 1492 Pinturicchio was employed by Pope Alexander VI to decorate a recently completed suite of rooms in the Vatican.  The rooms are now part of the Vatican library and five of the suites retain a series of frescos.

The Arithmetic

The upper part of the walls and vaults were not only painted, but further enriched with delicate stucco work in relief, and are a masterpiece of design.  The paintings used themes from medieval encyclopedias adding an eschatological layer of meaning and celebrating the supposedly divine origins of the Borgias.

Descent of the Holy Spirit, Hall of the Mysteries of the Faith

Pinturicchio worked in these rooms with an army of apprentices without interruption until 1498.  No contract is in evidence, the only record of his work is the payment; another line entered in the Vatican account books.

Annunciation, Hall of the Mysteries of the Faith

The private living rooms of the Pope at that time were the Hall of Mysteries, the Hall of the Saints and the Hall of the Liberal Arts, besides the two withdrawing rooms.

Martyrdom of Saint Sebastian, Hall of Saints

Arts of the Trivium, Grammar, Hall of the Liberal Arts

Arts of the Trivium, Grammar, Hall of the Liberal Arts


Arts of the Trivium, Hall of the Liberal Arts

Arts of Quadrivium, Geometry, Hall of the Liberal Arts

Encounter between St. Anthony Abbot & St. Paul the Hermit, Hall of the Saints

Imagination furnishes the empty chambers with all the choice objects they once contained.

Resurrection, Hall of the Mysteries of the Faith

Nativity, Hall of the Mysteries of the Faith

Descent of the Holy Spirit, Hall of the Mysteries of the Faith

Adoration of the Magi, Hall of the Mysteries of the Faith

Adoration of the Magi, Hall of the Mysteries of the Faith

Annunciation, Hall of the Mysteries of the Faith

Floor to Ceiling View

The priceless majolica, the gold and silver vessels, the brocaded hangings, the ivory carvings – an ideal background for the scenes of love and revelry once lived here.  The strum of music, the laughter and wit, boisterous merriment, muted conferences, the whispered plotting, the ghastly treacheries, the dying groans.  In the Hall of the Sibyls, the second husband of Lucrezia, Alfonso of Aragon, was murdered.  In the adjoining suite, the Pope himself died in agony.  What other deeds of darkness, despair and triumphant villainy have these chaste and innocent conceptions of Pintoricchio looked down upon?  Fascinations of fleurs du mal.

Hosea and Sybil, Hall of the Saints

In 1889 Pope Leo XII reopened the rooms for restoration.  Most of the rooms were in use for the Vatican Collection of Modern Religious Art, inaugurated by Pope Paul VI in 1973.

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