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Domenico
Fontana in Naples
Architect
Domenico Fontana
(1543 –1607) was born near Lake
Lugano; in 1592 he moved
to Naples
and lived out his life there. Before
coming to Naples, Fontana
was active in Rome
under the patronage of Cardinal Montalto, who became Pope Sixtus V. In Rome, Fontana
built the Cappella del Presepio
(Chapel of the Manger) in the basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore; near
that
basilica he also built the Palazzo
Montalto. He was also responsible for alterations
in the basilica of San Giovanni in
Laterano and for some work within St.
Peter’s, including the raising of the mammoth 327 ton obelisk in the
square.
Fontana was invited by the Spanish viceroy
(under Philip II of Spain)
Juan de Zúñiga y Requesens, to Naples
where he held the title of Ingegnere Maggiore del Regno di
Napoli (chief engineer for the Kingdom of Naples)
until his death. In Naples,
Domenico founded
a new firm with his son, Giulio Cesare Fontana
(1593–1627), and the architectural engineer Bartolomeo
Picchiatti. Domenico Fontana was mainly active in urban expansion
in the Naples
of the day. Examples
include the expansion of the area adjacent to the Maschio Angioino (the large
fortress at the port) an area that had already received much attention
in terms
of fortifications some decades earlier under viceroy
Toledo.
The area is now Piazza Municipio and
is again in the midst of its umpteenth episode of rebuilding as work
for the
new subway line progresses.
Fontana’s most important work in Naples was the
Palazzo Reale—the Royal
Palace. The authoritative
map of Naples for the late 1500s is the
Lafréry
map by French engraver Antoine
Lafréry (1512-1577), who helped
found a printing
and publishing firm in Rome
in the 1550s. The map was printed in Rome
in 1566. It clearly shows what the area looked like between the port
and where
the royal palace now stands. The building in the upper left of the
accompanying
detail (above, left) of that map was a vice-royal residence put
up when the Spanish took over Naples
in the
early 1500s. That building no longer exists and sat (approximately)
where the
parking lot now is between the San Carlo
theater and the north end of the
present-day royal palace. (The map is 55 x 82 cm—about 22 x 32 inches—
is
engraved in wood and is in the holdings of the San Martino museum in Naples)
A later map (right) is the
Stopendaehl map (by Dutch engraver Bastiaen Stopendael—also
spelled ‘Stoopendaehl’ in some sources) from 1653.
(The map measures 42 x 102 cm—17 x 40 inches— is engraved in copper and
is in
the holdings of the San Martino museum in Naples).
The map shows Fontana’s
creation on the right, extending from where the old vice-royal
residence had
been down to the area above the shipyards, the old “arsenale”. The area in
front of the palace had not yet been expanded into what one today knows
as Piazza del Plebiscito. Nor had the
Santa Lucia area undergone the dramatic
expansion of the late 1800s, the so-called Risanamento. One sees the old
Santa
Lucia harbor and beach adjacent to the arsenale
and, above it, the open area and adjacent streets below the height of
Pizzofalcone (Monte Echia). The streets of Santa Lucia, though greatly
modified
by the Risanamento, were
originally the work of Domenico Fontana.
Work on the
Palace was begun in
1600. Fontana
did not live to see the completion, which was carried out by his son.
The
Palace, itself, was greatly modified in the mid-1700s by the great
architect of
that period, Luigi Vanvitelli. There is
a street in Naples
named for Domenico Fontana; it is way up on the “high Vomero,” the hill
above Naples.
In 1600 there was
nothing up there but woods and spooky goings-on (the secret workshop of
scientist/sorcerer Giambattista della Porta,
for example). It is doubtful that
Domenico Fontana could ever have imagined me being stuck in a traffic
jam on a
street named for him.
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