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The
Castel Sant'Angelo is towering cylindrical building in Rome,
initially commissioned by the Roman Emperor Hadrian as a mausoleum
for himself and his family. The building spent over a thousand
years as a fortress and castle, and is now a museum. The Tomb
of Hadrian was erected on the right bank of the Tiber, between
135 and 139. Originally, the mausoleum was a decorated cylinder,
with a garden top and the golden quadriga of the emperor. Hadrian's
ashes were placed here a year after his death in Baiae in 138,
together with those of his wife Sabina, and his first adopted
son, Lucius Aelius, who also died in 138. Following this, the
remains of succeeding emperors were also placed here, the last
recorded deposition being Caracalla in 217. The urns containing
these ashes were probably placed in what is now known as the
Treasury room deep within the building, but the urns and the
ashes are long since gone, scattered by Visigoth looters when
Alaric sacked Rome in 410. In 401, the mausoleum was converted
into a military fortress and included by Flavius Augustus Honorius
in the Aurelian Walls. Procopius recounts that during the siege
by the Goths in 537, the bronze and stone statuary that originally
decorated the tomb-become-fortress were thrown down upon the
attackers. The popes converted the structure into a castle,
from the 14th century; Pope Nicholas III connected the castle
to St. Peter's Basilica by a covered fortified corridor called
the Passetto di Borgo. The fortress was the refuge of Pope Clement
VII from the siege of Charles V's Landsknecht during the Sack
of Rome (1527), in which Benvenuto Cellini describes strolling
the ramparts and shooting enemy soldiers. The Papal state also
used Sant'Angelo as a prison; Giordano Bruno, for example, was
imprisoned there for six years. As a prison, it was also the
setting of Giacomo Puccini's Tosca from whose ramparts the namesake
of the opera leaps to her death. An 18th century bronze statue
of Saint Michael the archangel sheathing a sword surmounts the
tomb; legend holds that an angel appeared atop of the mausoleum,
sheathing his sword as a sign of the end of the plague of 590,
thus lending the castle its present name. Decommissioned at
last in 1901, the photogenic castle is now a museum, Museo Nazionale
di Castel Sant'Angelo. The Ponte Sant'Angelo, providing a scenic
approach from the center of Rome and the right bank of the Tiber,
dates also from Imperial Rome and is renowned for its Baroque
statuary of angels holding aloft elements of the Passion of
Christ.
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