About this Lecture series
The princely House of Colonna has occupied a position at the fulcrum of Rome’s history from their recorded origins in the eleventh century to the present day. No other aristocratic family has enjoyed such a place at the heart of the religious, political and cultural life of the city. From brutal warring in medieval Rome against their bitter rivals the Orsini family, the Colonna were elevated through the church as counts, cardinals and princes. It was Oddone Colonna, who ruled as Pope Martin V (1417 – 1431), who ended the Western Schism in 1417, and returned the Papacy to its former home in Rome. The family were given titles, benefices and estates; marriages were made, and international alliances were secured. As the Colonna grew in influence their power as skilled diplomats and military leaders bolstered their prestige as arguably some of the greatest patrons of the arts in Rome.
James Hill returns to present two lectures on The House of Colonna: Prestige & Patronage in Rome, 26 & 27 January . In the first he will explore the family’s origins, Pope Martin V’s role and legacy in the story of Rome’s renaissance, and the family’s place in the wider struggles which convulsed Italy and the continent in the sixteenth century. In the second lecture he will introduce important members of the family, both the past and recent, exploring the magnificence of Rome’s greatest palace and private art collection, Palazzo Colonna.
James Hill returns to present two lectures on The House of Colonna: Prestige & Patronage in Rome, 26 & 27 January . In the first he will explore the family’s origins, Pope Martin V’s role and legacy in the story of Rome’s renaissance, and the family’s place in the wider struggles which convulsed Italy and the continent in the sixteenth century. In the second lecture he will introduce important members of the family, both the past and recent, exploring the magnificence of Rome’s greatest palace and private art collection, Palazzo Colonna.