Palazzo Salvadori Tiepolo

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Palazzo Salvadori Tiepolo

Palazzo Salvadori Tiepolo is a palace in Venice in the Veneto region of Italy . It is located in the Sestiere San Marco between the Campo San Fantin , the Corte San Gaetano and the Rio dei Barcaroli .

history

The palace was designed by Daniele del fu Giovanni Salvador at the end of the 14th century and completed around 1400.

Giuseppe Tassini wrote under the title "Palazzo Tiepolo, campo San Fantino":

“Equipped with a small, pointed arch facade facing the Rio dei Barcaroli, it was built in the 15th century thanks to Salvador (...) Again in the courtyard I saw a beautiful fountain in red marble with the Salvador coat of arms. This palace, in many parts rebuilt beyond recognition, fell, according to other owners, to a branch of the Tiepolo family, which was therefore called "by San Fantino" and was abandoned by luck at the beginning of this century; he died with a certain Girolamo q. Almorò. "

And still about the same family branch:

“The Salvador family, who came from Tuscany , acquired quite a few riches through trade, owned buildings in the communities of S. Fantino and dell'Angelo Raffaele, in 1427 produced a Daniele Guardino Grande of the brotherhood of San Maria della Carità and contracted through marriage the most famous patrician family of Venice, such as the Baffos, the Barbarigos, the Bembos, the Contarinis, the Dandolos, the Michiels and the Morosinis, (...). "

Today the building is called "Palazzo Salvadori Tiepolo" and has the house number 1979–1982 and 1997 of the Corte San Gaetano and the Campo San Fantin . The magnificent red stone fountain from Verona was sold in the 1880s, so we only have the description by Tassini (see above) and an 18th century drawing by Giovanni Grevembroch in the library of the Museo Correr .

In the second half of the 15th century the palace fell to the Baffo family via Chiara del fu Giovanni Salvador and from there over several stages to the Tiepolos , who held it into the early 1800s.

The palace was built between 1394 and 1400 by Daniele del fu Giovanni Salvador . In fact, he did not live there on June 22, 1394 (he lived in San Salvador), but he lived there in 1400 when his daughter Madaluzza married the noble Luca Dandolo . Many scholars have been interested in this palace and the most in-depth research on it comes from Giorgio Bellavitis . This palace is often confused in literature with the Palazzo Molin a San Fantin , with which it has nothing to do with. The main facade faces the Rio dei Barcaroli and can best be admired from the Ponte della piscina di Frezzeria .

Individual evidence

  1. a b Marcello Brusegan: La grande guida dei monumenti di Venezia . Newton & Compton, Rome 2005. p. 426.
  2. ^ A b Edoardo Aslan: Venezia Gotica: l'architettura civile . 1996. p. 226.
  3. Giuseppe Tassini: Alcuni palazzi ed antichi edificii di Venezia etc. Venice 1879 S. 259th
  4. Giuseppe Tassini: Di un'antica vera as a pozzo S. Fantino . Archivio Veneto, XXXI, XVI, 1886. pp. 493-494.
  5. ^ Giorgio Bellavitis: Palazzo Giustinian . Pesaro 1975. pp. 54-55, 220.

Coordinates: 45 ° 26 '1.6 "  N , 12 ° 20' 4.4"  E