The Ducal Palace of Parma (Italian: Palazzo Ducale di Parma) was a neoclassical palace in Parma, Italy. It was located on the west side of the Piazzale della Pace. Between its construction and 1859, it was the residence of the Dukes of Parma. After 1859, it became the prefecture.
Throughout its history, the palace was not a single building but a collection of privately acquired properties gradually embellished by the dukes, which never formed a homogeneous ensemble. Instead, they represented a grouping of diverse and unfinished projects.
One notable element associated with the Ducal Palace is the Palazzo della Pilotta, which was part of the complex. This compound housed a series of buildings and structures used for various purposes, including a library, theater, art gallery, and other cultural spaces.
During the Second World War, the residential core suffered severe damage during air raids in 1944, and it was not reconstructed afterwards. In its place, a large empty and landscaped space known as Piazza della Pace was established, which serves as public space and also as a reminder of the turbulent events that occurred during the war. Although the loss of the residential core of the Ducal Palace was a tragedy for the city's historical heritage, the presence of the Piazza della Pace symbolizes the post-war rebirth and reconstruction.
In 1545, Pope Paul III created the hereditary Duchy of Parma for his natural son, Pier Luigi Farnese (1503-1547). It was held by the House of Farnese until 1731, when the last Farnese duke, Antonio Farnese, died without heirs. Initially, Piacenza was the capital of the duchy. But, Pier Luigi's son, Ottavio Farnese (1524-1586) moved the capital to Parma. Unlike, the monumental residence in Piacenza, the Palazzo Farnese, the ducal palace in Parma was modest. Background was the empty ducal treasury, due to economic conditions and the manu wars that ravaged northern Italy in the second half of the 16th century. The palace was only a set of neighbouring houses, along the current Strada Garibaldi, which were acquired for temporarily use by the ducal court. In addition, across the Parma river, Ottavio transformed an ancient Visconti fortress into a summer residence surrounded by gardens, the current Palazzo del Giardino.[1]
In 1580, Ottavio decided to connect his Parmesan palaces by building a large corridor that connected the ducal palace with the 'Rocchetta Viscontea', a keep of which traces can be seen next to the Parma river. He probably involved the architect, Francesco Paciotto, to do the design.[2] The project echoed the idea, never realized, of connecting the two Farnese residences in Rome via a bridge: the Palazzo Farnese and the Villa Farnesina. It can also be compared to the Vasari Corridor in Florence, which connected the Palazzo Vecchio with the Palazzo Pitti, allowing safe passage for the Medici grand dukes of Tuscany. Construction of the corridor started in 1581, but were halted in 1586, when Ottavio passed away. Fragments have been preserved in the south side of Pilotta courtyard. Over the next fifty years, additional buildings and courtyards were added to the corridor. This complex is now known as the Palazzo della Pilotta.
Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma (1545-1592), showed less interest in continuing the works on the ducal palace, as he mostly stayed in Brussels, being Governor of the Spanish Netherlands.
In the start of the 17th century, duke Ranuccio I Farnese (1569–1622) decided to reconstruct the set of houses in a new ducal palace. [3] Connected with the Palazzo della Pilotta, this became a large residential complex. It became subject to various renovations. It was inspired by the palace-monastery of El Escorial, with its orthogonal arrangement through courtyards, its monumental scale, and its "unadorned style". It demonstrated the growing power and prestige of the Farnese family.[4]
The architect Simone Moschino (1553-1610) was responsible for the project, although with the significant contribution of duke Ranuccio I himself. The Palazzo della Pilotta was essentially intended to be a "services palace", that is, it would contain various services linked to the ducal court. This would simultaneously relieve and dignify the old ducal palace located a little further east. The complex included a large large banquet hall, a monumental staircase, stables, coach houses, wardrobes, and numerous accommodations for the household staff, all connected through various galleries and courtyards. This set-up was again inspired by El Escorial. Similarly, the imperial staircase of the Spanish building also served as inspiration for the one in the Parmesan palace.[5]
The first campaign of works was carried out between 1602 and 1611 and included the southern courtyard of the complex, now the Pilotta courtyard, built around duke Octavio's corridor. Only the eastern area, adjacent to the ducal palace and the church of San Pietro Martire, remained unfinished.
The second campaign started in 1617, with the transformation of the large hall of the west wing into the Farnese Theater, which forced the relocation of various services, such as the stables, which was rebuilt further north. The third campaign began in 1620, with the works on the southwest facade facing the Ghiaia, which remained incomplete due to the duke's death in 1622. In the last two campaigns, the duke's collaborating architect was Pier Francesco Battistelli.[6]
In 1622, Cardinal-Regent Odoardo Farnese (1573-1626) appointed the Roman architect Girolamo Rainaldi (1570-1655) as the new court architect. His first objective was to complete the Pilotta with a grand Baroque facade to the east, topped by a very tall central tower. However, nothing was ultimately achieved, leaving the Palazzo della Pilotta as a large unfinished building, the result of contradictory projects, which was never inhabited by the ducal family and was destined for ancillary services.[7]
The last dukes of the Farnese house also failed to remove the Dominican monks from the monastery of San Pietro Martire, which was supposed to be demolished for the continuation of the works. Also, they shifted their building activities to ducal palace of Colorno and the Rocca Sanvitale in Sala Baganza.[8]
Transformations in the Pilotta and the ducal palace, still a heterogeneous mix of several buildings, focused mainly on the interior, adapting the spaces for ceremonial and daily life and to display the magnificent art collection and library of the Farnese.[9]
After the death of the last duke, Antonio Farnese, in 1731, the duchy was inherited by the Infante Charles of Spain (1716-1788), son of Spanish Queen Elisabeth Farnese (1692-1766). Becoming the king of Naples in 1734, Charles ordered the transfer of the fabulous collections of the Farnese to Naples between 1735 and 1738. They are currently exhibited in the Museo di Capodimonte and in the National Archaeological Museum.
After an interlude of more than ten years, during which Parma was under the rule of the House of Habsburg, in 1748 the duchy regained its independence with the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, and Infante Fhilip (1720-1765), another son of Elisabeth Farnese, became the new duke. He primarily focused on embellishing the ducal palace of Colorno, but in 1750, duke Philip commissioned a new northern facade for the ducal palace. This rococo facade was the work. of Antoine Carlier and Jean Marie Bigoeud. This intervention was to be overshadowed by the projects of the following decade.[10]
Duke Ferdinand I (1751–1802) considered the ducal palace too modest. And promoted by his chief minister Guillaume du Tillot, he commissioned the architect Ennemond Alexandre Petitot to design a new palace.[11] Petitot created a grandiose plan, a new ducal residence (or "Royal Palace" as referenced in the documents) with a grand cour d'honneur and frontal square. Facing the rococo decoration developed by Petitot inside the palace, the east facade showed a classical severity, especially in the central body, clearly influenced by the Palazzo Chiericati built by Palladio in Vicenza. The lateral wings, on the other hand, served to regularize the square and conceal the heterogeneous buildings behind them.[12] On the other hand, the grand square, inspired by the French royal squares, would extend to the present-day Strada Cavour, surpassing in size the other two squares of the city, the Piazza Grande and the Piazza del Duomo, symbolizing the preeminence of the sovereign over municipal and religious power, respectively.[13]
However, Petitot's plan first required the demolition of numerous buildings between the Palazzo della Pilotta and the current Garibaldi road, including half of the old ducal palace and the new 1750s facade. These massive demolitions happened in 1766. However, financial difficulties prevented the completion of the monumental plans. And the duke and his wife lost interest in the Parmesan palaces, therefore, a large void remained and only the palace interiors were renovated.[14]
In 1801, Napoleon incorporated the Duchy of Parma into France. Nothing much happened to the ducal palace, except for the demolition of the Dominican church and convent of San Pietro Martire in 1813, which had been one of the main obstacles to the realization of many architectural projects in the past.
In 1816, upon the arrival of the new Duchess of Parma, Marie Louise (1791–1847), Napoleon's second wife, the old ducal palace still presented a rather labyrinthine and heterogeneous appearance, as depicted in a painting by Giuseppe Alinovi from around 1830. The large space left by the demolitions of the 18th century was now occupied by a square, called Piazza di Corte, which roughly corresponds to the current Piazza della Pace. On the right (west) stood the facade of the Ducal Palace that had survived the demolitions of 1767, with a temporary neo-Renaissance facade made by Petitot. In the background (south) appeared the rooftops of the Teatro Regio and the basilica of Santa Maria della Steccatta. Just in front of the aforementioned structures, there was a low building, almost an elevated passageway, which housed the guardhouse and connected the Ducal Palace with the Palazzo di Riserva, located on the left (east). The latter, currently the Glauco Lombardi Museum, had been built in 1764 by Petitot to accommodate the duke's illustrious guests, as well as a court theater.
Initially, Maria Luisa only concerned herself with adapting the rooms for herself, her second husband Count Adam von Neipperg (1775-1829), and their children. A series of watercolors by Giuseppe Naudin precisely depict the interiors, which were more bourgeois than royal, of the palace.
Finally, in 1833, duchess Marie Louise (1791–1847), Napoleon's second wife, engaged the architect Nicola Bettoli to reconstruct the facade in neoclassical style.[15] The works were carried out between 1833 and 1834. The neoclassical style and the Ionic columns match the facade of the opposing Palazzo di Riserva, which was connected to the Ducal palace by a corridor. The renovation works also involved the interior of the palace, which has been captured in water colours by Giuseppe Naudin.`
After the Unification of Italy, the palace became the seat of the regional prefecture. Its name changed to Palazzo del Governo. And the ducal palace was emptied of its treasures, which were transferred to other residences of the House of Savoy, such as the Quirinal Palace or the Royal Palace of Venice. The connection between the Ducal palace and the Palazzo di Riserva was demolished at the start of the 20th century.
The palace was severely hit and damaged by Allied air raids on 13 May 1944.[16] Immediately after the Second World War, it was demolished leaving a hole in the middle of the city centre. There has been a proposal to reconstruct the palace in its original form. However, the regional superintendency for antiquities rejected the project in 1963. Various other attempts to rebuild the palace also did not have any effect. The empty space at the Piazzale della Pace was occupied by parking lots for year. But in 1998, the architect Mario Botta created a large lawn on the location of the palace.[17]