Torre del Mangia explained

The Torre del Mangia is a tower in Siena, in the Tuscany region of Italy. Built in 1338-1348,[1] it is located in the Piazza del Campo, Siena's main square, next to the Palazzo Pubblico (Town Hall). When built it was one of the tallest secular towers in medieval Italy. At 102 m it is now Italy's second tallest after Cremona Cathedral's Torrazzo (112m (367feet)), the Asinelli tower in Bologna at 97 m being third.

History

The tower was built to be exactly the same height as Siena Cathedral as a sign that the church and the state had equal power.

The name refers to its first bellringer, Giovanni di Balduccio, nicknamed Mangiaguadagni (‘Profit eater’) either for his spendthrift tendency,[2] idleness[3] or gluttony.[4]

Sections

The tower has visually distinct levels, from the bottom:

  1. a marble loggia at the base
  2. a long red brick shaft
  3. a stone section that flares out slightly
  4. a short pale-gray upper loggia
  5. a marble (uppermost) structure.

The loggia where the tower meets the Piazza del Campo, known as the Cappella di Piazza, was added in 1352 to fulfil a vow to the Holy Virgin by Sienese survivors of the Black Death. The corner pilasters attained their current form in 1378, the sculptures decorating them being executed in 1378-1382 by Mariano d'Angelo Romanelli e Bartolomeo di Tommé. The simple wooden ceiling once covering the loggia was replaced by the current Renaissance marble vault in 1461-1468 by Antonio Federighi, also responsible for the bizarre decorations of the coronation. In 1537-1539 Il Sodoma painted a fresco above the altar, now housed in the town museum in the Palazzo Pubblico.

The upper-middle part in stone was built by Agostino di Giovanni to the design of one Mastro Lippo pittore, probably identifiable with Lippo Memmi. It consists of a parapet resting on corbels. The pronounced petal-like arches between the corbels have led writers to describe the structure as a tulip[5] or lily.[6]

The clock on the lower part of the shaft was added in 1360. There are three bells, the largest one is called the "Sunto" - an abbreviation of assunto, a reference to the assumption of the Virgin. The bell plays a notable role in the celebrations of the Palio.

The walls of the tower are approximately 3m (10feet) thick on each side.

Towers inspired by the Torre del Mangia

A number of towers have been inspired by the Torre del Mangia. These include:

See also

Notes and References

  1. https://whc.unesco.org/ Unesco Heritage Centre
  2. Book: Birnbaum, Stephen. Stephen Birnbaum

    . Stephen Birnbaum. Birnbaum's Italy. registration. 1989. Houghton Mifflin Company. 978-0-395-51151-0. 6358. ...a one-time bell ringer, Giovanni di Duccio, who was evidently a man of prodigal habits and better known to the Sienese as Mangiaguadagni..

  3. Book: Stratton, Adele. DK Eyewitness Travel Guide: Italy. 2010. Dorling Kindersley. 978-0-7566-7275-1. 340.
  4. Book: Harvard Student's Let's Go, Inc.. Let's Go: the Budget Guide to Italy. 1999. St. Martin's Press. 288. 9780312194888 .
  5. Book: du Colombier, Pierre. Sienna, and the Siennese Art. 1957. Nicholas Kaye. 17.
  6. Book: Sells, Arthur Lytton. The paradise of travellers: the Italian influence on Englishmen in the seventeenth century. 1964. Indiana University Press. 154. 9780598400451 .
  7. Chandler, F. W. (Francis Ward), ed. Municipal architecture in Boston, from designs by Edmund M. Wheelwright, city architect, 1891-1895. Boston : Bates & Guild company, 1898.
  8. https://books.google.com/books?id=8gZZAAAAYAAJ The Brochure series of architectural illustration
  9. Ralli, Tania (2005), "And Now A Word From Our Shelter: Ads Atop Pine Street Inn Help Pay To Restore It, But Some Ask Where It Will End", The Boston Globe, October 9, 2005, p. 1
  10. http://wikimapia.org/12650498/Pine-Street-Inn Pine Street Inn (Boston)