Pietro Boncompagni

Pietro Corcos Boncompagni (1592–1664) was a member of the branch of the historic Jewish Roman family that embraced Christianity, in the person of Solomon Corcos, who in being baptised in 1582 added the family name of Pope Gregory XIII (Ugo Buoncompagni) to his own. In 1635-38 his heir Pietro Corcos Boncampagni[1] commissioned from Alessandro Algardi a colossal statue of Philip Neri with kneeling angels, completed in 1640 for the sacristy of Santa Maria in Vallicella, the church of the Oratorians in Rome. From the 1640s he enlarged and rebuilt the Palazzo Boncompagni Corcos in via del Governo Vecchio on the little hill in Rome called Monte Giordano, providing it with an elegantly balanced façade and transforming the interior with a courtyard, a grand staircase and a suite of reception rooms on the piano nobile.

Notes

  1. Bruce Boucher, Earth and Fire: Italian Terracotta Sculpture from Donatello to Canova (Yale University Press) 2001:47.
gollark: Yes. It's not very effective, but it at least shows you really don't like the options!
gollark: Solution: don't vote, but then whenever anyone brings up the subject, just change the subject and distract them.
gollark: > Why is the IQ of everyone using Twitter, Facebook, etc all like 40? It’s amazing just how dumb people on social media areThey have incentives to show you stuff which will make you very outraged, to boost engagement.
gollark: I have, mercifully, been able to avoid it so far.
gollark: Probably not the same people, but likely the same *kind*.
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