John of Austria (Messina)

John of Austria or Don Giovanni d'Austria is a monumental sculpture in bronze, originally gilded, of John of Austria by architect and sculptor Andrea Camalech, a native of Carrara who trained in the Florentine workshop of Bartolomeo Ammannati.[1] Its erection was decided by the Senate of Messina in 1571 to honor the victor of the Battle of Lepanto, from which many Messineses had benefited, and it was dedicated in 1572. William Stirling-Maxwell called it "one of the most effective monuments of sixteenth-century art".[2] On the sides of the pedestal are bronze plaques depicting the fleet, the battle, and the fleet's victorious return to Messina as well as an inscription. John is figured holding a three-pronged baton in reference to his command of the triple alliance of Philip II, the Pope, and the Republic of Venice, with his foot on the severed head of a vanquished Turk generally considered to be Müezzinzade Ali Pasha.[3]

Monument to John of Austria
LocationPiazza Catalani, Messina
DesignerAndrea Camalech
MaterialBronze
Dedicated date1572
Restored date1908
Dedicated toJohn of Austria

The monument was initially located between Messina's Royal Palace and the Church of Our Lady of the Pillar. Following damages during the Sicilian revolution of 1848, it was moved in 1853 to face the Church of Santissima Annunziata dei Teatini (it). After the destructions of the 1908 Messina earthquake, it was moved again to its current location in 1928.[4]

A copy of the statue was erected on Zieroldsplatz in Regensburg, John's birthplace, in 1978 on the fourth centenary of his death.[5]

References

  1. Pietro Paolo Gemelli (1999), Monumenti di Messina: la statua di Don Giovanni d'Austria, Pellegrini
  2. William Stirling-Maxwell (1883), Don John of Austria, or Passages from the History of the Sixteenth Century, 1547-1578, London: Longmans, Green, and co., p. 460
  3. DK Eyewitness Travel Guide Sicily, Penguin, 2015, p. 187
  4. "Monument to Don Giovanni d'Austria". ZonzoFox Messina.
  5. Karl Bauer (1988), Regensburg. Aus Kunst-, Kultur- und Sittengeschichte, Regensburg: MZ Buchverlag, p. 246
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