
In Padua, fourteenth-century frescoes become part of UNESCO World Heritage List
The pictorial cycle, including the Scrovegni Chapel frescoed by Giotto, enters the World Heritage List.
Padua, which is only 12 km from our hotel, has been defined “Urbs picta”, as it preserves a fourteenth-century pictorial cycle in its city center.
These frescoes are preserved inside buildings and monumental complexes in the historic center of Padua in an area that in the fourteenth century corresponded to the entire inhabited area within the walls.
The eight buildings are:
- Scrovegni Chapel
- Chucrch of Eremitani
- Palazzo della Ragione
- Chapel of the Carraresi Palace
- the Baptistery
- the Basilica of St. Anthony and associated buildings
- the Oratorio of Saint Giorgio
- the Oratorio of Saint Michele
Overall, this complex of historic monuments is known throughout the world and stands in a region where the tradition of wall frescoes dates back to the tenth century but would undergo extraordinary development during the course of the fourteenth century.
Giotto’s presence in the city around 1302 marks the beginning of a period of remarkable cultural and artistic achievements, which would continue throughout the century and produce frescoes of rare quality.
Giotto, Guariento, Giusto de’ Menabuoi, Altichiero da Zevio, Jacopo Avanzi and Jacopo da Verona would all play a leading role in these achievements.
Working for illustrious local families, the clergy, the city commune and the Carraresi court, these artists would decorate the interiors of religious and civic buildings (both public and private), producing works that would alter the way the city was perceived.
Today, these fresco cycles can still be visited within their original buildings.
And even though they are the work of different artists commissioned by different patrons to adorn structures of different character, these frescoes form a single narrative that reflects their shared origin in the art of Giotto.
Each cycle is a personal interpretation of the artistic language developed by that master, and as such makes an exceptional contribution to the whole.
Thanks to this important recognition, Padua thus includes two UNESCO sites: the pictorial cycle is added to the Botanical Garden, which has been part of it since 1997.