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The Vatican Museums
(Musei Vaticani) are the public art
and sculpture museums in the Vatican City,
which display works from the extensive
collection of the Roman Catholic Church. Pope
Julius II founded the museums in the 16th
century. The Sistine Chapel and the Stanze
della Segnatura decorated by Raphael are on the
visitor route through the Vatican Museums. As
of November 2006, it was visited by more than
4,000,000 people for the year.
The Vatican
Museums trace their origin to one marble
sculpture,
purchased 500 years ago. The
sculpture of Laocoön, the priest who,
according to Greek mythology, tried to convince
the people of ancient Troy not to accept the
Greeks' gift of a hollow horse, was discovered
14 January 1506, in a vineyard near the of
Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome. Pope Julius II
sent Giuliano da Sangallo and Michelangelo
Buonarroti,
who were working at the Vatican, to
check out the discovery. On their
recommendation, the pope immediately purchased
the sculpture from the vineyard owner. The pope
put the sculpture of Laocoön and his sons
in the grips of a sea serpent on public display
at the Vatican exactly one month after its
discovery.
The Museums celebrated their 500th
anniversary in October 2006 by permanently
opening the excavations
of a Vatican Hill
necropolis to the public. |