Photo by Daniele Fregonese |
I have been preparing an article on the exhibit for the Traveller, the Sunday travel magazine of both the Sydney Morning Herald and the Melbourne Age and it has been published this weekend! Here's an excerpt:
Michelangelo's smudged signature, a secret papal messaging code, a 1200-year-old book and myriad blood-red papal seals, excommunication bulls, death warrants of heretics and letters written in desperation by condemned queens - these are some of the most precious documents in the world, kept for the past four centuries in impenetrable vaults in the Vatican. For the first - and perhaps only - time in history, 100 original documents have left the Vatican Secret Archives and been shifted across town for an exhibition that opened a fortnight ago in the Capitoline Museums in central Rome...
read the full article.
I hope you enjoy it! The online version of the article unfortunately has only one photo, so below are some of the best images of the exhibit.
Photo by Daniele Fregonese |
Photo by Daniele Fregonese |
Photo by Daniele Fregonese |
Photo by Daniele Fregonese |
Photo by Daniele Fregonese |
This was one of the most exciting and bone-chilling exhibits: a 60 meter scroll of parchment with the depositions of 231 French Templar knights. During the Council of Vienne in 1311 they were forced to betray the order or face execution.
Photo by Giovanni Ciarlo |
What I found so thrilling about this exhibit was that many of the documents on display pertain to events that we have all learned about, events that changed history and changed the world. Seeing the documents up close and personal brings history alive in a whole new way. In my eternal quest to travel in time, this was pretty close.
Visit my Exhibits on Now page for all pertinent information and enjoy! This is truly a once-in-a-lifetime event!
All images are provided courtesy of Zètema Press Office and may not be reproduced.
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