St Peter's Basilica
Itīs one of the most beloved success stories of Renaissance Italian art and architecture. A stroll through St. Peterīs Basilica and the Vatican museums is to see the wealth of the Renaissance popes and feel their desire to combat the growing Reformation by appealing to the beauty and grandeur of Catholicism. The building of St. Peterīs is also the story of the rebuilding of Rome itself, a city left devastated by the Middle Ages, neglected by the Great Schism when the popes lived under the thumb of the French in Avignon. Only in the 15th century did the popes return to Rome and pick up the pieces of the Caput Mundi.

In 1506, Pope Julius II oversaw the early demolitions of the old basilica and the architectural plans of what would be the new home of the Universal Church. Construction would take a century and a half, carrying the birth of the new St. Peterīs through the high Renaissance under the guidance of astounding architects and artists: Michelangelo, Bramante, Raphael, Giuliano da Sangallo, Maderno, Baldassare Peruzzi and Antonio da Sangallo.

Location: St. Peterīs sits in the Vatican City, a walled section of western Rome that in a 1929 treaty became a sovereign state with the pope as chief executive. The Vatican City is less than one fifth of a square mile making it the smallest state in Europe. The Vatican coat of arms depicts the triple papal crown- father of kings, rector of the world and vicar of Christ- and the keys to the Kingdom of Heaven that Christ gave to St. Peter.

History: The basilica was built on land that has seen thousands of years of building, demolition and more building. It began in ancient times, when the oblong Circus of Caligula (or Nero, 1st c. AD) expanded to the left of the current basilica. It is said that St. Peter was martyred there in 64 A.D. Over St. Peterīs tomb and other Christian catacombs, the Emperor Constantine built what is now referred to as the Constantinian Basilica in the 4th c. A.D. During the Middle Ages, builders constructed new wings to the church, but the design stayed essentially the same.