Cultural heritage monument

Palace of Monza

Italy Monza Italian national heritage
Palace of Monza
Palace of Monza · Wikipedia

About

The Royal Villa (Italian: Villa Reale) is a historical building in Monza, Northern Italy. It lies on the banks of the Lambro river, surrounded by the large Monza Park, one of the largest enclosed parks in Europe. The Royal Villa, also called the Palace of Monza, is a neoclassical palace built by the Habsburgs as a private residence during the Austrian domination of the 18th century. It became the residence of the viceroy with the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy and during the Kingdom of Lombardy-Venetia, but it lost this function during the Kingdom of Italy of the House of Savoy, the last royals to use it. The Royal Villa was abandoned by the royal family following the murder of King Umberto I in Monza on 29 July 1900 by anarchist Gaetano Bresci. Nowadays, it hosts exhibitions; a wing hosts also the Artistic High School of Monza.

The construction of the Villa of Monza was commissioned by the Empress Maria Theresa of Austria to be the summer residence for the Archduke Ferdinand of Austria, governor of the Duchy of Milan. He had initially settled in the Villa Alari, Cernusco sul Naviglio, rented from the Alari Counts. The choice of Monza was due to the salubrity of the air and the amenity of the country, but also because it represents a symbolic link between Vienna and Milan, being the place on the way to the imperial capital.

It was originally built by Giuseppe Piermarini between 1777 and 1780, while the realization of the gardens took a few more years. Later, the young Archduke Ferdinand ordered many additions to the complex, again by Piermarini, and used the villa as his country residence until the arrival of the French army in 1796.

Piermarini took inspiration from Schönbrunn Palace and the Royal Palace of Caserta realized by his master Luigi Vanvitelli. Schönbrunn's inverted U-shaped plan is reused and combines the strong scenographic impact that the side wings give to the main façade, the distributional comfort (the central body is used for representation functions, the side wings for private apartments, and the avant-corps for service functions). Unlike the other imperial palaces, the east–west orientation of the façades is preferred here, in place of the classic north–south orientation that guaranteed greater solar radiation. Maybe this choice aimed to ensure a cooler temperature in the villa's rooms or to orient the façade that overlooks the gardens towards the imperial capital. The extension is really vast: 700 rooms for a total of 22,000 m².

Following the establishment of the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy, the building was used as a royal palace and became home to the viceroy of Italy, Eugène de Beauharnais.

Palace of Monza

The new Viceroy commissioned the architect Luigi Canonica to improve the structure of the villa, including the construction of the theatre on the north wing.

It was always at the behest of Beauharnais that, between 1806 and 1808, the complex of the villa and its gardens was extended in size, through the construction of the vast fenced park called " Monza Park "; in fact, it was between 1807 and 1808 that the current 14 km long wall was built, using the demolition material of the ancient Visconti castle.

With the fall of the First French Empire (1814), Austria annexed the Italian territories to the Kingdom of Lombardy-Venetia and Monza was included in the province of Milan.

The new Viceroy was Archduke Rainer Joseph of Austria.

Archduke Rainer was passionate about botany and thanks to his contribution the park and the gardens became rich in new species.

Palace of Monza

In 1819 a school was opened in the park to train professional gardeners to care for the gardens of imperial residences. The Archduke commissioned the architect Giacomo Tazzini to modernize the villa. He worked in particular on the apartments reserved for the Archduke's sons and daughters, on the floors, which were enriched with refined decorations, and on the bathrooms.

In 1857 Archduke Maximilian of Austria, the new viceroy of Lombardy-Venetia, occupied the villa sporadically for only two years, definitively closing the Austrian period of the Royal Villa.

In 1861, when the new Kingdom of Italy was established, the building became a palace of the Italian Royal House of Savoy.

In 1868 the villa was donated by Victor Emmanuel II to his son, the future Umberto I on the occasion of his marriage to Margherita of Savoy. The villa was a very welcome gift and was immediately used by the royal couple; after the death of King Victor Emmanuel, modernization works, cured by the architects Achille Majnoni d'Intignano and Luigi Tarantola, were undertaken.

The Royal Villa was abandoned by the royal family in 1900, after the murder of King Umberto I on 29 July 1900. The King was assassinated in Monza by Gaetano Bresci while he was attending a sports event organized by the club "Forti e Liberi".

Palace of Monza

After the mournful event, the new king, Victor Emmanuel III no longer wanted to use the Royal Villa, closing it and transferring most of the furnishings to the Quirinal Palace.

In 1934 Victor Emmanuel III donated most of the villa to the municipalities of Monza and Milan by royal decree.

He still kept the southern portion with the halls of his father's apartment, King Umberto I, but constantly closed in his memory.

During the Italian Social Republic, it was the seat of command of the Republican National Guard.

The events of the immediate post-war period of World War II provoked occupations and the decay of the monument.