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Italy Scavenger Hunt 5

Italy Scavenger Hunt 5

Q HUM 120 – Cultural Studies Virtual Study Abroad Italy – Unit 5: Scavenger Hunt Quest Scene & Location W/I Time Stamp Discovery 1. This pope was a true humanist & Renaissance artist, both a scholar and a great poet. And this was his actual name. 2. This style was inspired by the ruins of the Roman emperor Nero’s palace in Rome. Name the style, origin of its name, the famous artist who helped develop it, and the name of Nero’s palace. 3. This well known sculptor 1st came to Rome at the invitation of Cardinal Raffaele Riario, went on to work in Siena, returned to Florence where he produced one of his most famous statues, and came back to Rome where he produced his most famous paintings. This is the Florentine statue, and this is the location of his Roman painting. 4. This small building is supposed to mark the spot of St. Peter’s crucifixion, and this is the architect. 5. This is home to the oldest surviving anatomical theater, and a place where Copernicus studied medicine, and Galileo taught. 6. This city became the dominant center of printing and publication for all of Europe, producing 100s of thousands of copies of the most important books, and this printer not only printed the complete works of Aristotle, but invented italic script and affordable “pocketbooks”. 7. This important Hellenistic statue was discovered in 1506 at the church of Santa Maria Maggiore, and it would inspire and influence a new style in sculpture (and later Baroque), and this artist in particular. 8. These men all took turns redesigning one of the largest churches in the world commissioned by Pope Julius II to replace the original by Constantine (4th C.), and this is the church. 9. This city contained the first Jewish Ghetto in Europe, and this is the origin of the word “Ghetto”. 10. These museums are the oldest in the world, and house such famous works as the Capitoline Wolf, and the bronze statue of Marcus Aurelius. 11. This building was originally the mausoleum of the Roman emperor Hadrian, later a defensive fortress, and was connected to the Vatican by a secret passage. 12. This cardinal constructed his family gardens upon the long neglected Palatine Hill, home of the original Roman Emperors. 13. This church was one of the final projects of Michelangelo, and involved the conversion of the ancient Roman Baths of Diocletian (a persecutor of Christianity). 14. This artist’s most famous work stands overlooking the Piazza della Signoria from the Loggia dei Lanzi, and this is the name of the famous mannerist bronze statue. 15. This palace became the new residence of the Medici in 1549, and the former palace became known by this name. 16. This is where Galileo and Michelangelo are buried 17. Cardinal Bessarion left his most important Byzantine manuscripts to this city, and they are housed in this library. 18. This unique fountain sporting little gargoyle heads is found in the gardens of this famous villa in Tivoli.

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