Stanza di Constantino (Raphael Rooms)

Battle at the Milvian Bridge by Giulio Romano in the Stanza di Constantinoof the Raphael Rooms in the Vatican Museum, Rome
Battle at the Milvian Bridge by Giulio Romano in the Stanza di Constantino.

The Stanza di Constantino in the Vatican's Stanze di Raffaello (Raphael Rooms) is a papal apartment frescoed by Raphael's students according to his designs

The ceiling of the Sala di Constantino in the Raphael Rooms of the Vatican Museums
The ceiling of the Sala di Constantino.

The fourth Raphael Room, the Stanza di Constantino (1517–24), is the least satisfying and was largely painted after Raphael's death according to his hastily sketched designs.

By far the most famous bit is the ceiling, densely and colorfully decorated by Sicilian artist Tomamso Laureti in 1582–85—several generations after Raphael's team finished the walls—for Pope Gregory XIII (though finished under Sixtus V).

The central panel—an airy, pink-and-green Classical/Reniassance space—depicts the Triumph of Christianity by showing a pedestal topped by a golden Crucifix, which has, apparently, literally pushed a pagan idol off that pedestal to lie broken on the floor. Not too subltle as far as metaphors go, but impressive for the painter's impeccable use of single point perspective and masterly foreshortening on those broken bits of "statue" on the "floor."

Giulio Romano's Vision of the Cross, to a design by Raffaello, in the Stanza di Constantino in the Vatican's Raphael Rooms.
Giulio Romano's Vision of the Cross, to a design by Raphael, in the Stanza di Constantino.

As for the walls, Raphael's followers Giulio Romano and Raffaellino del Colle adapted some of their master's original cartoons (preparatory sketches) into the newly fashionable Mannerist style of painting, a sort of pastel-infused, often exaggerated, short-lived offshot of the High Renaissance based on taking Michelangelo's innovations beyond their logical extremes.

Those two talented assistants probably painted most of the Battle at the Milvian Bridge (in which Emperor Constantine the Great fights his would-be deposer Maxentius in AD 313; the Milvian Bridge, incidentally, is still there, across a northerly bend of the Tiber through Rome's inner suburbs), the Vision of the Cross (under whose miraculous sign the emperor wins that famous battle), and the Donation of Rome (in which Emperor Constantine, in thanks for his vistory, converts the entire empire to Christianity and gives princely power over Rome to Pope Sylvester I).

Apparently, a less apt pupil of Raphael's finished off the cycle with a weak Baptism of Constantine.

All of that, by the way, is a bit of a stretch of the historical truth.

Though Constantine the Great did, indeed, decree that Rome officially become Christian—the very reason later Chrsitians gave him the sobriquet "The Great"—the vast empire actually remained a pluralistic one in which all the other existing religious cults and pagan sects were allowed to continue on.

The Emperor himself supposedly did not even convert (or at least was not officially baptized) until he was on his deathbed—and all of this reportedly was done largely to please the growing cohort of powerful Roman patricians who were Christians, most notably his own mother, St. Helena.

But, of course, the walls of the pope's own personal apartment in the Vatican are no place to engage in these more nuanced interpretations of ancient history, realpolitick, or filial accommodations. Here, the divine calling is unimpeachable, true faith is unshakable, and the Church always triumphs.

 

The other Raphael Rooms

Tips & links

Details
ADDRESS

Viale Vaticano (on the north side of the Vatican City walls, between where Via Santamaura and the Via Tunisi staircase hit Viale Vaticano; about a 5–10 minute walk around the walls from St. Peter's).
tel. +39-06-6988-4676 or +39-06-6988-3145
www.museivaticani.va or www.vatican.va

OPEN

Mon–Sat 9am–6pm (last entry: 4pm)
* May 2–July 25 and Sept 5–Oct 31 also open Fridays 7–11pm with advance booking (» more)
* Open the last Sun of each month 9:30am–2pm—and it's free!... and terribly crowded
* For other closed dates, see "tips" below

ADMISSION

€16
Roma Pass: No
Tickets: Select Italy or Viator

TRANSPORT

Bus: 49; 490, 492, 496; 23, 32, 81,Tram 19, 271, 492, 590, 982, 990
Metro: Cipro-Musei Vaticani (A)
See "Tips" for more info

TOURS
How long does theR aphael Rooms' Stanza di Constantino take?

Planning your day: The Raphael Rooms take about 25–40 minutes (more if you're a true fan), but expect to spend all day at the Vatican. Two days if you can swing it. Even on a tight schedule, expect to pretty much spend one full day seeing the Vatican Museums and St. Peter's together. They're worth it.

Warning: The ticket office closes 2 hours before the museum, with the last entry at 4pm.

» Rome itineraries

Book ahead

You can book Vatican entry tickets ahead of time to help avoid the lines, which can last for up to an hour or so in the summer. However, this adds a €4 fee to the already steep admission of €16 at www.vatican.va. Or you can do it online via one of our partners:

Reserve a Vatican tour

Vatican tours: There are two-hour tours of the museums and Sistine Chapel available (in English usually four time a day) for €32 per person. Three-hour tours that also include St. Peter's cost €37. Note, though, that those prices include the €16 admisison ticket and €4 booking fee, so the tour portion actually only costs an extra €12–€15. For more info: tel. +39-06-6988-3145 or www.vatican.va.

If you prefer a private guided tour of the Vatican and its museums, book one via our partner sites Viator.com or Context Travel:

Admission quirks: When the Vatican is free, closed, crowded, open late, etc.

Vatican Museum free days

The Vatican Museums are free on the last Sunday of each month, when they stay open until 2pm (last entry: 12:30pm). This, however, is no secret, so they are also intensely crowded.

On any other Sunday, however, the Vatican Museum are closed—and if that final Sunday of the month happens falls on a church holiday (see below), they also remain closed.

The Vatican is also free on Sept. 27 (World Tourism Day)..

Vatican most crowded on Sun and Wed

The Vatican Museums are most crowded on Sundays (because they're free) and many Wednesdays (because in the morning St. Peter's itself is often closed for the papal audience in the piazza, so everyone who doesn't have tickets walks around the walls to kill time inside the museums, and by afternoon all the audience-goers join them).

Open late on summer Fridays

The Vatican has been experimenting with reopening the museums on Friday evenings in spring and early summer then again in fall allowing a limited number of visitors—upon advance booking only—to wander the mooonlit galleries without the crowds.

More info: www.vatican.va.

To book: Viator.com

Vatican closed on church holidays

The Vatican Museums are closed on all church holidays: Jan. 1, Jan. 6, Feb. 11, Mar. 19, Easter Sunday and Monday, May 1, June 29 (Feast of St. Peter and Paul—major Roman holiday), Aug. 14–15 (everything is closed in Rome on Aug. 15; head to Santa Maria Maggiore for mass with a "snowfall" of rose petals), Nov. 1, Dec. 25 (Merry Christmas!), and Dec. 26 (Santo Stefano—huge in Italy).

Last entry: 4pm

Note that the Vatican Museums close surprisingly early (last entry at 4pm, doors close 6pm).

So see the Museums first, then walk around the walls to visit St. Peter's.

Dress code?

Recently, the Vatican (or at least some guards) seems to have decided that you must dress "appropriately" to visit any part of Vatican City—including the museums—and not just St. Peter's, where a dress code has long applied.

Err on the side of caution and make sure you arrive with no bare shoulders, knees or midriffs.

That means: no shorts, no miniskirts, no sleeveless shirts or blouses, no tank-tops. Also, no hats.

(If it's hot and you want to wear a tank top around town that day, just bring a light shawl to cover your shoulders while inside; » more on packing the right items for an Italy trip.)

Also, you cannot bring into the museum any bag or backpack larger than 40cm x 35cm x 15cm (roughly 16" x 14" x 6")—there is a cloackroom where you can leave it.

The various Vatican Museums
How to get to the Vatican Museums

Cipro-Musei Vaticani is the closest Metro stop (on the A line, about 5 blocks northwest of the entrance; just follow the crowds).

Otherwise, bus 49 stops right in front of the museum entrance (you can catch it from Piazza Cavour, or anywhere along Via Cescenzio, which starts at the northwestern tip of the piazza, near Castel Sant'Angelo).

You can also take bus 490, 492, 496, N1 to Via Candia (two blocks north of the entrance), or one of many bus lines to Piazza del Risorgimento, tucked into a inside corner of the Vatican walls a short walk east of the musuems entrance: 23, 32, 81,Tram 19, 271, 492, 590, 982, 990, N11.

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Raphael Rooms' Stanza di Constantino
ADDRESS

Viale Vaticano (on the north side of the Vatican City walls, between where Via Santamaura and the Via Tunisi staircase hit Viale Vaticano; about a 5–10 minute walk around the walls from St. Peter's).
tel. +39-06-6988-4676 or +39-06-6988-3145
www.museivaticani.va or www.vatican.va

OPEN

Mon–Sat 9am–6pm (last entry: 4pm)
* May 2–July 25 and Sept 5–Oct 31 also open Fridays 7–11pm with advance booking (» more)
* Open the last Sun of each month 9:30am–2pm—and it's free!... and terribly crowded
* For other closed dates, see "tips" below

ADMISSION

€16
Roma Pass: No
Tickets: Select Italy or Viator

TRANSPORT

Bus: 49; 490, 492, 496; 23, 32, 81,Tram 19, 271, 492, 590, 982, 990
Metro: Cipro-Musei Vaticani (A)
See "Tips" for more info

TOURS


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