11 April 1506 A.D. ROME: Pope Julius Lays New Foundation for St. Peter’s; Pope Leo X Finances Constructions Costs with Indulgence Trafficking (As TBN Does Today)
11 April 1506 A.D. ROME: Pope Julius Lays New Foundation for St. Peter’s; Pope Leo X Finances Constructions
Costs with Indulgence Trafficking (As TBN Does Today)
Graves, Dan. “St.
Peter’s New Foundation.” Christianity.com.
Apr 2007. http://www.christianity.com/church/church-history/timeline/1501-1600/st-peters-new-foundation-11629910.html, Accessed 10 Apr
2015.
The walls of the old church were veined with cracks. Might it not
collapse and kill the worshippers within? Nicholas V thought so. He summoned
two famous architects with orders to strengthen the historic building. Alberti
and Rossellino looked it over and came up with a plan for new walls.
St. Peter's basilica, first constructed by Constantine the Great, was to
be shored up. It sat on the site where tradition says Peter was buried when
executed in 67 A. D. As early as 90 A. D. an oratory had memorialize the spot.
The work was just begun when Nicholas died. Succeeding popes let the project
lapse.
Not until Julius II became pope was the project revived. Julius threw
out halfway measures, determined to replace the basilica completely. As
architect, he appointed Bramante. Bramante drew up huge plans and outraged
traditionalists by rudely ripping down the old building. He should at least
have disassembled the old columns, they sputtered, to be reused. Bramante went
ahead with excavation.
On this date April 11, 1506, Pope Julius laid the foundation stone. The
elderly vicar descended deep into the earth on a wobbly rope ladder to perform
the honor. Lack of funds slowed construction. Leo X replaced Julius in 1513 and
after Bramante's death in 1514 made Raphael the chief architect.
Work progressed slowly, due to lack of funds. Raphael never completed
the project. Sangello, Verone, Sangallo and Peruzzi also served as architects
at one time or another. Eventually Michelangelo was put in charge. He was then
in his seventies, but redrew the plans. By the time he died in 1564, the shell
of the dome was complete.
The great cathedral was not finished until 1626, 120 years after Julius
laid the first stone. Then Carlo Maderna completed the facade. Men in those
times projected their schemes across centuries. It is one of the most admirable
characteristics of the church which confidently expected the body of Christ to
survive all ups and downs. Neither Bramante's plans nor Michelangelo's were
adhered to. Consequently the finished building was a series of compromises.
Despite this it came forth with grandeur, its vast interior gloriously
decorated. It covers four acres. St. Peter, who admired Herod's great temple in
Jerusalem and preached and healed in it, might have been astonished at this
triumph of religious architecture.
It was to pay for Raphael's efforts, by the way, that Leo X authorized
the indulgence which led to Luther's 95 theses. Unfortunately, the edifice
which sums up Catholic tradition and its patronage of the arts became a cause
of the second greatest division in Christendom (the first being the East-West
split in 1054) when Luther insisted indulgences were not necessary for Christians who can go directly to their Savior for forgiveness.
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Brusher, J. Popes Through the Ages. Princeton, New
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Durant, Will. The Renaissance, New York: Simon and
Schuster, 1953; pp. 450 - 451.
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Kent, W. H. "Indugences." The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York:
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Robert Appleton, 1914.
Various encyclopedia articles.
Last updated April, 2007.
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