Visconti Castle (Pavia)
| Visconti Castle of Pavia | |
|---|---|
Castello Visconteo di Pavia | |
| Pavia, Lombardy, Northern Italy | |
The south-western side of the Visconti Castle with the main entrance and the two surviving towers | |
| Site information | |
| Type | Medieval castle |
| Owner | Municipality of Pavia |
| Open to the public | Yes |
| Condition | Good (the survived part, excluding two towers and one side destroyed in 1527) |
| Location | |
| Coordinates | 45°11′24″N 9°09′30″E / 45.19000°N 9.15833°E |
| Height | 43 metres (141 ft) (4 towers) |
| Length | 142 metres (466 ft) (4 sides) |
| Site history | |
| Built | 1360–1365 |
| Built by | Galeazzo II Visconti |
| Materials | Bricks (walls) and stone (columns) |
| Battles/wars | Pavia (1525, Italian War of 1521–1526), Sack of Pavia (1527, War of the League of Cognac) |
The Visconti Castle of Pavia (Italian: Castello Visconteo di Pavia) is a medieval castle in Pavia, Lombardy, Northern Italy. It was built after 1360 in a few years by Galeazzo II Visconti, Lord of Milan, and used as a sovereign residence by him and his son Gian Galeazzo, first duke of Milan. Its wide dimensions induced Petrarch, who visited Pavia in the fall of 1365, to call it "an enormous palace in the citadel, a truly remarkable and costly structure". Adjacent to the castle, the Visconti created a vast walled park that reached the Certosa di Pavia, a Carthusian monastery founded in 1396 by the Visconti as well and located about 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) to the north.
In the 16th century, an artillery attack on Pavia destroyed a wing and two towers of the castle. The frescos that entirely decorated the castle rooms are today almost completely lost. The castle had been the seat of the Visconti Library until its transfer to Paris in 1499. Today, it hosts the Pavia Civic Museums.