Camillo Camilliani
Camillo Camilliani (fl. 1574–1603) was an Italian architect, military engineer and sculptor. He is mostly known for the design of watchtowers and other fortifications around the coasts of Sicily.
Life[]
Camillani was born in Florence sometime in the 16th century. He was the son of the sculptor Francesco Camilliani. In 1574, he and Michelangelo Naccherino directed the relocation of the Fontana Pretoria, which had been designed by his father, from Florence to Palermo.[1]
In July 1583, Viceroy Marcantonio Colonna invited him to Sicily to design a system of coastal fortifications to prevent the island from being attacked by the Ottoman Empire or Barbary pirates. Camillani reviewed the existing fortifications, and in 1584 he published his findings in the report Descrittione delle marine di tutto il regno di Sicilia con le guardie necessarie da cavallo e da piedi che vi si tengono.
He went on to design watchtowers, which were built at strategic sites along the coastline, in such a way that they were able to communicate with each other and warn cities of any approaching enemy. The towers had a square base with two floors, and were armed with artillery pieces on the roof.
Camillani also designed fountains, statues and funerary monuments for various patrons and churches.[2]
Works[]
Camillani designed the following buildings, among others:
Fortifications[]
- Fortezza del Tocco, Acireale
- Torre di Manfria, Gela
- Towers of , Capo Passero and Punta delle Formiche in the province of Syracuse
- Palazzo Baronale, Spadafora
- Castello di Roccavaldina
- , Caronia
- , near Isola delle Femmine
- , and in San Vito Lo Capo and Castellammare del Golfo
- Reconstruction of the Castello di Milazzo, Milazzo
- , Siculiana[3]
- , Porto Empedocle
- , Realmonte
- Torre Sant'Angelo, Licata
Castle of Milazzo
Castle of Sant' Angelo Licata
Tower of Manfria (Gela)
Tower of Monterosso near Realmonte
Tower of Tre Fontane (Campobello di Mazara)
Other works[]
- Façade of the in Messina
- Fontana della Flora in Villa Vittorio Emanuele, Caltagirone
- He possibly worked on the Cathedral of Milazzo
- two fonts for the Catania Cathedral
- a Glauco for the Royal Palace of Palermo
- sculptures for churches in Roccavaldina
Church di San Giovanni di Malta (Messina)
Old cathedral Santo Stefano Protomartire (Milazzo)
Old cathedral Santo Stefano Protomartire, facade (Milazzo)
Old cathedral Santo Stefano Protomartire, interior (Milazzo)
Old cathedral Santo Stefano Protomartire, west side (Milazzo)
References[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Camillo Camilliani. |
- ^ "Camilliani, Camillo". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani - Volume 17 (in Italian). 1974. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
- ^ "Camilliani, Camillo". The Grove Dictionary of Art. Archived from the original on 30 March 2005.
- ^ "Beni culturali". wwftorresalsa.it (in Italian). Archived from the original on 12 September 2009. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
- 16th-century births
- 1603 deaths
- Architects from Florence
- 16th-century Italian architects
- Italian military engineers
- Sculptors from Tuscany