The Palazzo Moro Lin, also called the palace of 13 windows is a baroque-style palace on the Grand Canal, located between the Palazzo Grassi and the Palazzo da Lezze, in the sestiere of San Marco, in Venice, Italy.
The palace was built in 1670 by design of Sebastiano Mazzoni, and made for the painter Pietro Liberi.[1] The palace interior has frescoes by Antonio Bellucci, Antonio Molinari, and Gregorio Lazzarini.[2] The palace was soon bought by the Lin family. At the death of Michele Anzolo Lin in 1788, the palace was inherited by his niece Elisabetta, the wife of Gasparo Moro of San Trovaso, who afterwards called themselves Moro-Lin.[3] In 1942 it was purchased by the Milanese industrialist Enrico Ghezzi.
See also
editFurther reading
edit- McGregor, James H. (30 June 2009). Venice from the Ground Up. Harvard University Press. p. 260.
- Family Guide Italy. DK Travel. 2016. p. 51.
References
edit- ^ Venice described (tr. by R. Barton) adapted to assist as a guide to the model of Venice now exhibiting at the Egyptian hall, Piccadilly. 1844. p. 28. Retrieved 6 October 2019.
- ^ Venice, by Augustus John Cuthbert Hare, page 94.
- ^ Venice on Foot: With the Itinerary of the Grand Canal by Hugh Douglas, (1907), page 282.
External links
edit- Media related to Palazzo Moro Lin (Venice) at Wikimedia Commons