, one of the palazzo's residents.
Muti Papazzurri family The Muti Papazzurri are
documented in Rome from 1435 when the will of Giovanni Paolo Muti mentions a
casa complete with a
tower on the site, and a painting from the early 17th century shows an older family house, with a large
roof terrace, on the site of the present palazzo. In addition to their palazzi in Rome the family also owned a
villa in the
Province of Viterbo The Muti Papazurri became extinct with the death of Raffaele Muti Papazurri in 1816. The palazzo then passed through female descent into the family of the Marchese
Livio Savorelli, who assumed the additional names of Muti Papazzurri. The family name used during the 19th century was "Savorelli Papazzurri", at this time the family also owned the far larger
Villa Aurelia on the
Janiculum Hill in Rome (used by
Garibaldi as his headquarters) which is now the
American Academy in Rome. The palazzo acquired its long and religious name "Palazzo Muti e Santuario della Madonna dell' Archetto" following an event in 1796 when a
sacred image of
Madonna in a
niche in the narrow
alley to the rear of the
Palazzo was said to have moved her eyes, another version says she was weeping because the
Papal States were being invaded by France. This
phenomenon was acknowledged by a
papal decree in 1797. Thereafter the statue became known as "''Madonna dell'Archetto
". The image had been painted circa 1690 by Domenico Muratori for the Marchesa Savorelli Papazzurri who lived at the Palazzo. By 1850 the painting (sometimes called the "Mater Misericordiae''" had overcome her distress at the invasion of the Vatican states and was now performing miracles involving divine intervention. The Madonna had become one of the most visited sites of the Virgin Mary in Rome, as a result of this in 1850 the owners of the palazzo Count Alessandro and Countess Caterina Papazzurri Savorelli had the architect
Virginio Vespignani build the
neoclassical, domed
Church of the Madonna dell’Archetto around the shrine. Today this is Rome's smallest functioning church. The Muti Papazzurri are buried in Rome at the Church of
San Marcello al Corso, where their Baroque tombs and memorials still exist.
Stuart occupancy . The Muti Papazzurri complex of residences was rented in its entirety at the expense of the Pope through the Apostolic Camera from the
Marchese Giovanni Battista Muti and his widowed mother the Marchesa Alessandra Millini Muti in 1719 for
James Stuart (the "
Old Pretender"), and
Maria Klementyna Sobieska as their Roman residence. The Popes
Clement XI and
Innocent XIII considered the couple to be the rightful and, more importantly,
Catholic King and Queen of England, Scotland and Ireland. The cousin of Pope Innocent XIII, Francesco Maria Conti, from
Siena, was here the
Gentiluomo di Camera (
Gentleman of the Bedchamber) in the little Roman Jacobite court. For over two generations it remained the seat of the Stuart court-in-exile. It was the birthplace of James's two sons,
Charles Edward Stuart (or 'Bonnie Prince Charlie') in 1720, and
Henry Benedict Stuart (later Cardinal, Duke of York) in 1725. James Stuart died in the Palazzo in 1766. Charles died in the Palazzo in 1788. After Charles' death, the tenancy passed to Henry, the last of the Stuart pretenders, who died in Frascati in 1807. == Alternative names ==