From the 17th century, the convent became the base of the
Roman Inquisition or
Holy Office, and it housed the trial and recantation of
Galileo Galilei. Little remains of the Dominican complex except its cloister: This had been largely rebuilt from the original building, and expropriated by the state in 1870 as the seat of the Ministry of Public Education and for a short time the Ministry of Post and Telecommunications. The cloister now holds the library of the
Italian Senate, dedicated to
Giovanni Spadolini. • At the centre of the piazza, backing onto the Inquisition convent, is the 1667
Elephant and Obelisk by
Bernini. This obelisk was excavated in the cloister and came from the
Iseum. The elephant was known as "il pulcin della Minerva", or "porcino", from the Roman people's story that ― uninspired by elephants ― Bernini in fact sculpted a pig. • To the right of the church stands the 16th century
Palazzo Fonseca, since 1832 the site of one of the historic hotels of Rome, known as the
Minerva, whose guests have included
Stendhal and
José de San Martín, remembered in plaques on the facade. • Opposite the church is the
Pontifical Ecclesiastical Academy (the former Pontifical Academy of Ecclesiastical Nobles). The original 14-century palace was completely rebuilt in 1878. == See also ==