:''For other places, see
Mondragon.

View of Villa Mondragone from Tusculum.

Villa Mondragone.
'Villa Mondragone' is a patrician villa originally in the territory of the Italian commune of
Frascati (
Lazio), now in the territory of Monte Porzio Catone (
Alban Hills). It lies on a hill 416m above sea-level, in an area called, from its many castles and villas,
Castelli Romani about 20 km southeast of Rome, near the ancient town of
Tusculum.
It was built, beginning in 1573, by Cardinal Marco Sitico Altemps, who commissioned the design for it and for the
Palazzo Altemps in central Rome from
Martino Longhi the Elder, on the site of the remains of a Roman villa of the
consular
Quintili family.
Pope Gregory XIII, whose heraldic dragon led to calling the villa "Mondragone", used the villa regularly as a summer residence, as guest of Cardinal Altemps: here, in
1582, he promulgated the document (the papal bull "
Inter gravissimas") which initiated the reform of the calendar now in use and known as the
Gregorian calendar.
Villa Mondragone was at its maximum splendour during the epoch of the
Borghese family (including Cardinal
Scipione Borghese and
Pope Paul V), who exhibited parts of their art and antiquities collections there (including the
Antinous Mondragone which derives its name from the villa).
Other popes who passed long periods in Villa Mondragone include
Clement VIII and
Paul V. Starting from 1626,
Pope Urban VIII decided to leave Villa Mondragone in favour of the Papal residence of
Castelgandolfo.
In 1858
George Sand was guest in the villa, and found there a suitable atmosphere for the setting of her novel ''La Daniella''. In 1896 the
Jesuits turned it into a college for young aristocrats.
In 1912
Wilfrid Michael Voynich acquired here the famous
Voynich manuscript from the Jesuits.
During the Second World War the college gave shelter to evacuated people: the institution was closed in 1953.
In 1981 it was sold by the Order of the Jesuits to the University.
Villa Mondragone is today a peripheral seat of the
University of Rome Tor Vergata.
External links
★
Official website