Palazzo Saccheti.
ts construction was carried out on a project by Antonio da Sangallo , who wanted to make your home, obtaining in 1542 the land and an existing unfinished house owned by the Vatican Chapter of Paul III , its primary if not exclusive client, to whom he dedicated the coat of arms still exists on the main facade. Building the architect devoted the last years of his life, especially for the design until 1545 , when he died in 1546 passed to his son Orazio, and construction was completed by Nanni di Baccio Bigio . Purchased by Ricci of Montepulciano that lavished huge sums to extension work and decorations, passed then to the family or Cevoli Ceuli which was named after the adjacent alley of Cephalus; in 1608 was acquired by Cardinal Ottavio Acquaviva d’Aragona Archbishop of Naples before 1612, the year he died, he built the chapel frescoed by Ciampelli Augustine , in 1648 sold the palace to the Acquaviva Marquis bags from Florence who still possess it. The palace houses some of the most significant cycles of Mannerism , with works by Francesco Salviati , who was responsible for the frescoes of the Hall of Globes, Pietro da Cortona and Jacopino Count . Also the writer Ingeborg Bachmann died here.