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How Jewish is the Sistine Chapel?

We spot the Vatican's Hebrew images

March 23, 2016 13:04
The Sistine Chapel

By

Michael Knipe,

Michael Knipe

2 min read

Looking up at Michelangelo's frescos on the ceiling, we could see seven Hebrew prophets - Daniel, Ezekiel, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Joel, Jonah and Zechariah. In the four corners between the shoulders of adjoining arches, we could spot "Moses with the bronze serpent" and "Esther slaying Haman".

What made viewing these stunning images across the 800sq m ceiling of the Sistine Chapel (a chapel in the Apostolic Palace, the official residence of the Pope in Vatican City) all the more enthralling, however, was that we could savour them in relative solitude and silence. There were just four of us in the chapel, plus our guide, and on the other side of the room a few guards.

As the fifth most visited art museum in the world, the Sistine Chapel does not spring to mind as a place in which Michelangelo's stunning biblical frescos can be studied in such tranquility. Some 17,000 visitors traipse and jostle their way through the Vatican Museum's 1,400 rooms every day.

Yet it is possible to enjoy an exclusive visit to the chapel - if you take advantage of the entrepreneurial enterprise of a Rome-based Irish woman, Helen Donegan.