Construction begins in 1152 on the baptistery …
Years: 1152 - 1152
Construction begins in 1152 on the baptistery of St. John adjacent to the Cathedral of Pisa.
Replacing an older baptistry, it is the second building, in chronological order, in the Piazza dei Miracoli, near the Cathedral and the famous Leaning Tower.
The baptistery is an example of the transition from the Romanesque style to the Gothic style: the lower registers are in the Romanesque style, with rounded arches, while the upper registers are in the Gothic style, with pointed arches.
Like the cathedral and its future campanile (later famous as the Leaning Tower) the baptistery displays continuity with the Tuscan Romanesque style of the latter buildings, finely decorated with white and polychrome inlaid marble.
The architect is Diotisalvi, whose signature can be read on two pillars inside the building, and who constructed only the first part, the ground floor.
The building will be continued after his death by Nicola Pisano, a century after its foundation, and then completed by Giovanni Pisano.
