Built at different times by two descendants of the Roman Serlupi family, Gian Filippo Serlupi in 1580 for the part on Piazza Lovatelli and Girolamo Serlupi in 1619 for the part on Piazza Campitelli, it is considered to be the work of Giacomo Della Porta.
Purchased by the Ruspoli family in 1744, the building was sold in the 19th century to the Lovatelli family, who became related to the Caetani family through the marriage of Ersilia Lovatelli. In the second half of the 19th century, the Palazzo was an important literary salon frequented by the intellectuals of the time. The two-storey façade has two entrance portals, each overlooking its own square, with half-arched windows on the ground and first floors and a corbelled cornice at the end.
Information
The building is visible only from the outside.
Location
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