Posted on 11/12/2009 2:50:01 PM PST by NYer
VATICAN CITY — As a participant in Villanova Universitys Vatican internship program, I had the opportunity to be a part of a groundbreaking project.
This Monday, in celebration of the feast of the dedication of the Basilica of St. John Lateran, the Vatican website launched a state-of-the-art virtual tour of the basilica.

Paul Wilson working on the virtual tour of the Basilica of St. John Lateran in October. (Photo by Villanova intern, Heather West)
The tour of St. John Lateran is only a small part of a monumental project in which a team of Villanova University professors and students photographed the Sistine Chapel, the newly resorted Pauline Chapel, the Basilica of St. Mary Major and the Necropolis of St. Rosa.
Having labored long and hard on the virtual reality tour, the launch is a sort of personal triumph for me.
To allow the Villanova team to photograph everything in peace, officials kept the public out of the buildings, except at St. John Lateran. The Villanova interns and I worked as the photographers personal police squad. We made sure no curious tourists or aspiring models got in the way of the cameras. This was particularly difficult because people in St. John Lateran had no qualms about walking right up to the lens and inspecting the state-of-the-art equipment.
I was assigned to help Villanova Digital Media Coordinator Chad Fahs photograph the front entrance of the basilica. Shooting the outside of the basilica had a different set of challenges; the open space and large crowds make crowd control more difficult. It seemed as though every time Chad was about to begin the shooting process a large herd of tourists was walking right in front of the camera on their way into the basilica.
The highlight of the photo shoot was Paul Wilsons face after he finished the apse. Paul is the director of the Villanova Universitys Vatican project. He is a seasoned veteran who has more than 40 years of experience in photography. After the shoot, he was physically unable to suppress the huge smile on his face. The only words he could let out were, We got it.
Its monumental. Michelangelo and other artists created these masterpieces and we are showing them to the world. Paul’s words capture the work he and the team of Villanova students and professors are doing to create virtual tours of important sites throughout the Vatican.
Wilson was, right we got it. The Villanova team captured what it is like to be inside the basilica. Save the motion-sensitive controls that could cause some headaches and nausea before you get accustomed to them, the virtual tour is quite impressive. The photographs are crystal clear and the people actually add perspective to the basilicas size.
The launch of the tour of St. John Lateran is not the end of the story. One cant help but think how impressive the virtual tours of the Sistine Chapel, the Pauline Chapel, St. Mary Major and the Necropolis of St. Rosa will turn out.
Enjoy!
This is just marvelous.
Wow, that is so cool!
St. John Lateran Visita Virtuale
It's in Italian, but not difficult to understand.
Beautiful. Are there bodies in what appear to be coffins over some of the doorways?
Where it reads “EN” you can translate it to English.
In the "Nave I" photo, if you zoom in to the doorway on the right, you can see the effigy and tomb of Innocent III (his name is over the doorway). That's now the gift shop, so all the tourists are waltzing in and out under his bones!
There were a lot of popes buried in St. John Lateran, including a dozen or so whose tombs were destroyed in the two Lateran fires -- they gathered the remains together and reinterred them in one tomb. There are also a couple of popes that they aren't sure where they are, but THINK they may be in the Lateran somewhere . . . .
I’ll check this out later. Sounds wonderful!
Totally awesome.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.