An Italian villa restored by a Texas-born princess is up for sale. Despite the $533m estimate, there's no swimming pool, but it does include a unique Baroque mural.
- The Casino dell'Aurora, also known as Villa Ludovisi, is scheduled for auction in January.
- It's for sale for the first time in 400 years, following an inheritance battle.
A historic villa in central Rome, Italy, with the world's only known ceiling mural by Caravaggio, is scheduled to go up for auction in January.
The Casino dell'Aurora, also known as Villa Ludovisi, has been owned by the aristocratic Ludovisi family since 1621.
But following an inheritance battle between the children of Prince Nicolo Boncompagni Ludovisi, who died in 2018, Sky News reported that a judge has ruled that the family could lose possession of the property, built in 1570, for the first time in 400 years.
Bids on the 2,800-square-meter property, which features a fresco by the Baroque artist Guercino, two roof terraces, and landscaped gardens, will start at 353 million euros ($400 million), per Bloomberg. The property is valued at 471 million euros ($533 million), the media outlet said.
The historic home is most famous for its opulent nine-foot wide mural by Caravaggio, commissioned by a diplomat in 1597.
According to Bloomberg, the listing says that approximately 11 million euros ($12.5 million) in renovations will be required to make the property comply with current standards.
A Texas-born princess, who was previously married to former US congressman John Jenrette Jr, started renovations on the property after marrying the late Boncompagni Ludovisi in 2009, Sky News reported.
Her husband used the dilapidated building as an office, she told the Associated Press.
"I started really trying to restore it as much as I could, within means," Princess Rita Jenrette Boncompagni Ludovisi told AP. "Really, you need to be a billionaire, not a millionaire. You need to be a billionaire if you have a house like this, a historic home because you want to do everything right. You don't want to get anything wrong."
According to Sky News, Boncompagni Ludovisi said that she hopes the Italian government acquires the villa.