Thursday, March 28, 2019

St. MARY IN MONTICELLI

S. MARIA IN MONTICELLI
Maybe built in the seventh century AD over ruins which determined the mound where the church is and from which it took the name monticelli (mounds)
Maybe they were the ruins of a temple in the area of the Circus Flaminius such as the TEMPLE OF NEPTUNE. Filippo Coarelli reckons the Temple of Neptune was actually located in the area of the Manilis' House
In 1089 Pope Urban II (1088/99) transferred here the relics of five martyrs from Palermo
Restored in 1101 for Paschal II (1099/1118)
It was known as Sancta Maria in Monticellis Arenulae de Urbe
1715 transformed for Clement XI Albani (1700/21) by Matteo Sassi (1646/1723) who also designed the FAÇADE with the collaboration of Giuseppe Sardi (1680/1753)
1860 restoration by Francesco Azzurri (1831/1901) for Pius IX Mastai-Ferretti (1846/78) with polychrome marble taken from the columns of the previous church, as they were found embedded in the pillars of the eighteenth-century restoration
Since 1726 it is officiated by the Fathers of the Christian Doctrine

VAULT
“Six heroines of the Old Testament: Esther, Bathsheba, Deborah, Jael, Abighail and Judith” representatives of the main glories of Our Lady, 1860 by Cesare Mariani (1826/1901)
“Highly regarded by the popes, Cesare Mariani began his copious activities under Pius IX in the mid-1800s, and continued until the end of the century under Leo XIII, literally covering of paint vaults, pillars and domes of 13 Roman churches. Appreciated by the House of Savoy, he also contributed to the definition of the image of the emerging unitary Italian state, winning the competition for the first public commission of the new kingdom: the frescoes in the Hall of the Majority, at the current Treasury Palace, where the first ever Council of Ministers Italian met. (...) An artist who played an important role in that particular historical moment of transition between the papal city and the 'Third Rome' (...) His art is defined by critics as 'very flexible', as he knew to adapt it to any client with great ease” (Lauretta Colonnnelli - Corriere della Sera on 3/25/01)
COUNTER FAÇADE
Above the organ “Moses and the Burning Bush” and “Jacob's Dream” by Cesare Mariani
On the choir “St. Cecilia among the angels” by Tommaso Minardi (1787/1871)
To the left of the entrance there is a medieval fragment of a fresco representing perhaps “Paschal II”

FRESCOES ON THE PILLARS
“Evangelists” 1860 by the nineteenth-century painter Ercole Ruspi

1st CHAPEL ON THE RIGHT
Above the altar “Agony in the Garden” by Odoardo Vicinelli (1683/1755)
On the right wall “Assumption” maybe by Andrea Sacchi (1599/1661)

2nd CHAPEL ON THE RIGHT
Above the altar “Flagellation” by an anonymous seventeenth-century artist maybe Antonio Carracci (about 1589/1618), son of Annibale

3rd CHAPEL ON THE RIGHT
Above the altar “S. Ninfa refuses to sacrifice to idols” by G.B. Puccetti (1593/about 1670)
On the left wall “Madonna and Child with martyrs of Palermo” by Etienne Parrocel (1696/1774) formerly on the main altar

AT THE END OF THE RIGHT NAVE - CHAPEL OF JESUS ​​OF NAZARETH
Altarpiece “Jesus Christ” by an unknown seventeenth century artist
This image is famous for a miracle which took place in 1854: apparently the eyes of Jesus in this painting moved
Frescoes of the beginning of the twentieth century by Eugenio Cisterna (1862/1933)
“Tombstone of Gregoria de' Rusticelli” of the fifteenth century

APSE
Fragment of mosaic of the twelfth century with “Head of the Redeemer”

MAIN ALTAR
Relics of the martyrs of Palermo bishop Maximilian, Eustosius, Proculus, Golbodeus and the young girl Ninfa
Above the altar “Presentation of Mary in the Temple” by Alfredo Bea
Walls of the presbytery on the right “Mothers offer their children to Jesus”, on the left “Jesus teaches in the Temple” by Cesare Mancini

AT THE END OF THE LEFT NAVE - CHAPEL OF CESARE DE BUS
Founder of the Congregation of Priests of the Christian Doctrine, exhumed in 1975 when he was beatified

3rd CHAPEL ON THE LEFT
Above the altar “Preaching of St. John the Baptist” by G.B. Puccetti (1593/about 1670)
Under the altar body of S. Fortunato martyr of the second century

2nd CHAPEL ON THE LEFT
Above the altar “Wooden Crucifix” traditionally attributed to Pietro de' Cerroni aka Pietro Cavallini (about 1240/about 1325) in front of which it seems St. Bridget used to pray

1st CHAPEL ON THE LEFT
Above the altar “Flagellation” by the Frenchman Jean Baptiste Van Loo (1684/1745), who studied in Rome with Benedetto Luti

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