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The entrance to Santa Cecilia on the Piazza Santa Cecilia |
The entrance to Santa Cecilia on the Piazza Santa Cecilia
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The entrance to the church from the cortile within the piazza entrance. |
The entrance to the church from the cortile within the piazza entrance
Yesterday November 22nd was the feast day of Saint Cecilia to whom tradition assigns the role of patron saint of music. Pious legend says that she invented the pipe organ. This church in Rome is the final resting place of the actual saint and her sainted husband Valerian on the site of their home (according to tradition) in the Trastevere neighborhood in Rome.
Tradition says that Cecilia was a young woman from a noble Roman family. She converted to Christianity when very young and took a vow of chastity. Her parents insisted that she marry a young man by the name of Valerian. During the wedding, she sang a hymn of praise to God so well and so loudly that she drowned out the wedding music thus making her the patron saint of music. She told Valerian that she could not consummate the marriage because an angel guarded her chastity. When Valerian asked to see the angel, Cecilia told him to go to Pope Urban I to be baptized and he would see the angel. Valerian took his brother Tiburtius and a soldier Maximus to do as she told him. All were baptized and all returned and saw the angel holding a garland of roses and lilies over her head. The three young men were all arrested and executed by Roman authorities under the reign of Alexander Severus. Cecilia herself was later arrested and beheaded. Legend says that her head refused to separate from her body after three blows from a sword. She died after three days. Her martyrdom took place around 230 during the Third Century Crisis when a lot of affluent educated Romans began converting to Christianity. Most scholars agree that she and her three companions in martyrdom are historical persons, though much of the pious legend surrounding them is indeed legend. All three rest together in the crypt of Santa Cecilia in Trastevere.
Santa Cecilia in Trastevere is an ancient church in continuous use for over a thousand years. The present church was built in the 5th century. Like all public buildings continuously used over many centuries, the church acquired many additions and underwent many changes. None more dramatic and extensive as those ordered in 1724 - 1725 by Cardinal Francesco Acquaviva and carried out by the architect Ferdinando Fuga. Cardinal Acquaviva and Fuga substantially rebuilt the church, its two entrances and its interior transforming it into something like a late Baroque/early Rococo church. The 12th century bell tower and the 9th century apse mosaic are all that is left exposed from the original medieval church.
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Interior of Santa Cecilia |
Interior of Santa Cecilia
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Interior of Santa Cecilia Interior of Santa Cecilia |
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Apse of Santa Cecilia with the apse mosaic, the ciborium over the altar and Maderno's sculpture. |
Apse of Santa Cecilia with the apse mosaic, the ciborium over the altar, and Maderno's sculpture
The Apse Mosaic
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The apse mosaic |
The apse mosaic
Santa Cecilia in Trastevere is one of the oldest churches in Rome and has been built and rebuilt many times over. The mosaic in the apse survives from a Carolingian era rebuilding by Pope Pascal I (817 - 824). It is an interpretation of earlier mosaics still to be seen in Rome such as from
Sts. Cosmas and Damian and
Santa Pudenziana, both of those mosaics are 3 and 4 centuries older respectively, and were already revered by the time this mosaic was made.
The drawing is a little shaky compared to mosaic prototypes in Rome from 4 centuries earlier, but still very fine.
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The apse mosaic: Pope Pascal I, St. Cecilia, and St. Paul. |
The apse mosaic: Pope Pascal I, St. Cecilia, and St. Paul
St. Cecilia presents Pope Paschal I who presents the church to the enthroned Christ flanked by Peter and Paul the patron saints of the city of Rome. The square halo indicates that Pope Pascal was still alive when the mosaic was made.
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The apse mosaic: St. Peter, St. Valerian, St. Agatha and one of two flanking date palms |
The apse mosaic: St. Peter, St. Valerian, St. Agatha and one of two flanking date palms
Date palm leaves and fruits were the prizes awarded to athletes in ancient Greece and Rome. Here they are the symbolic prizes of Christian martyrdom. St. Valerian and St. Agatha hold crowns of martydom.
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The Lamb of God with sheep standing for the Apostles |
The Lamb of God with sheep standing for Apostles
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Arnolfo di Cambio's 13th century ciborium |
Arnolfo di Cambio's 13th century ciborium
Arnolfo di Cambio, the Florentine sculptor and architect designed and built this ciborium in 1293, among his last works in Rome before he returned to Florence the following year. This is one of two ciboria he designed and built for Roman churches. The other is over the
high altar and tomb of St. Paul in San Paolo Fuori della Mura.
On the floor before Stefano Maderno's striking sculpture of the martyred Cecilia is an inscription describing the macabre origins of Maderno's sculptural conception.
It records the exhumation of St. Cecilia's remains during a renovation of the church in 1599 ordered by Cardinal Paolo Emilio Sfondrati. It states that Maderno was present at the exhumation and that his sculpture is faithful to what was found on the "uncorrupted" remains of the saint.
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Stefano Maderno, St. Cecilia, 1599 - 1600 |
Stefano Maderno, St. Cecilia, 1599 - 1600
An early masterpiece of Baroque sculpture that is still striking and even disturbing in its drama, as though Saint Cecilia just fell before us stricken by the sword.
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Stefano Maderno, St. Cecilia, detail |
Even more disturbing, blood just begins to flow from the fatal wound in her neck.
Santa Cecilia in Trastevere is home to a community of Benedictine nuns since the early 16th century. When Ferdinando Fuga redesigned and rebuilt the church in the 18th century, he built a choir for the nuns above the main entrance of the church. In that nuns' choir are the remains of the greatest work of art in the church left from a 13th century rebuilding, plastered over in the 18th century rebuilding, and rediscovered in 1900.
Pietro Cavallini's Last Judgement Fresco
Pietro Cavallini's Last Judgement once covered all the entrance wall of the church. Today only fragments of the center portion survive in the nun's choir, uncovered in 1900.
What survives is a major masterpiece of Roman medieval painting that revives the splendors of the earliest church art in Rome combining that monumentality with the naturalism that pervaded late medieval art. Cavallini's art looks back to ancient Roman painting and forward to the work of Giotto and the Renaissance.
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The whole surviving portion of the Last Judgement fresco |
The whole surviving portion of the Last Judgement fresco
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Enthroned Christ the Judge |
Enthroned Christ the Judge
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Christ the Judge |
Christ the Judge
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The Virgin Mary with angels |
The Virgin Mary with Angels
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John the Baptist with angels |
John the Baptist with Angels
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Seraphim and archangels |
Seraphim and Archangels
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Head of a seraph |
Head of a Seraph
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An Apostle, possibly Paul |
An Apostle, possibly Paul
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Saints and Apostles |
Saints and Apostles
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Two Apostles |
Two Apostles
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Head of an Apostle |
Head of an Apostle
Santa Cecilia Underground
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The crypt chapel |
The crypt chapel
The splendid chapel in the crypt looks ancient, but is quite modern (by Roman standards). It was all built in 1899.
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Mosaic of St. Cecilia |
19th century Mosaic of St. Agnes
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The tombs of St. Cecilia, her husband Valerian, her brother in law Tiburtius, and his companion Maximus. |
The tombs of St. Cecilia, her husband Valerian, her brother-in-law Tiburtius, and his companion Maximus.
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Remains of Roman housing underneath the church. |
Remains of Roman housing underneath the church
Next to the crypt chapel are the remains of an ancient Roman house and a tannery.
Sebastiano Conca's Apotheosis of St. Cecilia
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Sebastiano Conca's painting on the ceiling of the Nave |
Sebastiano Conca's painting on the ceiling of the nave
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St. Cecilia Received by the Holy Trinity in Paradise |
St. Cecilia received into Heaven by the Holy Trinity
I presume the sainted pope in this painting is Urban I who baptized Cecilia's husband and his companions.
This fine late Baroque fresco almost makes me forgive Cardinal Acquaviva and Ferdinando Fuga's drastic alteration of this ancient church...almost.
1 comment:
I am definitely not using the caption option for pictures on Blogger anymore. What a Rubik's Cube of a mess!
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