BASILICA OF SAINT ANTHONY - PADOVA
BASILICA OF SAINT MAY OF SALVATION - VENEZIA
THE CHARTERHOUSE - FIRENZE
POMPOSA
ABBEY
VALLOMBROSA
ABBEY
FONTE AVELLANA
BASILICA OF SAINT FRANCIS - ASSISI
THE SHRINE OF THE HOLY HOUSE - LORETO
FARFA
ABBEY
MONTECASSINO
FOSSANOVA
ABBEY
CASAMARI
ABBEY
TRINITA` DELLA CAVA
THE SANCTUARY OF MONTE SANT'ANGELO
PADRE PIO CHURCH - S. GIOVANNI ROTONDO
THE CHARTERHOUSE - PAVIA
The Charterhouse of Pavia (Certosa di Pavia) is a monastery complex in Lombardy, northern
Italy, situated 8 km north of Pavia. Built in 1396-1495, it was once located on the border of a large hunting
park belonging to the Visconti family of Milan, of which today only scattered parts remain. The Certosa is renowned
for the exuberance of its architecture, in both Gothic and Renaissance styles, and for its collection of artworks
which are particularly representative of the region. The church is built on a Latin cross plan with a nave, two
aisles and transept, typical of Gothic architecture. The chancel terminates with an apse. It is covered by crossed
vaults on Gothic arches and is inspired, on a reduced scale, by the Duomo of Milan. The vaults are alternatively
decorated with geometrical shapes and starry skies. The transept and the main chapel end with square-plan chapels
with smaller, semi-circular apses on three sides. The Certosa has painted masterpieces by Bergognone including
the panels of St. Ambrose and San Siro and, most significantly, the Crucifixion. Other paintings in the church
include a Holy Father and panels by Perugino, Morazzone, Guercino, Francesco Cairo and Daniele Crespi.
www.comune.pv.it/certosadipavia
BASILICA OF SAINT ANTHONY - PADOVA
The Basilica of Saint Anthony of Padua (Sant'Antonio da Padova) is the largest church in
Padua. Construction of the Basilica probably began around 1235, nineteen years after the death of St. Anthony.
It was completed in 1301 although several structural modifications took place between the end of the 14th
and the mid 15th century. The Saint, according to his will, had been buried in
the small church of Santa Maria Mater Domini, probably dating from the late 12th century
and near which a convent was founded by him in 1229. This church was incorporated into the present basilica as
the Cappella della Madonna Mora (Chapel of the Dark Madonna). Saint Anthony is a giant edifice without a precise
architectural style. Over the centuries, it has grown under a variety of different influences as shown by the exterior
details. The new basilica was begun as a single-naved church, with an apsidal chancel, broad transepts and two
square nave bays roofed with hemispherical domes. The style was Romanesque. Later in the 13th century, the aisles
were added in a more Gothic style, the length of each nave bay being divided into two aisle bays with arches and
vaults. The interior of the church contains numerous funerary monuments, some of noteworthy artistic value. The
Chapel of the Holy Sacrament (Cappella del Santissimo Sacramento) with its broad bands of polychrome and carved
Gothic details has had many stages of decoration
www.basilicadelsanto.org
BASILICA OF SAINT MARY OF SALVATION - VENEZIA
The Basilica of St Mary of Salvation (Basilica di Santa
Maria della Salute), commonly known simply as the Salute, is a famous church in Venice, placed scenically at a
narrow fin
ger of land
which lies between the Grand Canal and the Bacino di San Marco on the lagoon. The Salute is a vast, octagonal building
built on a platform made of 100,000 wooden piles. The interior has its architectural elements demarcated by the
coloration of the material, and the central nave with its ring of saints atop a balustrade is a novel design. It
is full of Marian symbolism the great dome represents her crown, the cavernous interior her womb, the eight sides
the eight points on her symbolic star. The dome of the Salute was an important addition to the Venice skyline,
and became emblematic of the city, just as the domes of the Cathedral in Florence and St. Peter's in Rome were
for their respective cities. The Baroque high altar arrangement shelters an iconic Byzantine Madonna and Child
of the 12th or 13th century. The most represented artist included in the church is Titian, who painted St Mark
enthroned with saints Cosmas, Damian, Sebastian and Roch, the altarpiece of the sacristy, as well as ceiling paintings
of David and Goliath, Abraham and Isaac and Cain and Abel.
www.sacred-destinations.com
THE CHARTERHOUSE - FIRENZE
The Charterhouse of Florence
(Certosa di Firenze o Certosa del Galluzzo) is situated on a hillside just south of Florence.
Niccolò Acciaiuoli, one of the most powerful Florence citizens of 14th century, built it in 1341 not only
as a religious centre but also for the education of the young. The Church of Saint Lawrence is Mannerist in architectural
style and filled with frescoes and pictures, a sumptuous marble altar of the 16th century and a crypt containing
many tombs. It gives access to the beautiful Renaissance cloister with its large terracotta well by Andrea and
Giovanni della Robbia. The monks' cells open onto this cloister, and those which are open to the public give an
idea of Carthusian monastic life. Each consists of a room for sleeping and a room for praying. Their furnishings
are severe but each has a tiny enclosed garden which was cultivated individually by the inhabitant. In addition
to the large cloister, the small cloister of Conversi (Chiostro dei Conversi) is open to the public. This gives
access to the refectory which is decorated with a pulpit from which lessons were read during meals. In 1957, a
small group of Cistercian friars replaced the Carthusian monks as the inhabitants of the Certosa. They are largely
self-supporting and maintain their old traditions such as the distillation of herb liqueurs and the manufacture
of small handmade religious articles.
www.abbeys-of-tuscany.com/certosa_galluzzo.htm
VALLOMBROSA
ABBEY
Vallombrosa is a Benedictine abbey in the comune of Reggello (Tuscany), 30 km south-east
of Florence. It was founded by Giovanni Gualberto, a Florentine noble, in 1038. It was extended around 1450, reaching
its current aspect at the end of the 15th century. Soon, the Vallombrosa abbey began benefiting from bequests and
donations enriching its patrimony remarkably and rapidly developed into an authentic rural seignior.
Even if Florence annexed the monastery in 1280, it kept its autonomy and its own statute. In the XIII century,
the abbot of Vallombrosa also became the Count of Magnale with the task to nominate his vicar to administer justice
within the jurisdiction of the monastery. By 1377, the properties of the Vallombrosani included more than sixty
holdings and plots of ground and a real community with more than 120 people had developed inside the convent. The
monastery has its own business life based on timber trade and livestock farming. In the XVI century, the rich and
powerful convent of Vallombrosa caught the attention of the Spanish troops during their presence in Tuscany. In
the second half of the XVI century, the abbey started to thrive again and it was also restored. The congregation
of the Vallombrosiani was suppressed in the Napoleonic age, when the French emperor initiated his fight against
the religious brotherhoods, but it recuperated its properties in 1818. Later on, after the Unity of Italy, a second
abolition of all the orders was settled. In 1866., the friars were obliged to abandon the complex again. They returned
here in 1949, only, and took back the forest area that had thriven thanks to a huge forestation works since 1963.
Today, the monastery is open for tourists and is selling local produce.
www.monaci.org
FONTE AVELLANA
The monastery of Fonte Avellana is situated on Mount Catria, in the Apennine mountains, in
the region of Marche. Its beauty
is
derived as much from the intentional poverty of the architecture as the magnificence of its proportions and the
extraordinary size of the entire complex. It was founded in 980. Dante stayed here in 1318 and described the hermitage
in Canto XXI of Paradise in "The Divine Comedy". The spiritual life of the hermits was certainly influenced
by Saint Romuald of Ravenna, the father of the Congregation of the Camaldolese Monks of the Order of Saint Benedict.
The development of Fonte Avellana started with Saint Peter Damianus. Not only did his strong personality shape
the original nucleus of the hermitage. Even more, it was because of his spiritual, cultural and organizing impulse
that the hermitage became a centre of attraction and for spreading the monastic life and exerted a great influence
in religious reformation and in social life. The monastery itself conserves an extraordinary scriptorium which
was built projecting out of the side of the monastery, facing due south. Tall single light windows on each side
are ingeniously arranged in such a way as to allow the maximum amount of light into the room for the greatest part
of the day.
www.fonteavellana.it
BASILICA OF SAINT FRANCIS - ASSISI

The Papal Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi (Basilica Papale
di San Francesco d'Assisi) is the mother church of the Roman Catholic Order of Friars Minor, commonly known as
the Franciscan Order. The basilica is one of the most important places of Christian pilgrimage in Italy. It was
begun in 1228 and it was built into the side of a hill and comprises two churches known as the Upper Church and
the Lower Church, and a crypt where the remains of the saint are interred. With its accompanying friary, the basilica
is a distinctive landmark to those approaching Assisi. It is an UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2000. The interior
of the Upper Church is important as an early example of the Gothic style in Italy. The Upper and Lower Churches
are decorated with frescoes by numerous late medieval painters from the Roman and Tuscan schools, and include works
by Cimabue, Giotto, Simone Martini and Pietro Lorenzetti. The range and quality of the works gives the basilica
an unique importance in demonstrating the development of Italian art of this period. The architecture is a synthesis
of the Romanesque and Gothic styles, and established many of the typical characteristics of Italian Gothic architecture.
As originally built, both upper and lower churches had a simple cruciform plan, a square crossing, a transept that
projected by half a bay one each side, and an apse, the lower being semicircular and the upper polygonal. To the
left of the church stands a free-standing bell tower of Romanesque design.
www.assisionline.com
THE SHRINE OF THE HOLY HOUSE - LORETO
The Shrine of the Holy House (Basilica della Santa Casa) is a late gothic structure. The
façade of the church was erected under Sixtus V, who fortified Loreto and gave it the privileges of
a town (1586). The interior of the church has mosaics by Domenichino and Guido Reni and other works of art, including
statues by Raffaello da Montelupo. In the sacristies on each side of the right transept are frescoes and fine intarsias.
The basilica as a whole is thus a collaborative masterpiece by generations of architects and artists. The main
attraction of Loreto is the Holy House, a well-known Catholic place of pilgrimage since at least the 14th century
and a popular tourist destination for non-Catholics as well. It is a plain stone building; the niche contains a
small black image of the Virgin and Child, in Lebanon cedar, and richly adorned with jewels. The statue was commissioned
after a fire in the Casa Santa in 1921, and was crowned in the Vatican in 1922 by Pope Pius XI. Around the house
is a tall marble screen designed by Bramante. The four sides represent the Annunciation, the Nativity, the Arrival
of the Santa Casa at Loreto and the Nativity of the Virgin, respectively. The treasury contains a large variety
of rich and curious votive offerings.
www.santuarioloreto.it
FARFA ABBEY
Farfa Abbey is a territorial abbey in northern Lazio, central
Italy. It is one of the most famous
abbeys
of Italy and Europe. It belongs to the Benedictine Order and is located about 60 km from Rome, in the commune
of Fara Sabina. Archeological discoveries in 1888 seem to prove that the first monastic establishment was built
on the ruins of a pagan temple. This first monastery was devastated by the Vandals in the 5th century. The "Constructio
Monasterii Farfensis", a writing which dates probably from 857, relates at length the story of its principal
founder Thomas of Maurienne. Farfa was the most important monastery in Italy both from the point of view of worldly
possession and ecclesiastical dignity. It had one large basilican church and five smaller ones, rich in masterpieces
of religious orfèverie. Between 930 and 936, it was rebuilt by Abbot Ratfredus. Berard, abbot from 1049
to 1089, made the abbey a great seat of intellectual activity. The Cathedral has a huge Romanesque gate, with magnificent
floral freizes. The interior has three naves middle one surmounted with a lunette representing the Virgin and the
Child. The Renaissance hall has several chapel: in the Curcifix Chapel is housed the most venerated image of Farfa.
The interior wall of the façade has a fresco depicting the Last Judgment (1571).
www.abbaziadifarfa.it/
MONTECASSINO ABBEY
Montecassino is a monastery complex near Rome. It was the site of Battle of Monte Cassino
in 1944. The site has been visited many times by the Popes and other senior clergy, including a visit by Pope Benedict
XVI in May 2009. The monastery was constructed on an older pagan site and enclosed by a fortifying wall. St. Benedict
of Norcia established here the Benedictine Order around 529. At Monte Cassino he wrote the Benedictine Rule that
became the founding principle for western monasticism. Monte Cassino became a model for future developments but
unfortunately its protected site has always made it an object of strategic importance. It was sacked or destroyed
a number of times. It was rebuilt and reached the apex of its fame in the 11th century. The number of monks rose
to over two hundred, and the library, the manuscripts produced in the scriptorium and the school of manuscript
illuminators became famous throughout the West. The buildings of the monastery were reconstructed on a scale of
great magnificence, artists being brought from Amalfi, Lombardy, and even Constantinople to supervise the various
works. An earthquake damaged the Abbey in 1349, and although the site was rebuilt it marked the beginning of a
long period of decline. The archives, besides a vast number of documents relating to the history of the abbey,
contained some 1400 irreplaceable manuscript codices, chiefly patristic and historical.
www.montecassino.it
FOSSANOVA
ABBEY
Fossanova Abbey is a Cistercian monastery, 100 kilometers south-east of Rome. It is the finest
example of a Cistercian abbey in Gothic style. The church (1187-1208) is closely similar to that of Casamari. The
history of Fossanova dates back to the time of the Roman Empire. An ancient Roman villa, whose remains can still
be seen today, was largely used by the Benedictine monks to build the first Romanesque construction. It was later
enlarged by the Cistercian monks who settled in Fossanova around 1135 A. C. turning the complex into a vital center
from the spiritual, as well as cultural and artistic, point of view. The fame of the abbey was fostered by renowned
guests, such as Pope Innocent III and St. Thomas Aquinas. The Friars Minor Conventual have been in charge of the
abbey since 1932. The Franciscans have a busy agenda. Besides the daily care of the rooms of the complex and the
reception of a large number of pilgrims, they are committed to pastoral activity, especially through the administration
of sacraments - the celebration of Sunday Holy masses, with a special attention to liturgy and preaching; a considerable
number of baptisms, confirmations and weddings; confessions and spiritual retreats for small, organized groups.
Artistic and cultural events often take place in the abbey and the Franciscans take an active role in their management,
in collaboration with the Monuments and Fine Arts Office of Lazio Region. The ancient mixture of faith, culture
and history make the abbey of Fossanova a charming place where everybody, absorbed in the harmony of spirit, art
and tradition, can find a rest and distraction from the hectic pace of modern life.
www.fossanova.ofmconv.pl
CASAMARI
ABBEY
The
Abbey of Casamari is a Cistercian abbey in the province of Frosinone, in the region of
Lazio. It is named for the "house of Marius." Caius Marius was consul of Rome a record number of seven
times. A Benedictine monastery was established on the site in the early 11th century and briefly flourished before
falling into decline in the 12th century. The Cistercians completely rebuilt the Benedictine buildings between
1203 and 1217, designing a new abbey church and monastery based on the standard Cistercian pattern. Fortunately,
most of the abbey's architecture and monks survived the many hardships of the centuries, including a siege by Muzio
Attendolo Sforza in 1417. The abbey was extensively restored in the 1950s. Today, the beautiful Abbey of Casamari
still houses a Cistercian community. The Abbey of Casamari is built in the austere Cistercian style, specifically
designed to avoid distraction and ostentation. The abbey is a beautiful sight, with delicate columns, vaulted ceilings,
small stained-glass windows, and a lovely cloistered courtyard. The spiritual life of the monks of Casamari centers
on common prayer and visitors can enjoy their Gregorian chant throughout the week. The other main focus of the
monks is work, by which they earn a living for themselves and for the poor and missions. There is a small museum
and bookshop at the abbey, and accommodation for guests is provided.
www.casamari.it
TRINITA' DELLA CAVA ABBEY
The Trinità della Cava (commonly known as Badia
di Cava) is a Benedictine
abbey
located near Cava de' Tirreni, in the Province of Salerno. It stands in a gorge of the Finestre Hills. It was founded
in 1025 by a noble of Salerno who became a Cluniac monk and had lived as a hermit in the vicinity since 1011. Pope
Urban II endowed this monastery with many privileges, making it immediately subject to the Holy See, with jurisdiction
over the surrounding territory. In 1394 Pope Boniface IX elevated it to a diocese, with the abbot functioning as
bishops. In 1513 the Cluniacs were replaced by Cassinese monks. The monastery was closed under Napoleon but the
community remained relatively unscathed, thanks to abbot Carlo Mazzacane, and was restored after his fall. The
abbey still provides the surrounding parishes with clergy. The church and the greater part of the buildings were
entirely modernized in 1796. The old Gothic cloisters are preserved. The church contains a fine organ and several
ancient sarcophagi. The monastery contains rich archives of public and private documents, which date back to the
8th century, and fine incunabula. The monastery later became the seat of a national educational establishment,
under the care of the Benedictines.
www.cavaturismo.sa.it
THE SANCTUARY OF MONTE SANT'ANGELO
The Sa
nctuary of Monte Sant'Angelo, sometimes called simply Monte Gargano, is the
oldest shrine in Western Europe dedicated to the archangel Michael. It is located on Mount Gargano in the province
of Foggia, northern Apulia. The historic site and its environs are protected by the Parco Nazionale del Gargano.
The complex of buildings consists of the Battistero di San Giovanni in Tumba, damaged in 1942, and the Church of
Santa Maria Maggiore. The massive, octagonal campanile was built in the late 13th century by Emperor Frederick
II of Sicily as a watchtower. It was turned into a bell tower. Behind a forecourt the sanctuary presents a portico
of two Gothic arches, the right one of 1395 by the local architect Simone, the left one a reconstruction of 1865.
From the portico steps lead down to the low arched nave. The cavern can be accessed from a Romanesque portal, called
the Portale del Toro ("Gate of the Bull"): the doors, in bronze, were made in Constantinople in 1076,
the donation of an Amalfitan noble. They are divided in 24 panels portraying episodes of angels from the Old and
New Testaments. The archaic cavern opening to the left, with its holy well, is full of votive offerings, especially
the 12th century marble bishop's throne supported on crouching lions. Among the ex voto objects is a statue of
the Archangel by Andrea Sansovino. During centuries, millions of pilgrims went to Monte Sant'Angelo in order to
visit the Celestial Basilica . Among the pilgrims who visited the Saint Michael Archangel Sanctuary were many popes,
saints, emperors, kings and princes. Also Francis of Assisi went to visit the Sanctuary.
www.santuariosanmichele.it
PADRE PIO CHURCH
The Padre Pio Pilgrimage Church is a church in San Giovanni
Rotondo, owned by the Ordine dei Frati Minori Cappuccini of Foggia. Built in devotion to Saint Pio of Pi
etrelcina, it can accommodate 6,500 people seated at worship,
with standing room for 30,000 people outside. The Genoan architect Renzo Piano designed the church. It is located
in front of Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza, a big Italian Hospital and Research Center, founded by Saint Pio of
Pietrelcina. The shrine also includes a modern Way of the Cross (Via Crucis) on the forested hillside above, regular
processions, and an English-speaking pilgrim's office. The materials, selected to express simplicity and solidity,
are local stone, wood and glass. The immense roof skin is finished in pre-patinated copper with a supporting structure
of wood and limestone. The supporting structure consists of two intermeshing rows of Apricena stone arches arranged
in a circle, a total of 21, that form an inner and an outer. The arches of the inner ring originate in the center
of the three-quarter circle, where the altar is located. The radial structure brings the assembly as close as possible
to the altar. The cost of the building, which took 10 years to design and build, has been met entirely by contributions
from the faithful.
www.padrepio.it
POMPOSA ABBEY
P
omposa Abbey is a Benedictine monastery near Ferrara in the region of Emilia Romagna. It
was one of the most important abbey in northern Italy. The buildings are Romanesque. News of a Benedictine abbey
at this site dates from the 9th century, but the settlement was probably two centuries earlier. Until the 14th
century the abbey had possessions in the whole of Italy, but later declined due to impoverishment of the neighboring
area and the presence of malaria. It played an important role in the culture of Italy thanks to the work of its
scribe monks. In the 19th century the abbey was acquired by the Italian government. The church architecture shares
the features of the late basilicas of Ravenna, and it is the result of several additions and transformations. It
is dedicated to Saint Mary, consists of a nave and two aisles and contains a good mosaic pavement and interesting
frescoes by Vitale da Bologna. The bell tower (1063), standing at 48 m, is one of the finest bell towers from the
Romanesque period. Notable is also the Palazzo della Ragione. The abbey is certainly one of the most important
historical places, and one of the most suggestive locations in the whole province: once an island surrounded by
the waters of the Adriatic sea, the Po di Volano and the Po di Goro rivers, today it is an enchanting historical
and cultural site.
www.soprintendenzaravenna.beniculturali.it