Churches of Rome Wiki
No edit summary
Tag: Visual edit
(9 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
 
{{Infobox church|
 
{{Infobox church|
   
name= |
+
name= Santa Maria in Publicolis|
   
image= |
+
image= Maria_in_Publicolis.jpg|
   
caption= |
+
caption= Exterior|
   
 
englishname= St Mary of the Publicoli|
 
englishname= St Mary of the Publicoli|
Line 26: Line 25:
 
consecrated= |
 
consecrated= |
   
architect= |
+
architect= Giovanni Antonio de Rossi|
   
 
artists= |
 
artists= |
   
address= Via dei Falegnami 23|
+
address= Via in Publicolis|
   
 
phone= |
 
phone= |
Line 40: Line 39:
 
url= |
 
url= |
   
}}'''Santa Maria in Publicolis '''is a Baroque church at Via dei Falegnami 23 on the Piazza Costaguti, south of the Largo di Torre Argentina. Picture of the church at Wikimedia Commons. [http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Santa_Maria_in_Publicolis_(Rome) [1]]
+
}}'''Santa Maria in Publicolis''' is a 17th century [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baroque Baroque] convent church with a postal address at Via dei Falegnami 23 in the [https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sant'Eustachio_(rione_di_Roma) rione Sant'Eustachio]. This is the convent side entrance. The church is round the corner on the Via in Publicolis, and facing onto the Piazza Costaguti, south of the Largo di Torre Argentina. Pictures of the church at Wikimedia Commons are [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Santa_Maria_in_Publicolis_(Rome) here]. ''(2014: The photo of the counterfaçade is not of this church.)''
  +
  +
The dedication is to the [[Blessed Virgin Mary]] under the aspect of her [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nativity_of_Mary Nativity].
   
It is occupied by the Missionaries of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, whose Generalate is at this address.
 
 
==History==
 
==History==
  +
===Origins===
The first mention of this church is in a papal bull of 1186, when it was called “de Publico”. The name changed as a result of patronage by the noble family of the Santacroce, who deluded themselves into claiming that they were lineal descendants of the ancient Roman clan of the Publicoli. They restored it in 1465, and completely rebuilt it in the Baroque style to a design by Giovanni Antonio de Rossi in 1643. The church was, in effect, their mausoleum. The congregation of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart, founded by St Cajetan Errico (Italian: Gaetano), established themselves next door after their papal approval in 1864, and the church has been their chapel since then.
 
  +
The first mention of this church is in the papal bull of 1186 issued by Pope [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Urban_III Urban III], listing the parish churches dependent on the basilica of [[San Lorenzo in Damaso]]. Here it is called ''Sanctae Mariae de Publico''.
The full dedication of the church is "Our Lady's Birthday".
 
  +
  +
The last word seems to refer to the public property (''publicum'') of the ancient Roman state, and it is thought that it might derive from the ''[https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porticus_Minucia Porticus Minucia] Frumentaria. ''This was a large colonnaded square or portico immediately to the east of the present Largo di Torre Argentina, and was a major centre for the distribution of the free wheat ration to the city's ordinary inhabitants.
  +
  +
The foundation of the church is unrecorded, but it would have been one of many small parish churches built in the city in the 10th or early 11th centuries.
  +
===Santacroce===
  +
The church was apparently restored in 1465 by one [http://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/andrea-santacroce/ Andrea Santacroce], a lawyer who attended the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Council_of_Florence Council of Florence].
  +
  +
The name changed as a result of patronage by the noble family of the [https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santacroce_(famiglia) Santacroce] to whom he belonged. They were listed as Roman nobility in a catalogue drawn up by Pope [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Innocent_IV Innocent IV] in the middle of the 13th century, where they were described as ''antiquissimi. ''However, they only became important as clients of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orsini_family Orsini] family in Rome in the next two centuries. 
  +
  +
They deluded themselves into claiming that they were lineal descendants of the ancient Roman consul called [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Publius_Valerius_Publicola Publius Valerius Publicola], and the first evidence of this is claimed to be an epitaph of 1471. Then they became parishioners in 1501, when Antonio Santacroce built a nearby ''palazzo ''in a rather old-fashioned style for the time. The first examples of the name ''Publicolis ''for the church occur later in that century.
  +
===Rebuilding===
  +
  +
In the early 17th century the church fell into disrepair, and so Cardinal [https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcello_Santacroce Marcello Santacroce] had it completely rebuilt it in the Baroque style to a design by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovan_Antonio_de'_Rossi Giovanni Antonio de' Rossi] in 1643.
  +
  +
The church became, in effect, the family mausoleum. In the 17th century the parish was noted as having just over a hundred families, which made it marginal -and so having a rich family to look after the church ensured its survival. 
  +
===Convent===
  +
The church remained parochial until a major re-ordering of the parishes of the ''Centro Storico ''took place'' ''in 1824, under the bull ''Super Universam ''issued by Pope [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Leo_XII Leo XII]. This suppressed the parish attached to the church.'' ''The latter was left without a function, but the Santacroce family continued to maintain it. It was put in the charge of a confraternity, the ''Arciconfraternità di Sant'Antonio di Padova, ''but they only stayed until 1856 when they moved to [[Santa Lucia alle Botteghe Oscure]].
  +
  +
However, in 1864 the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missionaries_of_the_Sacred_Hearts_of_Jesus_and_Mary Missionaries of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary], founded by St [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaetano_Errico Cajetan Errico] (Italian: ''Gaetano''), established themselves next door. The congregation was founded at [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secondigliano Secondigliano], now a suburb of Naples, in 1833 and received approval in 1846. The new convent was then turned into the Generalate or congregational headquarters.
  +
  +
Meanwhile, in 1867 the last of the Santacroce family, Antonio Publicolo Santacroce, died without male heirs. 
  +
  +
The church now functions as the convent chapel, and contains a venerated statue of the founder.
  +
 
==Exterior==
 
==Exterior==
  +
===Layout and fabric===
The church has a single nave without aisles. The three-storey frontage is vertically divided by a central half-width which is brought forward from the two quarter-widths on either side. The entrance door is crowned by a broken segmental pediment which is elevated above the lintel to make room for a fresco of Our Lady. On either side are two pillars with Ionic capitals decorated with swags and heads of putti, attached but in the round. The quarter-widths are bounded by pilasters with capitals in the same style, and these flank empty round-headed niches crowned by decorations including winged heads of putti protected by little gables. The pilasters nearer the door are hidden by the columns. Above is an entablature bearing an inscription giving the name and year of construction. The second storey has two pairs of Doric pilasters framing a large window with a broken triangular pediment, again raised above the lintel. This interrupts the thin architrave, above which is the third storey. This has a small window inserted into the top broken segmental pediment, which is supported by two stumpy pilasters with acanthus leaves, framed by incurving volutes topped by a pair of little porthole windows. At the top corners are two pelicans in piety (extracting blood from their breasts to feed their chicks), this being the emblem of the Santacroce family.
 
  +
The little church has a single nave of three bays without aisles, and with a pair of shallow side chapels off the central bay. The sanctuary forms a fourth bay.
   
  +
Apart from the façade, the fabric is invisible from the street because of neighbouring buildings. The nave has a pitched and tiled roof, which is hipped at the entrance end to stop it peeping over the façade. The sanctuary is incorporated in a convent block. 
[[File:Maria_in_Publicolis.jpg|thumb|Santa Maria in Publicolis, façade.]]
 
  +
  +
The campanile is a brick slab over the right hand sanctuary wall next to this block. It has a pair of round-headed apertures side by side, and an ogee curved top with a finial. It is invisible from the street.
  +
===Façade===
  +
  +
The three-storey façade is vertically divided into a central half-width, which is brought forward from the two quarter-widths on either side.
  +
  +
The single entrance door is crowned by a segmental pediment, which is elevated above the lintel on strapworks posts to make room for a fresco of Our Lady. This intrudes into the tympanum of the pediment via a broken cornice. The doorway is flanked by a pair of Ionic semi-columns with their capitals decorated with swags and heads of putti. The quarter-widths are bounded by pilasters with capitals in the same style, and these flank empty round-headed niches crowned by tablets featuring winged heads of putti protected by little gables. The pilasters nearer the door are half-hidden by the columns. The pilasters and columns support an entablature bearing an inscription giving the name and year of construction.
  +
  +
The second storey has two pairs of Doric pilasters framing a large window with a molded Baroque frame and a triangular pediment, again raised above the lintel on posts and with a broken cornice into which a scallop shell is intruded. The inner pair of pilasters is doubletted along the outer edges. The pilasters support a simple cornice (not an entablature), above which is the third storey. The window pediment interrupts the cornice
  +
  +
The low third storey has a crowning segmental pediment which is supported by a pair of posts with strapwork decoration. This pediment also has a broken cornice, and a window is fitted into the tympanum with its top matching the curve. The posts are flanked by a pair of small incurving double volutes topped by a pair of little oval porthole windows. At the top corners are plinths with two pelicans in piety (extracting blood from their breasts to feed their chicks), this allegedly being the emblem of the Santacroce family.
   
 
==Interior==
 
==Interior==
  +
The interior is chiefly notable for the Santacroce tombs, which are rich in polychrome marble decoration.
 
===External link===
+
===Layout ===
  +
[[File:Santa Maria in Publicolis floor plan.png|thumb|377x377px]]
[http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiesa_di_Santa_Maria_in_Publicolis Italian Wikipedia page]
 
  +
The little interior has had few changes since the 17th century. There is a small nave of three bays, with a pair of side chapels off the central bay. The sanctuary occupies a further bay.
 
The interior is chiefly notable for the Santacroce tombs, which are rich in polychrome marble decoration. These are in the sanctuary, and flanking the entrance.
  +
===Nave===
  +
The bays of the nave are divided by Corinthian pilasters, made to look as if they are revetted in red marble. The capitals are in white, with gilded highlights, and support an entablature that runs around the interior. This has a frieze with the same red marble effect.
  +
  +
The side chapels are entered through large arches with Doric imposts, the archivolts of which interrupt the architrave and frieze of the entablature. The other two bays of the nave have large rectangular niches with horizontal cornices, one on each side (a total of four).
  +
  +
The nave ceiling is in three parts. The near and far bays are barrel vaulted, with three octagonal panels each. The central bay is cross-vaulted, also with geometric panels and with a large lunette on each side. The left hand one contains a genuine window, but the right hand window is blocked by the convent building. The decoration is very simple, the geometric panels being picked out in a variety of pastel colours.
  +
  +
Over the entrance is the organ gallery, cantilevered out. The balustrade has an interesting ropework effect along its top.
  +
  +
The top right hand niche contains the sacristy entrance, and here is the tomb-slab of Angelo Tucci, a canon of St Peter's 1435.
  +
  +
The top left hand niche contains a 19th century painted wooden crucifix, with an interesting panoramic background intended to be Jerusalem at the time of the crucifixion.
  +
  +
There are some interesting tomb slabs in the floor. The one to Alfonso Santacroce, the restorer of the church, dates from 1472 and shows his effigy in shallow relief. Next to that is one to Clemenzia Santacroce, who was only 24 when she died in 1571. It has polychrome marble inlay.
  +
===Nave wall monuments===
  +
Two spectacular funerary monuments are over the nave side niches near the entrance. There has been some serious scholarship done on the artists responsible -suffice to point out here that Maini was not responsible for both monuments, as older publications allege.
  +
  +
The one on the left is to Antonio Publicola Santacroce (died 1707) and his wife, Girolama Naro. Their two half-length effigies are shown as if they were standing in a balcony with a draped cloth in black marble bearing the epitaph. He is looking towards the high altar in an attitude of supplication, while she is reading a book. Below the drape is a winged skull, and to the sides are a pair of putti (the right hand one is blowing his nose). There is an arched aedicule behind the figures, with a pair of Ionic columns and a scallop shell in the tympanum. This is flanked by a pair of Ionic pilasters, revetted in what looks like genuine ''verde antico''. The combined heraldry of husband and wife is in the crowning shield, which is joined to the pilaster capitals with festoons.
  +
  +
The busts, putti but not the skull are by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lorenzo_Ottoni Lorenzo Ottoni], and the overall design is ascribed to one Giovanni Francesco Zannoli.
  +
  +
The memorial on the right is to Scipione Publicola Santacroce, the son of the above couple, who died in 1747. This was designed and partly executed by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovanni_Battista_Maini Giovanni Battista Maini], but it is thought that the youthful [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tommaso_Righi Tommaso Righi] also participated (this was his first public commission).
  +
  +
The work shows a red marble plinth in the form of a truncated cone bearing the epitaph, on which is a medallion portrait of the deceased. This is accompanied by a pair of putti who are holding onto a length of draped cloth in white marble. 
  +
===Sanctuary===
  +
The sanctuary is entered through a semi-circular triumphal arch, the molded archivolt of which is fitted into the nave vault. It springs from a pair of posts in the entablature, themselves supported by two proud pilasters which have Composite capitals doubletted forwards (note the duplicated volutes).
  +
  +
The sanctuary vault is a little saucer cupola in pale blue, with a glory in the middle.
  +
  +
The altar aedicule is against the far wall. It has an oversized segmental pediment, supported by a pair of Corinthian columns with gilded capitals and ribbing.'' ''The altarpiece is ''The Nativity of Our Lady ''by [https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raffaello_Vanni Raffaello Vanni].
  +
  +
The wall above the aedicule has a monochrome depiction of ''The Exaltation of the Cross, ''and to the sides are little icons of ''The Sacred Heart of Jesus ''and ''The Immaculate Heart of Mary, ''installed by the brethren in honour of their charism.
  +
  +
The side walls have a matching pair of monuments of the Santacroce family. Each has four tondo portraits over four conjoined black marble epitaph tablets, with clergy on the left and laity on the right. The portraits are by [https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovanni_Francesco_Grimaldi Giovanni Francesco Grimaldi].
  +
===Side chapels===
  +
The two side chapels have similarly designed matching altar aedicules. The one on the left is dedicated to St [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helena_(empress) Helena the Empress], and the altarpiece by Raffaele Vanni shows her after the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/True_Cross True Cross] had been discovered.
  +
  +
The one on the left is dedicated to St [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_of_Assisi Francis of Assisi], and the altarpiece is by Grimaldi from an original by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annibale_Carracci Annibale Carracci]. Here are matching wall monuments to the last of the Santacroce, Antonio Publicola Santacroce 1867 and his Irish wife Catherine Scully 1864. They have cameo portrait medallions.
  +
==Access and liturgy==
  +
In 2009, the church was reported as open from 17:30 to 19:00 on weekdays, and 10:00 to 12:00 on Sundays.
  +
  +
Mass was being celebrated at 18:30 on weekdays, and 11:00 on Sundays.
  +
  +
The e-mail contact for the convent (according to its website) is
  +
  +
msscc.roma@libero.it
  +
  +
==External links==
  +
* [http://www.diocesidiroma.it/phpenti/ente/?ID=760 Official diocesan web-page]
 
* [http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiesa_di_Santa_Maria_in_Publicolis Italian Wikipedia page]
  +
* [http://nolli.uoregon.edu/map/index.html?xurl=46.565&yurl=30.476&surl=2000 Nolli map (look for 757)]
  +
* [https://www.flickr.com/photos/dealvariis/sets/72157621968464597 "De Alvariis" gallery on Flickr]
  +
* [http://www.romeartlover.it/Vasi29.html#Publicolis "Romeartlover" web-page]
  +
* [http://romafelix.com/smpubl.htm "Romafelix" web-page]
  +
* [http://romechurches.com/individual-churches/santa-maria-in-publicolis/ Photo of interior on romechurches.com]
  +
* [http://www.missionofsacredhearts.org/ Congregation's website] (English)
 
[[Category:Catholic churches]]
 
[[Category:Catholic churches]]
 
[[Category:Rione Sant'Eustachio]]
 
[[Category:Rione Sant'Eustachio]]

Revision as of 06:51, 19 June 2019

Santa Maria in Publicolis is a 17th century Baroque convent church with a postal address at Via dei Falegnami 23 in the rione Sant'Eustachio. This is the convent side entrance. The church is round the corner on the Via in Publicolis, and facing onto the Piazza Costaguti, south of the Largo di Torre Argentina. Pictures of the church at Wikimedia Commons are here(2014: The photo of the counterfaçade is not of this church.)

The dedication is to the Blessed Virgin Mary under the aspect of her Nativity.

History

Origins

The first mention of this church is in the papal bull of 1186 issued by Pope Urban III, listing the parish churches dependent on the basilica of San Lorenzo in Damaso. Here it is called Sanctae Mariae de Publico.

The last word seems to refer to the public property (publicum) of the ancient Roman state, and it is thought that it might derive from the Porticus Minucia Frumentaria. This was a large colonnaded square or portico immediately to the east of the present Largo di Torre Argentina, and was a major centre for the distribution of the free wheat ration to the city's ordinary inhabitants.

The foundation of the church is unrecorded, but it would have been one of many small parish churches built in the city in the 10th or early 11th centuries.

Santacroce

The church was apparently restored in 1465 by one Andrea Santacroce, a lawyer who attended the Council of Florence.

The name changed as a result of patronage by the noble family of the Santacroce to whom he belonged. They were listed as Roman nobility in a catalogue drawn up by Pope Innocent IV in the middle of the 13th century, where they were described as antiquissimi. However, they only became important as clients of the Orsini family in Rome in the next two centuries. 

They deluded themselves into claiming that they were lineal descendants of the ancient Roman consul called Publius Valerius Publicola, and the first evidence of this is claimed to be an epitaph of 1471. Then they became parishioners in 1501, when Antonio Santacroce built a nearby palazzo in a rather old-fashioned style for the time. The first examples of the name Publicolis for the church occur later in that century.

Rebuilding

In the early 17th century the church fell into disrepair, and so Cardinal Marcello Santacroce had it completely rebuilt it in the Baroque style to a design by Giovanni Antonio de' Rossi in 1643.

The church became, in effect, the family mausoleum. In the 17th century the parish was noted as having just over a hundred families, which made it marginal -and so having a rich family to look after the church ensured its survival. 

Convent

The church remained parochial until a major re-ordering of the parishes of the Centro Storico took place in 1824, under the bull Super Universam issued by Pope Leo XII. This suppressed the parish attached to the church. The latter was left without a function, but the Santacroce family continued to maintain it. It was put in the charge of a confraternity, the Arciconfraternità di Sant'Antonio di Padova, but they only stayed until 1856 when they moved to Santa Lucia alle Botteghe Oscure.

However, in 1864 the Missionaries of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, founded by St Cajetan Errico (Italian: Gaetano), established themselves next door. The congregation was founded at Secondigliano, now a suburb of Naples, in 1833 and received approval in 1846. The new convent was then turned into the Generalate or congregational headquarters.

Meanwhile, in 1867 the last of the Santacroce family, Antonio Publicolo Santacroce, died without male heirs. 

The church now functions as the convent chapel, and contains a venerated statue of the founder.

Exterior

Layout and fabric

The little church has a single nave of three bays without aisles, and with a pair of shallow side chapels off the central bay. The sanctuary forms a fourth bay.

Apart from the façade, the fabric is invisible from the street because of neighbouring buildings. The nave has a pitched and tiled roof, which is hipped at the entrance end to stop it peeping over the façade. The sanctuary is incorporated in a convent block. 

The campanile is a brick slab over the right hand sanctuary wall next to this block. It has a pair of round-headed apertures side by side, and an ogee curved top with a finial. It is invisible from the street.

Façade

The three-storey façade is vertically divided into a central half-width, which is brought forward from the two quarter-widths on either side.

The single entrance door is crowned by a segmental pediment, which is elevated above the lintel on strapworks posts to make room for a fresco of Our Lady. This intrudes into the tympanum of the pediment via a broken cornice. The doorway is flanked by a pair of Ionic semi-columns with their capitals decorated with swags and heads of putti. The quarter-widths are bounded by pilasters with capitals in the same style, and these flank empty round-headed niches crowned by tablets featuring winged heads of putti protected by little gables. The pilasters nearer the door are half-hidden by the columns. The pilasters and columns support an entablature bearing an inscription giving the name and year of construction.

The second storey has two pairs of Doric pilasters framing a large window with a molded Baroque frame and a triangular pediment, again raised above the lintel on posts and with a broken cornice into which a scallop shell is intruded. The inner pair of pilasters is doubletted along the outer edges. The pilasters support a simple cornice (not an entablature), above which is the third storey. The window pediment interrupts the cornice

The low third storey has a crowning segmental pediment which is supported by a pair of posts with strapwork decoration. This pediment also has a broken cornice, and a window is fitted into the tympanum with its top matching the curve. The posts are flanked by a pair of small incurving double volutes topped by a pair of little oval porthole windows. At the top corners are plinths with two pelicans in piety (extracting blood from their breasts to feed their chicks), this allegedly being the emblem of the Santacroce family.

Interior

Layout 

Santa Maria in Publicolis floor plan

The little interior has had few changes since the 17th century. There is a small nave of three bays, with a pair of side chapels off the central bay. The sanctuary occupies a further bay. The interior is chiefly notable for the Santacroce tombs, which are rich in polychrome marble decoration. These are in the sanctuary, and flanking the entrance.

Nave

The bays of the nave are divided by Corinthian pilasters, made to look as if they are revetted in red marble. The capitals are in white, with gilded highlights, and support an entablature that runs around the interior. This has a frieze with the same red marble effect.

The side chapels are entered through large arches with Doric imposts, the archivolts of which interrupt the architrave and frieze of the entablature. The other two bays of the nave have large rectangular niches with horizontal cornices, one on each side (a total of four).

The nave ceiling is in three parts. The near and far bays are barrel vaulted, with three octagonal panels each. The central bay is cross-vaulted, also with geometric panels and with a large lunette on each side. The left hand one contains a genuine window, but the right hand window is blocked by the convent building. The decoration is very simple, the geometric panels being picked out in a variety of pastel colours.

Over the entrance is the organ gallery, cantilevered out. The balustrade has an interesting ropework effect along its top.

The top right hand niche contains the sacristy entrance, and here is the tomb-slab of Angelo Tucci, a canon of St Peter's 1435.

The top left hand niche contains a 19th century painted wooden crucifix, with an interesting panoramic background intended to be Jerusalem at the time of the crucifixion.

There are some interesting tomb slabs in the floor. The one to Alfonso Santacroce, the restorer of the church, dates from 1472 and shows his effigy in shallow relief. Next to that is one to Clemenzia Santacroce, who was only 24 when she died in 1571. It has polychrome marble inlay.

Nave wall monuments

Two spectacular funerary monuments are over the nave side niches near the entrance. There has been some serious scholarship done on the artists responsible -suffice to point out here that Maini was not responsible for both monuments, as older publications allege.

The one on the left is to Antonio Publicola Santacroce (died 1707) and his wife, Girolama Naro. Their two half-length effigies are shown as if they were standing in a balcony with a draped cloth in black marble bearing the epitaph. He is looking towards the high altar in an attitude of supplication, while she is reading a book. Below the drape is a winged skull, and to the sides are a pair of putti (the right hand one is blowing his nose). There is an arched aedicule behind the figures, with a pair of Ionic columns and a scallop shell in the tympanum. This is flanked by a pair of Ionic pilasters, revetted in what looks like genuine verde antico. The combined heraldry of husband and wife is in the crowning shield, which is joined to the pilaster capitals with festoons.

The busts, putti but not the skull are by Lorenzo Ottoni, and the overall design is ascribed to one Giovanni Francesco Zannoli.

The memorial on the right is to Scipione Publicola Santacroce, the son of the above couple, who died in 1747. This was designed and partly executed by Giovanni Battista Maini, but it is thought that the youthful Tommaso Righi also participated (this was his first public commission).

The work shows a red marble plinth in the form of a truncated cone bearing the epitaph, on which is a medallion portrait of the deceased. This is accompanied by a pair of putti who are holding onto a length of draped cloth in white marble. 

Sanctuary

The sanctuary is entered through a semi-circular triumphal arch, the molded archivolt of which is fitted into the nave vault. It springs from a pair of posts in the entablature, themselves supported by two proud pilasters which have Composite capitals doubletted forwards (note the duplicated volutes).

The sanctuary vault is a little saucer cupola in pale blue, with a glory in the middle.

The altar aedicule is against the far wall. It has an oversized segmental pediment, supported by a pair of Corinthian columns with gilded capitals and ribbing. The altarpiece is The Nativity of Our Lady by Raffaello Vanni.

The wall above the aedicule has a monochrome depiction of The Exaltation of the Cross, and to the sides are little icons of The Sacred Heart of Jesus and The Immaculate Heart of Mary, installed by the brethren in honour of their charism.

The side walls have a matching pair of monuments of the Santacroce family. Each has four tondo portraits over four conjoined black marble epitaph tablets, with clergy on the left and laity on the right. The portraits are by Giovanni Francesco Grimaldi.

Side chapels

The two side chapels have similarly designed matching altar aedicules. The one on the left is dedicated to St Helena the Empress, and the altarpiece by Raffaele Vanni shows her after the True Cross had been discovered.

The one on the left is dedicated to St Francis of Assisi, and the altarpiece is by Grimaldi from an original by Annibale Carracci. Here are matching wall monuments to the last of the Santacroce, Antonio Publicola Santacroce 1867 and his Irish wife Catherine Scully 1864. They have cameo portrait medallions.

Access and liturgy

In 2009, the church was reported as open from 17:30 to 19:00 on weekdays, and 10:00 to 12:00 on Sundays.

Mass was being celebrated at 18:30 on weekdays, and 11:00 on Sundays.

The e-mail contact for the convent (according to its website) is

msscc.roma@libero.it

External links