Chiesa di San Sebastiano

The church of San Sebastiano was consecrated in 1633 for the Barnabite order. The church was designed by Giovanni Francesco Cantagallina. The last Barnabites left in 1867 and a few years later, in 1874, the church of San Sebastiano became a parish church.

About this building

Key Features

  • Architecture
  • Monuments

Visitors information

  • Bus stop within 100m
  • Car park at the building
  • Café within 500m

Other nearby buildings

Wikimedia Commons/Luca Aless

Livorno Synagogue

The Livorno Synagogue was built to a design by the architect Angelo Di Castro and completed in 1962 on the site of the 17th-century synagogue, which was partially destroyed during the Second World War. Together with Rome, Trieste and Genoa, it is one of the four great monumental synagogues of the twentieth century in Italy and the only one to have been built after the Second World War.

Wikimedia Commons/Lucarelli

Chiesa dei Santi Pietro e Paolo

Work on the Church of Saints Peter and Paul began in 1829 and was soon completed in a neo-Renaissance style. A few years later, the church was used to accommodate the patients of the cholera epidemic of 1835. Later, during the Second World War, the church was severely damaged by bombing and had to be restored.