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Chiesa della Pietà

Chiesa della Pietà

Venezia, IT

The church of the Pietà was built in its present form between 1745 and 1760 to a design by Giorgio Massari (1687-1766). However, the façade remained unfinished until the beginning of the 20th century: it was not until 1906 that the work was completed according to the original project, the only change being the upper ornamentation. The previous building, destroyed by the deterioration of time, was located on the right side of the present church.

Chiesa della Sacra Famiglia

Chiesa della Sacra Famiglia

Salerno, IT

The Sacra Famiglia church, built in 1971-1974, is the first religious building made entirely of reinforced concrete. The architect, Paolo Portoghesi, wanted to create a building that would express Christians concepts such as unity and centrality of the divine through the choice of curved shapes. The different colours of the windows symbolize the dialogue between the human nature and the divine nature. The tubular structures can be assimilated to lit flames that orient visitors upwards, where the circular openings invite direct contact with God.

Chiesa della Santissima Annunziata a Fonseca

Chiesa della Santissima Annunziata a Fonseca

Napoli, IT

The church of Santissima Annunziata a Fonseca was founded in 1620 by Cardinal Decio Carafa, then Archbishop of Naples, on land belonging to the noble Fonseca family, purchased in 1616. Enlarged in the 19th century, it was severely damaged by the bombings of the Second World War. In 2003, the church was renamed Santissima Annunziata and dedicated to Saint Jeanne Antida Thouret (1765-1826), a French saint who worked for the patients of the Incurables Hospital in Naples.

Chiesa della Santissima Annunziata dei Catalani

Chiesa della Santissima Annunziata dei Catalani

Messina, IT

The construction of the Annunziata dei Catalani began in the second half of the 11th century (apse, transept, dome) and was completed at the beginning of the following century (façade and porches) after an earthquake. It seems that the builders of the church incorporated elements (columns) from an ancient temple of Neptune into its construction. The church has a typical plan of late Norman architecture in Sicily.

Chiesa della Santissima Annunziata

Chiesa della Santissima Annunziata

Cefalù, IT

The church of the Santissima Annunziata was probably built around 1511 and was damaged in 1964 when the adjacent building collapsed. The façade has a large rose window, which surmounts the portal carved with a relief of the "Annunciation". The portal was dismantled and reassembled at a lower level in the second half of the 19th century when the street level was lowered, which also led to the creation of two internal stairways. The bell tower, which is not very high, flanks the façade and has a mullioned window.

Chiesa della Santissima Annunziata

Chiesa della Santissima Annunziata

Sala Consilina, IT

The church of the Santissima Annunziata was founded in 1330, with the permission of the bishop of Capaccio, Filippo Santomagno. About a century after its foundation, in 1451, the church was given to the Order of the Crucifera. In 1653, the parish of St. Nicholas of Bari was founded. Due to the earthquake of 16 December 1857, which had compromised the construction of the parish church of St. Nicholas, in 1859 Bishop Domenico Fanelli ordered the transfer of the title of the parish from St. Nicholas to the Santissima Annunziata.

Chiesa della Santissima Trinità

Chiesa della Santissima Trinità

Brindisi, IT

The Church of the Holy Trinity, or St Lucy, was built from the 13th century onwards where a women's monastery had been established. The church has a gabled façade on the outside; inside, it was once entirely frescoed and still has interesting remains of wall paintings from the 13th and 14th centuries. The crypt, which dates from the early 13th century, is divided into three naves on four columns with beautiful Corinthian capitals.

Chiesa della Santissima Trinità

Chiesa della Santissima Trinità

Lucca, IT

The Church of the Holy Trinity was completed in 1595, has a single room covered by a barrel vault and the façade is characterised by elements borrowed from Bartolomeo Ammannati (1511-1592). The building is also directly connected to the entrance portal of Villa Buonvisi, which faces outwards.

Chiesa della Santissima Trinità

Chiesa della Santissima Trinità

Pordenone, IT

The Church of the Holy Trinity, commonly called the Santissima, was built between 1526 and 1539 by the architect and priest Ippolito Morone. The church has an original octagonal plan, concluded by a pyramidal roof, while the interior is circular.

Chiesa delle Anime del Purgatorio

Chiesa delle Anime del Purgatorio

Trapani, IT

The Church of the Souls in Purgatory was built from 1688 onwards to a design by Don Pietro Castro, while the façade, dating from 1712, is the work of the Trapani architect Giovanni Biagio Amico, who is buried in the church. Damaged by the bombings of the Second World War, it was only reopened for worship in 1962.

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