Explore Religious Heritage Across Europe

Here you can search for a building to visit. You can use the map find destinations, or you can use the filters to search for a building based upon what different criteria.

Refine search

Basilica Saint-Andoche

Basilica Saint-Andoche

Saulieu, FR

Considered one of the most beautiful testimonies of Romanesque architecture in Burgundy, a recent renovation completed in 2007 highlights this jewel built in the 12th century on the ruins of an abbey founded in the 8th century to protect the relics of the martyrs Saint Andoche, Saint Thyrse and Saint Felix.

Basilica sanctuary of Santa Maria del Carmine Maggiore

Basilica sanctuary of Santa Maria del Carmine Maggiore

Napoli, IT

Santa Maria del Carmine Maggiore is one of the largest basilicas in Naples and a fine example of Neapolitan Baroque style. The church was founded in the 13th century by Carmelite friars who had been expelled from the Holy Land during the Crusades, and who probably arrived in the Bay of Naples on Amalfi ships. The present facade dates from 1766 and was designed by Giovanni del Gaizo to replace the old one, which had been ruined by lightning and above all by the earthquake of 1456. Although it was built at the same time as the church, the bell tower is first mentioned in 1439. It was damaged and rebuilt several times and took on its present appearance in the first half of the 17th century.

Basilica-sanctuary Madonna delle Lacrime

Basilica-sanctuary Madonna delle Lacrime

Siracusa, IT

The basilica-sanctuary Madonna delle Lacrime is a Marian sanctuary erected in memory of the miraculous tearing of a plaster effigy representing the Virgin Mary in 1953. The work was designed in 1957 by the French architects Michel Andrault and Pierre Parat following an international competition, but the structural works are by the engineer Riccardo Morandi. Built between 1966 and 1994, the church was elevated to the status of a minor basilica by John Paul II in 2002.

Basilica-santuario di Maria Santissima Annunziata

Basilica-santuario di Maria Santissima Annunziata

Trapani, IT

The Basilica-Sanctuary of Maria Santissima Annunziata, dating from the 13th century, is an important Marian shrine in western Sicily. On 20 November 1270, the church hosted for a few days the remains of Louis IX of France (1226-1270), who died in Tunis during the Eighth Crusade. The church was enlarged in the 18th century to its present form on a project by the Trapani architect Giovanni Biagio Amico.

Basiliek de Scherpenheuvel

Basiliek de Scherpenheuvel

Scherpenheuvel, BE

Reputedly the most visited shrine of pilgrimage in Belgium, this church was consecrated in 1627, and owes much of its beauty and status to the patronage of the Archdukes Albert and Isabela, and its role in the Counter-Reformation.

Mende Cathedral

Mende Cathedral

Mende , FR

The construction of the church was decided in 1360 and was fully completed in the 19th century. It stands above the tomb of Saint Privat. During the war of religion, following an unsuccessful blackmail on the population who had to pay 4,000 ecus, the cathedral was destroyed.

Immaculée-Conception Basilica, Boulogne sur Mer

Immaculée-Conception Basilica, Boulogne sur Mer

Boulogne-sur-Mer, FR

The present basilica, under the name of Notre-Dame, was built in the 19th century on the ruins of a medieval building. The building rests on one of the largest crypts in France (100 metres long and with a surface area of 1,400m²), which was laid out during the construction work on the foundations of the Romanesque crypt.

Notre-Dame Basilica, Alencon

Notre-Dame Basilica, Alencon

Alençon , FR

The construction of the church began in 1356 and was completed in the 16th century. A fire in the 18th century led to the reconstruction of the choir, the transept and the bell tower.

Basilique Notre-Dame de Gray

Gray, FR

The Notre-Dame de Gray basilica is the parish church of the town of Gray, in Franche-Comte. Attached to the diocese of Besancon, it is part of the parish of Notre-Dame de Gray. It was built in the 15th and 16th centuries, in a hybrid Gothic-Renaissance style, on the site of the first Notre-Dame church destroyed in 1477 during the War of the Burgundy Succession. Since 1641 it has housed the heart of Saint Pierre Fourier and since 1802 the miraculous statue of Notre-Dame de Gray. The possession of these two relics earned him the elevation to the title of minor basilica on July 16, 1948 by Pope Pius XII.

Be inspired