Susa Cathedral
Susa Cathedral, founded in the 11th century, was a Benedictine abbey until the 17th century. In 1027 Olderico Manfredi II, Marquis of Turin and Susa, founded a Benedictine abbey in Susa. During the Middle Ages, the cathedral was enlarged in two campaigns: the first took place in the 12th century and concerned the façade, which was extended to the walls; the second took place between the 14th and 15th centuries and concerned the apse: in fact, the three apses were rebuilt, as well as the sacristy. In the 17th and 18th centuries, the church was restored with the addition of Baroque decorations. In 1772, when Susa became the seat of the bishop, the church, now deprived of its monastic functions due to the closure of the adjacent Benedictine monastery, was raised to the rank of cathedral. Most of the Baroque additions were removed during the 19th-century renovations, giving the interior of the church a neo-Romanesque appearance.