Noto Cathedral

The Cathedral of Noto was built in the Sicilian Baroque style between the early 18th century and 1776. The cathedral collapsed in 1996 due to the fragility of its construction during the earthquake of 1990. It has since been rebuilt and reopened in 2007.

About this building

Key Features

  • Architecture

Visitors information

  • Café within 500m

Other nearby buildings

Wikimedia Commons/sailko

Chiesa dello Spirito Santo

The Church of the Holy Spirit was built during the Spanish rule of Sicily by the architect Pompeo Picherali in 1727. It stands on the site of a church dating from the fourth century. In the 14th century, a church of the Holy Spirit stood here but was destroyed by the earthquakes of 1542 and 1693.

Wikimedia Commons/Mboesch

Chiesa di San Martino

The church of San Martino dates back to the Norman period (1091-1194) and much of the structure has been preserved from this period. The architecture of the apse and the columns surrounding it are even older, probably dating from the sixth century AD, and other elements such as the rose window and the entrance portal date from 1300 - 1400.

Par pjt56 --- — Travail personnel, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=21935593

Cathedral of Syracuse

The Cathedral of the Nativity of Mary Most Holy, built in the 7th century, is incorporated in what was the main sacred temple of Doric style of the Greek colony of Syracuse, dedicated to Athena. After being damaged during the earthquake in Sicily in 1693, it was restored in a rococo style in the 18th century. Since 2005, the cathedral is protected by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site.