Santa Maria di Collemaggio, L'Aquila, Italy

History

After one more year the church was opened, though still unfinished, and on 29 August 1294, when Peter was crowned Pope there, it had been probably completed along with the attached monastery. In the following century the Holy Door, which has become a part of the whole ritual of the annual Perdonanza, was opened in the left side of the church. In the lunette, beneath a stone eagle, there is a fine, recently-restored fresco showing the Virgin with Child, St. John the Baptist and St. Peter Celestine, the three key figures connected to the church and the Perdonanza.
Works on the church went on for over a century, which is why so many different styles are present. The original austerity soon gave way to complex additions in the form of sculptures, frescoes and ornaments, especially after the hermit pope was made a saint under the name of Saint Peter Celestine (1313), his relics were brought to the church (1327) and pilgrims from all over Christianity came for the annual Perdonanza. For a long time the church was isolated from the city and the Colle di Maggio could be reached only getting out of L'Aquila through a door in the city walls, the Porta di Bazzano. Only in 1854, after filling the valley between the two hills with material discarded from the construction of the new theatre of St. Ferdinando, a direct link (nowadays called Viale di Collemaggio) between the city and the church was begun, to be finally completed in the 1930's.
The Outside

The Facade

The Inside

At the far end of the right aisle there's the tomb of St. Peter Celestine, whose mausoleum, paid for by the guild of wool workers in 1517, is the work of Girolamo da Vicenza. The relics were placed into silver urns: a first urn was stolen by the Prince of Orange in 1530, and a second by the French in 1646. The present urn was made at the end of the Second World War by Aquilan goldsmith Luigi Cardilli. In the transept there are two Baroque altarpieces; the right one shows a fine Virgin statue of the XIV century, probably by Silvestro dell'Aquila, a pupil of Donatello's.
In the wall of the right aisle there are niches with XIV-XV century frescoes by an anonymous local artist, showing scenes of the Virgin's life: the Virgin Mary between St. Agnes and St. Apollonia, and a Dormitio Virginis with Incoronation. Near the transept there is a Crucifixion which a small St. Julian, the warrior saint specially worshipped in L'Aquila In the wall of the left aisle there is a niche of the early XVI century showing a Virgin with Child and Saints. The Basilica is also enriched with 14 17th century paintings by monk Karl Ruther from Danzig, showing episodes from St.Peter Celestine's life.
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