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Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls

The Papal Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls (Italian: Basilica Papale di San Paolo fuori le Mura) is one of Rome's four major papal basilicas,[a] along with the basilicas of Saint John in the Lateran, Saint Peter's, and Saint Mary Major, as well as one of the Seven Pilgrim Churches of Rome.

Basilica of Saint Paul
Outside the Walls
Papal Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls
  • Basilica Papale di San Paolo fuori le Mura (Italian)
  • Basilica Sancti Pauli extra mœnia (Latin)
The statue of Saint Paul in front of the portico
Click on the map for a fullscreen view
41°51′31″N 12°28′36″E / 41.8587°N 12.4767°E / 41.8587; 12.4767
LocationPiazzale San Paolo, Rome
CountryItaly
DenominationCatholic Church
TraditionLatin Church
WebsiteBasilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls
History
StatusPapal major basilica
DedicationPaul the Apostle
ConsecratedAD 4th century
Relics heldSaint Paul
Architecture
Architect(s)Luigi Poletti (reconstruction)
Architectural typeChurch
StyleNeoclassical
GroundbreakingAD 4th century
Completed1840 (1840)
Specifications
Length150 metres (490 ft)
Width80 metres (260 ft)
Nave width30 metres (98 ft)
Height73 metres (240 ft)
Administration
DioceseRome
Clergy
ArchpriestJames Michael Harvey
Official nameHistoric Centre of Rome, the Properties of the Holy See in that City Enjoying Extraterritorial Rights and San Paolo Fuori le Mura
TypeCultural
Criteriai, ii, iii, iv, vi
Designated1980 (4th session)
Reference no.91
RegionEurope and North America

The Basilica is within Italian territory, but the Holy See owns the Basilica in a regime of extraterritoriality, with Italy recognizing its full ownership and conceding it "the immunity granted by international law to the headquarters of the diplomatic agents of foreign States".[1][2][3]

Plaque on an external wall of the building indicating its extraterritorial status.

James Michael Cardinal Harvey was named Archpriest of the basilica in 2012.

History edit

The basilica was founded by the Roman Emperor Constantine I over the burial place of Paul of Tarsus, where it was said that, after the apostle's execution, his followers erected a memorial, called a cella memoriae. This first basilica was consecrated by Pope Sylvester in 324.[4]

In 386, Emperor Theodosius I began erecting a much larger and more beautiful basilica with a nave and four aisles with a transept. It was probably consecrated around 402 by Pope Innocent I. The work, including the mosaics, was not completed until Leo I's pontificate (440–461). In the 5th century, it was larger than the Old Saint Peter's Basilica. The Christian poet Prudentius, who saw it at the time of emperor Honorius (395–423), describes the splendours of the monument in a few expressive lines.

Under Leo I, extensive repair work was carried out following the collapse of the roof on account of fire or lightning. In particular, the transept (i.e. the area around Paul's tomb) was elevated and a new main altar and presbytery were installed. This was probably the first time that an altar was placed over the tomb of Saint Paul, which remained untouched, but largely underground given Leo's newly elevated floor levels. Leo was also responsible for fixing the triumphal arch and for restoring a fountain in the courtyard (atrium).

Under Pope Gregory the Great (590–604), the main altar and presbytery were extensively modified. The pavement in the transept was raised and a new altar was placed above the earlier altar erected by Leo I. The position was directly over Saint Paul's sarcophagus.

In that period, there were two monasteries near the basilica: Saint Aristus's for men and Saint Stefano's for women. Masses were celebrated by a special body of clerics instituted by Pope Simplicius. Over time, the monasteries and the basilica's clergy declined; Pope Gregory II restored the former and entrusted the monks with the basilica's care.

The basilica was damaged in an earthquake on 29 April 801. Its roof collapsed, but was rebuilt by Leo III.

As it lay outside the Aurelian Walls, the basilica was damaged in the 9th century during a Saracen raid. Consequently, Pope John VIII (872–882) fortified the basilica, the monastery, and the dwellings of the peasantry,[5] forming the town of Johannispolis (Italian: Giovannipoli) which existed until 1348, when an earthquake totally destroyed it.

In 937, when Odo of Cluny came to Rome, Alberic II of Spoleto, Patrician of Rome, entrusted the monastery and basilica to his congregation and Odo placed Balduino of Monte Cassino in charge. Pope Gregory VII was abbot of the monastery and in his time Pantaleone, a rich merchant of Amalfi who lived in Constantinople, presented the bronze doors of the basilica maior, which were executed by Constantinopolitan artists; the doors are inscribed with Pantaleone's prayer that the "doors of life" may be opened to him.[6] Pope Martin V entrusted it to the monks of the Congregation of Monte Cassino. It was then made an abbey nullius. The abbot's jurisdiction extended over the districts of Civitella San Paolo, Leprignano, and Nazzano, all of which formed parishes.

 
Cloister of the monastery of San Paolo fuori le mura

The graceful cloister of the monastery was erected between 1220 and 1241.

From 1215 until 1964, it was the seat of the Latin Patriarch of Alexandria.

Pope Benedict XIV undertook the restoration of the apse mosaic and the frescoes of the central nave, and commissioned the painter Salvatore Manosilio to continue the series of papal portraits, which at that time ended with Pope Vitalian, who had reigned over a millennium earlier.[7]

On 15 July 1823, a workman repairing the copper gutters of the roof started a fire that led to the near-total destruction of this basilica, which, alone among all the churches of Rome, had preserved much of its original character for 1435 years.[4] Marble salvaged from the burnt-out Saint Paul's was re-laid for the floor of Santo Stefano del Cacco.[8]

In 1825, Leo XII issued the encyclical Ad plurimas encouraging donations for the reconstruction. A few months later, he issued orders that the basilica be rebuilt exactly as it had been when new in the fourth century, though he also stipulated that precious elements from later periods, such as the medieval mosaics and tabernacle, also be repaired and retained. These guidelines proved unrealistic for a variety of reasons and soon ceased to be enforced. The result is a reconstructed basilica that bears only a general resemblance to the original and is by no means identical to it. The reconstruction was initially entrusted to the architect Pasquale Belli, who was succeeded upon his death in 1833 by Luigi Poletti,[9] who supervised the project until his death in 1869 and was responsible for the lion's share of the work. Many elements which had survived the fire were reused in the reconstruction.[4] Many foreign rulers also made contributions. Muhammad Ali Pasha, Viceroy of Egypt gave columns of alabaster, while the Emperor of Russia donated precious malachite and lapis lazuli that was used on some of the altar fronts. The transept and high altar were consecrated by Pope Gregory XVI in October 1840,[10] and that part of the basilica was then re-opened. The entire building was reconsecrated in 1854 in the presence of Pope Pius IX and fifty cardinals. Many features of the building were still to be executed at that date, however, and work ultimately extended into the twentieth century. The quadriporticus looking toward the Tiber was completed by the Italian Government, which declared the church a national monument. On 23 April 1891, an explosion at the gunpowder magazine at Forte Portuense destroyed the basilica's stained glass windows.

On 31 May 2005, Pope Benedict XVI ordered the basilica to come under the control of an archpriest and he named Archbishop Andrea Cordero Lanza di Montezemolo as its first archpriest.

Architecture and interior edit

 
Exterior Holy Door by Enrico Manfrini (2000)

The covered portico (or narthex) that precedes the façade is a Neo-classicist addition of the 19th-century reconstruction. On the right is the Holy Door, which is opened only during the Jubilees. On the inside is a second door, known as the Byzantine door, which was present in the pre-19th century basilica; it contains on one side 56 small square engraved bronze panels, and was commissioned in 1070 by Pantaleone, Consul of Amalfi in Constantinople, and putatively cast in Constantinople. It depicts a number of episodes in the life of Christ and the apostles.

The new basilica has maintained the original structure with one nave and four side aisles. It is 131.66 metres (432.0 ft) long, 65 metres (213 ft)-wide, and 29.70 metres (97.4 ft)-high, the second largest in Rome.

The nave's 80 columns and its wood and stucco-decorated ceiling are from the 19th century. All that remains of the ancient basilica are the interior portion of the apse with the triumphal arch. The mosaics of the apse were greatly damaged in the 1823 fire; only a few traces were incorporated in the restoration. The 5th-century mosaics of the triumphal arch are original (but also heavily reworked): an inscription in the lower section attest they were done at the time of Leo I, paid by Galla Placidia. The subject portrays the Apocalypse of John, with the bust of Christ in the middle flanked by the 24 Doctors of the Church, surmounted by the flying symbols of the four Evangelists. Saint Peter and Saint Paul are portrayed at the right and left of the arch, the latter pointing downwards (probably to his tomb).

From the inside, the windows may appear to be stained glass, but they are actually translucent alabaster.[11]

The ciborium of the confession of Arnolfo di Cambio (1285) belongs to the 13th century.

In the old basilica each pope had his portrait in a painted frieze extending above the columns separating the aisles from the nave. A 19th-century[citation needed] mosaic version can be seen now. The nave's interior walls were also redecorated with painted scenes from Saint Paul's life placed between the windows of the clerestory.

South of the transept is the cloister, considered "one of the most beautiful of the Middle Ages".[12] Built by Vassalletto in 1205–1241, it has double columns of different shapes. Some columns have inlays with golden and colored-glass mosaics; the same decoration can be seen on the architrave and the inner frame of the cloister. Also visible are fragments from the destroyed basilica and ancient sarcophagi, one with scenes of the myth of Apollo.

Tomb of Saint Paul edit

 
Plan of the fourth-century basilica

According to tradition, Saint Paul's body was buried two miles away from the location of his martyrdom, in the sepulchral area along the Ostiense Way, which was owned by a Christian woman named Lucina. A tropaeum was erected on it and quickly became a place of veneration.[b]

Constantine I erected a basilica on the tropaeum's site, and the basilica was significantly extended by Theodosius I from 386, into what is now known as Saint Paul Outside the Walls. During the 4th century, Paul's remains, excluding the head, were moved into a sarcophagus. (According to church tradition the head rests at the Lateran.) Paul's tomb is below a marble tombstone in the basilica's crypt, at 1.37 metres (4.5 ft) below the altar. The tombstone bears the Latin inscription PAULO APOSTOLO MART ("to Paul the apostle and martyr"). The inscribed portion of the tombstone has three holes, two square and one circular.[13] The circular hole is connected to the tomb by a pipeline, reflecting the Roman custom of pouring perfumes inside the sarcophagus, or to the practice of providing the bones of the dead with libations. The sarcophagus below the tombstone measures 2.55 metres (8.4 ft) long, 1.25 metres (4.1 ft) wide and 0.97 metres (3.2 ft) high.

 
Front of the Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls

The discovery of the sarcophagus is mentioned in the chronicle of the Benedictine monastery attached to the basilica, in regard to the 19th century rebuilding. Unlike other sarcophagi found at that time, this was not mentioned in the excavation papers.[14]

On 6 December 2006, it was announced that Vatican archaeologists had confirmed the presence of a white marble sarcophagus beneath the altar, perhaps containing the remains of the Apostle.[15][16] A press conference held on 11 December 2006[17] gave more details of the work of excavation, which lasted from 2002 to 22 September 2006, and which had been initiated after pilgrims to the basilica expressed disappointment that the Apostle's tomb could not be visited or touched during the Jubilee year of 2000.[18] The sarcophagus was not extracted from its position, so that only one of its two longer sides is visible.[19] In 2009 the Pope announced that radiocarbon dating confirmed that the bones in the tomb date from the 1st or 2nd century suggesting that they are indeed Paul's.[20]

A curved line of bricks indicating the outline of the apse of the Constantinian basilica was discovered immediately to the west of the sarcophagus, showing that the original basilica had its entrance to the east, like Saint Peter's Basilica in the Vatican. The larger 386 basilica that replaced it had the Via Ostiense (the road to Ostia) to the east and so was extended westward, towards the river Tiber, changing the orientation diametrically.

Abbots edit

 
Colonnade of Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls
 
Arnolfo di Cambio's tabernacle

The complex includes an ancient Benedictine Abbey, restored by Odo of Cluny in 936.

  • 1796–1799 Giovanni Battista Gualengo
  • 1799–1799 Giustino Nuzi
  • 1800–1800 Giovanni B. Gualengo
  • 1803–1806 Stefano Alessandri
  • 1806–1810 Giuseppe Giustino di Costanzo
  • 1810–1815 Stefano Alessandri
  • 1815–1821 Francesco Cavalli
  • 1821–1825 Adeodato Galeffi
  • 1825–1831 Giovanni Francesco Zelli
  • 1831–1838 Vincenzo Bini
  • 1838–1844 Giovanni Francesco Zelli
  • 1844–1850 Paolo Theodoli
  • 1850–1853 Mariano Falcinelli-Antoniacci
  • 1853–1858 Simplicio Pappalettere
  • 1858–1867 Angelo Pescetelli[21]
  • 1867–1895 Leopoldo Zelli Jacobuzi
  • 1895–1904 Bonifacio Oslaender
  • 1904–1918 Giovanni del Papa
  • 1918–1929 Alfredo Ildefonso Schuster
  • 1929–1955 Ildebrando Vannucci
  • 1955–1964 Cesario D'Amato
  • 1964–1973 Giovanni Battista Franzoni
  • 1973–1980 Position empty
  • 1980–1988 Giuseppe Nardin
  • 1988–1996 Luca Collino
  • 1996–1997 Position empty
  • 1997–2005 Paolo Lunardon
  • 2005–2015 Edmund Power
  • 2015–2020 Roberto Dotta
  • 2020–present vacant; overseen by an appointed Papal Administrator, Arrigo Miglio

Archpriests edit

Other burials edit

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Since Benedict XVI's renunciation of the title of "Patriarch of the West", Latin Catholic patriarchal basilicas are known as papal basilicas.[citation needed]
  2. ^ The earliest account of a visit to the memorials of the apostles is attributed to Gaius, the Presbyter, "who lived when Zephyrinus was bishop of Rome [AD 199–217]", as quoted by Eusebius reporting that "I can point out the tropaia of the Apostles [Peter and Paul]; for if you go to the Vatican or the Ostian Way, you will find the tropaia of those who founded this Church".[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ Lateran Treaty of 1929, Article 15 (The Treaty of the Lateran by Benedict Williamson (London: Burns, Oates, and Washbourne Limited, 1929), pp. 42–66 2018-05-23 at the Wayback Machine).
  2. ^ Lateran Treaty of 1929, Article 13 (Ibidem 2018-05-23 at the Wayback Machine).
  3. ^ Lateran Treaty of 1929, Article 15 (Ibidem 2018-05-23 at the Wayback Machine).
  4. ^ a b c "The Basilica". Saint Paul Outside the Wall.
  5. ^ O'Malley, John W. (2010). A History of the Popes. New York: Sheed & Ward. ISBN 978-1580512299.
  6. ^ Margaret English Frazer (1973). "Church Doors and the Gates of Paradise: Byzantine Bronze Doors in Italy". Dumbarton Oaks Papers. 27 (1973): 145–162. doi:10.2307/1291338. JSTOR 1291338.
  7. ^ Rusconi, Roberto (2016). "Benedict XIV and the Holiness of the Popes in the First Half of the Eighteenth Century". In Messbarger, Rebecca; Johns, Christopher M. S.; Gavitt, Philip (eds.). Benedict XIV and the Enlightenment: Art, Science, and Spirituality. University of Toronto Press. pp. 278–279. doi:10.3138/9781442624757. ISBN 978-1442624757.
  8. ^ "Church of Santo Stefano del Cacco", Turismoromam, Dipartimento Grandi Eventi, Sport, Turismo e Moda
  9. ^ Terry Kirk (2005). The Architecture of Modern Italy: The Challenge of Tradition 1750–1900. p. 173. ISBN 978-1568984209.
  10. ^ Holy See, Augustissimam beatissimi (in Italian), issued 21 December 1840, accessed 3 July 2023
  11. ^ "San Paolo Fuori le Mura", Frommer's.
  12. ^ Hinzen-Bohlen, p. 411.
  13. ^ "The Tomb off St. Paul", Basilica Papale San Paolo Fuori le Mura.
  14. ^ Gheddo, Piero (2006-09-22). "Asia News: Saint Paul's sarcophagus found". Asianews.it. Retrieved 2013-03-04.
  15. ^ . National Geographic News. 11 December 2006. Archived from the original on December 13, 2006. Retrieved 21 July 2013.
  16. ^ . Catholic News Agency. 2006-12-06. Archived from the original on 2009-02-20. Retrieved 2013-03-04.
  17. ^ Communiqué about the press conference 2007-09-30 at the Wayback Machine.
  18. ^ "Associated Press: Have St. Paul's remains been unearthed?". NBC News. 2006-12-07. Retrieved 2013-03-04.
  19. ^ Fraser, Christian (2006-12-07). "Christian Fraser, St Paul's tomb unearthed in Rome, BBC News, 7 December 2006". BBC News. Retrieved 2013-03-04.
  20. ^ "Pope Says Tests ‘Seem to Conclude’ Bones Are the Apostle Paul’s" New York Times (The Associated Press), June 28, 2009.
  21. ^ For abbots from 1796 to 1867: Turbessi, G. "Vita monastica dell'abbazia di San Paolo nel secolo XIX." Revue Bénédictine 83 (1973): 49–118.

Further reading edit

  • Nicola Camerlenghi, St. Paul's Outside the Walls: A Roman Basilica from Antiquity to the Modern Era (Cambridge University Press, 2018).
  • Weitzmann, Kurt, ed., Age of spirituality: late antique and early Christian art, third to seventh century, no. 439–440, 1979, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, ISBN 978-0870991790
  • Hinze-Bohlen, Brigitte. Kunst & Architektur-ROM. Cologne: Könemann. [year missing]
  • Rendina, Claudio (2000). Enciclopedia di Roma. Newton & Compton. pp. 867–868.
  • Marina Docci, San Paolo fuori le mura: Dalle origini alla basilica delle origini (Roma: Gangemi Editore 2006).

External links edit

  • The Papal Basilica St Paul Outside-the-Walls, official site.
  • St. Paul's Outside the Walls: A Virtual Basilica
  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "St. Paul-without-the-Walls" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • , including a photograph of a side of the sarcophagus.
  • The tombs of the apostles: Saint Paul
  • Reliquary of St. Anne's forearm venerated in a side chapel

  Media related to Basilica di San Paolo Fuori le Mura at Wikimedia Commons

Preceded by
Santa Maria Maggiore
Landmarks of Rome
Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls
Succeeded by
San Lorenzo fuori le mura

basilica, saint, paul, outside, walls, papal, italian, basilica, papale, paolo, fuori, mura, rome, four, major, papal, basilicas, along, with, basilicas, saint, john, lateran, saint, peter, saint, mary, major, well, seven, pilgrim, churches, rome, basilica, sa. The Papal Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls Italian Basilica Papale di San Paolo fuori le Mura is one of Rome s four major papal basilicas a along with the basilicas of Saint John in the Lateran Saint Peter s and Saint Mary Major as well as one of the Seven Pilgrim Churches of Rome Basilica of Saint PaulOutside the WallsPapal Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the WallsBasilica Papale di San Paolo fuori le Mura Italian Basilica Sancti Pauli extra mœnia Latin The statue of Saint Paul in front of the porticoClick on the map for a fullscreen view41 51 31 N 12 28 36 E 41 8587 N 12 4767 E 41 8587 12 4767LocationPiazzale San Paolo RomeCountryItalyDenominationCatholic ChurchTraditionLatin ChurchWebsiteBasilica of Saint Paul Outside the WallsHistoryStatusPapal major basilicaDedicationPaul the ApostleConsecratedAD 4th centuryRelics heldSaint PaulArchitectureArchitect s Luigi Poletti reconstruction Architectural typeChurchStyleNeoclassicalGroundbreakingAD 4th centuryCompleted1840 1840 SpecificationsLength150 metres 490 ft Width80 metres 260 ft Nave width30 metres 98 ft Height73 metres 240 ft AdministrationDioceseRomeClergyArchpriestJames Michael HarveyUNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameHistoric Centre of Rome the Properties of the Holy See in that City Enjoying Extraterritorial Rights and San Paolo Fuori le MuraTypeCulturalCriteriai ii iii iv viDesignated1980 4th session Reference no 91RegionEurope and North AmericaThe Basilica is within Italian territory but the Holy See owns the Basilica in a regime of extraterritoriality with Italy recognizing its full ownership and conceding it the immunity granted by international law to the headquarters of the diplomatic agents of foreign States 1 2 3 Plaque on an external wall of the building indicating its extraterritorial status James Michael Cardinal Harvey was named Archpriest of the basilica in 2012 Contents 1 History 2 Architecture and interior 3 Tomb of Saint Paul 4 Abbots 5 Archpriests 6 Other burials 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory editThe basilica was founded by the Roman Emperor Constantine I over the burial place of Paul of Tarsus where it was said that after the apostle s execution his followers erected a memorial called a cella memoriae This first basilica was consecrated by Pope Sylvester in 324 4 In 386 Emperor Theodosius I began erecting a much larger and more beautiful basilica with a nave and four aisles with a transept It was probably consecrated around 402 by Pope Innocent I The work including the mosaics was not completed until Leo I s pontificate 440 461 In the 5th century it was larger than the Old Saint Peter s Basilica The Christian poet Prudentius who saw it at the time of emperor Honorius 395 423 describes the splendours of the monument in a few expressive lines Under Leo I extensive repair work was carried out following the collapse of the roof on account of fire or lightning In particular the transept i e the area around Paul s tomb was elevated and a new main altar and presbytery were installed This was probably the first time that an altar was placed over the tomb of Saint Paul which remained untouched but largely underground given Leo s newly elevated floor levels Leo was also responsible for fixing the triumphal arch and for restoring a fountain in the courtyard atrium Under Pope Gregory the Great 590 604 the main altar and presbytery were extensively modified The pavement in the transept was raised and a new altar was placed above the earlier altar erected by Leo I The position was directly over Saint Paul s sarcophagus In that period there were two monasteries near the basilica Saint Aristus s for men and Saint Stefano s for women Masses were celebrated by a special body of clerics instituted by Pope Simplicius Over time the monasteries and the basilica s clergy declined Pope Gregory II restored the former and entrusted the monks with the basilica s care The basilica was damaged in an earthquake on 29 April 801 Its roof collapsed but was rebuilt by Leo III As it lay outside the Aurelian Walls the basilica was damaged in the 9th century during a Saracen raid Consequently Pope John VIII 872 882 fortified the basilica the monastery and the dwellings of the peasantry 5 forming the town of Johannispolis Italian Giovannipoli which existed until 1348 when an earthquake totally destroyed it In 937 when Odo of Cluny came to Rome Alberic II of Spoleto Patrician of Rome entrusted the monastery and basilica to his congregation and Odo placed Balduino of Monte Cassino in charge Pope Gregory VII was abbot of the monastery and in his time Pantaleone a rich merchant of Amalfi who lived in Constantinople presented the bronze doors of the basilica maior which were executed by Constantinopolitan artists the doors are inscribed with Pantaleone s prayer that the doors of life may be opened to him 6 Pope Martin V entrusted it to the monks of the Congregation of Monte Cassino It was then made an abbey nullius The abbot s jurisdiction extended over the districts of Civitella San Paolo Leprignano and Nazzano all of which formed parishes nbsp Cloister of the monastery of San Paolo fuori le muraThe graceful cloister of the monastery was erected between 1220 and 1241 From 1215 until 1964 it was the seat of the Latin Patriarch of Alexandria Pope Benedict XIV undertook the restoration of the apse mosaic and the frescoes of the central nave and commissioned the painter Salvatore Manosilio to continue the series of papal portraits which at that time ended with Pope Vitalian who had reigned over a millennium earlier 7 On 15 July 1823 a workman repairing the copper gutters of the roof started a fire that led to the near total destruction of this basilica which alone among all the churches of Rome had preserved much of its original character for 1435 years 4 Marble salvaged from the burnt out Saint Paul s was re laid for the floor of Santo Stefano del Cacco 8 In 1825 Leo XII issued the encyclical Ad plurimas encouraging donations for the reconstruction A few months later he issued orders that the basilica be rebuilt exactly as it had been when new in the fourth century though he also stipulated that precious elements from later periods such as the medieval mosaics and tabernacle also be repaired and retained These guidelines proved unrealistic for a variety of reasons and soon ceased to be enforced The result is a reconstructed basilica that bears only a general resemblance to the original and is by no means identical to it The reconstruction was initially entrusted to the architect Pasquale Belli who was succeeded upon his death in 1833 by Luigi Poletti 9 who supervised the project until his death in 1869 and was responsible for the lion s share of the work Many elements which had survived the fire were reused in the reconstruction 4 Many foreign rulers also made contributions Muhammad Ali Pasha Viceroy of Egypt gave columns of alabaster while the Emperor of Russia donated precious malachite and lapis lazuli that was used on some of the altar fronts The transept and high altar were consecrated by Pope Gregory XVI in October 1840 10 and that part of the basilica was then re opened The entire building was reconsecrated in 1854 in the presence of Pope Pius IX and fifty cardinals Many features of the building were still to be executed at that date however and work ultimately extended into the twentieth century The quadriporticus looking toward the Tiber was completed by the Italian Government which declared the church a national monument On 23 April 1891 an explosion at the gunpowder magazine at Forte Portuense destroyed the basilica s stained glass windows On 31 May 2005 Pope Benedict XVI ordered the basilica to come under the control of an archpriest and he named Archbishop Andrea Cordero Lanza di Montezemolo as its first archpriest Architecture and interior edit nbsp Exterior Holy Door by Enrico Manfrini 2000 The covered portico or narthex that precedes the facade is a Neo classicist addition of the 19th century reconstruction On the right is the Holy Door which is opened only during the Jubilees On the inside is a second door known as the Byzantine door which was present in the pre 19th century basilica it contains on one side 56 small square engraved bronze panels and was commissioned in 1070 by Pantaleone Consul of Amalfi in Constantinople and putatively cast in Constantinople It depicts a number of episodes in the life of Christ and the apostles The new basilica has maintained the original structure with one nave and four side aisles It is 131 66 metres 432 0 ft long 65 metres 213 ft wide and 29 70 metres 97 4 ft high the second largest in Rome The nave s 80 columns and its wood and stucco decorated ceiling are from the 19th century All that remains of the ancient basilica are the interior portion of the apse with the triumphal arch The mosaics of the apse were greatly damaged in the 1823 fire only a few traces were incorporated in the restoration The 5th century mosaics of the triumphal arch are original but also heavily reworked an inscription in the lower section attest they were done at the time of Leo I paid by Galla Placidia The subject portrays the Apocalypse of John with the bust of Christ in the middle flanked by the 24 Doctors of the Church surmounted by the flying symbols of the four Evangelists Saint Peter and Saint Paul are portrayed at the right and left of the arch the latter pointing downwards probably to his tomb From the inside the windows may appear to be stained glass but they are actually translucent alabaster 11 The ciborium of the confession of Arnolfo di Cambio 1285 belongs to the 13th century In the old basilica each pope had his portrait in a painted frieze extending above the columns separating the aisles from the nave A 19th century citation needed mosaic version can be seen now The nave s interior walls were also redecorated with painted scenes from Saint Paul s life placed between the windows of the clerestory South of the transept is the cloister considered one of the most beautiful of the Middle Ages 12 Built by Vassalletto in 1205 1241 it has double columns of different shapes Some columns have inlays with golden and colored glass mosaics the same decoration can be seen on the architrave and the inner frame of the cloister Also visible are fragments from the destroyed basilica and ancient sarcophagi one with scenes of the myth of Apollo Tomb of Saint Paul edit nbsp Plan of the fourth century basilicaAccording to tradition Saint Paul s body was buried two miles away from the location of his martyrdom in the sepulchral area along the Ostiense Way which was owned by a Christian woman named Lucina A tropaeum was erected on it and quickly became a place of veneration b Constantine I erected a basilica on the tropaeum s site and the basilica was significantly extended by Theodosius I from 386 into what is now known as Saint Paul Outside the Walls During the 4th century Paul s remains excluding the head were moved into a sarcophagus According to church tradition the head rests at the Lateran Paul s tomb is below a marble tombstone in the basilica s crypt at 1 37 metres 4 5 ft below the altar The tombstone bears the Latin inscription PAULO APOSTOLO MART to Paul the apostle and martyr The inscribed portion of the tombstone has three holes two square and one circular 13 The circular hole is connected to the tomb by a pipeline reflecting the Roman custom of pouring perfumes inside the sarcophagus or to the practice of providing the bones of the dead with libations The sarcophagus below the tombstone measures 2 55 metres 8 4 ft long 1 25 metres 4 1 ft wide and 0 97 metres 3 2 ft high nbsp Front of the Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the WallsThe discovery of the sarcophagus is mentioned in the chronicle of the Benedictine monastery attached to the basilica in regard to the 19th century rebuilding Unlike other sarcophagi found at that time this was not mentioned in the excavation papers 14 On 6 December 2006 it was announced that Vatican archaeologists had confirmed the presence of a white marble sarcophagus beneath the altar perhaps containing the remains of the Apostle 15 16 A press conference held on 11 December 2006 17 gave more details of the work of excavation which lasted from 2002 to 22 September 2006 and which had been initiated after pilgrims to the basilica expressed disappointment that the Apostle s tomb could not be visited or touched during the Jubilee year of 2000 18 The sarcophagus was not extracted from its position so that only one of its two longer sides is visible 19 In 2009 the Pope announced that radiocarbon dating confirmed that the bones in the tomb date from the 1st or 2nd century suggesting that they are indeed Paul s 20 A curved line of bricks indicating the outline of the apse of the Constantinian basilica was discovered immediately to the west of the sarcophagus showing that the original basilica had its entrance to the east like Saint Peter s Basilica in the Vatican The larger 386 basilica that replaced it had the Via Ostiense the road to Ostia to the east and so was extended westward towards the river Tiber changing the orientation diametrically Abbots edit nbsp Colonnade of Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls nbsp Arnolfo di Cambio s tabernacleThe complex includes an ancient Benedictine Abbey restored by Odo of Cluny in 936 1796 1799 Giovanni Battista Gualengo 1799 1799 Giustino Nuzi 1800 1800 Giovanni B Gualengo 1803 1806 Stefano Alessandri 1806 1810 Giuseppe Giustino di Costanzo 1810 1815 Stefano Alessandri 1815 1821 Francesco Cavalli 1821 1825 Adeodato Galeffi 1825 1831 Giovanni Francesco Zelli 1831 1838 Vincenzo Bini 1838 1844 Giovanni Francesco Zelli 1844 1850 Paolo Theodoli 1850 1853 Mariano Falcinelli Antoniacci 1853 1858 Simplicio Pappalettere 1858 1867 Angelo Pescetelli 21 1867 1895 Leopoldo Zelli Jacobuzi 1895 1904 Bonifacio Oslaender 1904 1918 Giovanni del Papa 1918 1929 Alfredo Ildefonso Schuster 1929 1955 Ildebrando Vannucci 1955 1964 Cesario D Amato 1964 1973 Giovanni Battista Franzoni 1973 1980 Position empty 1980 1988 Giuseppe Nardin 1988 1996 Luca Collino 1996 1997 Position empty 1997 2005 Paolo Lunardon 2005 2015 Edmund Power 2015 2020 Roberto Dotta 2020 present vacant overseen by an appointed Papal Administrator Arrigo MiglioArchpriests editAndrea Cardinal Cordero Lanza di Montezemolo 31 May 2005 3 July 2009 Francesco Cardinal Monterisi 3 July 2009 23 November 2012 James Michael Cardinal Harvey 23 November 2012 present Other burials editThibaud of Ostia Felix III John XIII John XVIIIGallery edit nbsp Saint Paul Outside the Walls nbsp Interior of the church nbsp Apse mosaic 1220 Christ flanked by the Apostles Peter Paul and Andrew and Saint Luke nbsp Detail of the apse mosaic Pope Honorius III who commissioned it See also editBible of San Paolo fuori le Mura Leonine Wall first wall around Vatican City List of Greco Roman roofsNotes edit Since Benedict XVI s renunciation of the title of Patriarch of the West Latin Catholic patriarchal basilicas are known as papal basilicas citation needed The earliest account of a visit to the memorials of the apostles is attributed to Gaius the Presbyter who lived when Zephyrinus was bishop of Rome AD 199 217 as quoted by Eusebius reporting that I can point out the tropaia of the Apostles Peter and Paul for if you go to the Vatican or the Ostian Way you will find the tropaia of those who founded this Church citation needed References edit Lateran Treaty of 1929 Article 15 The Treaty of the Lateran by Benedict Williamson London Burns Oates and Washbourne Limited 1929 pp 42 66 Archived 2018 05 23 at the Wayback Machine Lateran Treaty of 1929 Article 13 Ibidem Archived 2018 05 23 at the Wayback Machine Lateran Treaty of 1929 Article 15 Ibidem Archived 2018 05 23 at the Wayback Machine a b c The Basilica Saint Paul Outside the Wall O Malley John W 2010 A History of the Popes New York Sheed amp Ward ISBN 978 1580512299 Margaret English Frazer 1973 Church Doors and the Gates of Paradise Byzantine Bronze Doors in Italy Dumbarton Oaks Papers 27 1973 145 162 doi 10 2307 1291338 JSTOR 1291338 Rusconi Roberto 2016 Benedict XIV and the Holiness of the Popes in the First Half of the Eighteenth Century In Messbarger Rebecca Johns Christopher M S Gavitt Philip eds Benedict XIV and the Enlightenment Art Science and Spirituality University of Toronto Press pp 278 279 doi 10 3138 9781442624757 ISBN 978 1442624757 Church of Santo Stefano del Cacco Turismoromam Dipartimento Grandi Eventi Sport Turismo e Moda Terry Kirk 2005 The Architecture of Modern Italy The Challenge of Tradition 1750 1900 p 173 ISBN 978 1568984209 Holy See Augustissimam beatissimi in Italian issued 21 December 1840 accessed 3 July 2023 San Paolo Fuori le Mura Frommer s Hinzen Bohlen p 411 The Tomb off St Paul Basilica Papale San Paolo Fuori le Mura Gheddo Piero 2006 09 22 Asia News Saint Paul s sarcophagus found Asianews it Retrieved 2013 03 04 St Paul s Tomb Unearthed in Rome National Geographic News 11 December 2006 Archived from the original on December 13 2006 Retrieved 21 July 2013 St Paul burial place confirmed Catholic News Agency 2006 12 06 Archived from the original on 2009 02 20 Retrieved 2013 03 04 Communique about the press conference Archived 2007 09 30 at the Wayback Machine Associated Press Have St Paul s remains been unearthed NBC News 2006 12 07 Retrieved 2013 03 04 Fraser Christian 2006 12 07 Christian Fraser St Paul s tomb unearthed in Rome BBC News 7 December 2006 BBC News Retrieved 2013 03 04 Pope Says Tests Seem to Conclude Bones Are the Apostle Paul s New York Times The Associated Press June 28 2009 For abbots from 1796 to 1867 Turbessi G Vita monastica dell abbazia di San Paolo nel secolo XIX Revue Benedictine 83 1973 49 118 Further reading editNicola Camerlenghi St Paul s Outside the Walls A Roman Basilica from Antiquity to the Modern Era Cambridge University Press 2018 Weitzmann Kurt ed Age of spirituality late antique and early Christian art third to seventh century no 439 440 1979 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York ISBN 978 0870991790 Hinze Bohlen Brigitte Kunst amp Architektur ROM Cologne Konemann year missing Rendina Claudio 2000 Enciclopedia di Roma Newton amp Compton pp 867 868 Marina Docci San Paolo fuori le mura Dalle origini alla basilica delle origini Roma Gangemi Editore 2006 External links editThe Papal Basilica St Paul Outside the Walls official site St Paul s Outside the Walls A Virtual Basilica Herbermann Charles ed 1913 St Paul without the Walls Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company St Paul s Tomb Unearthed in Rome on National Geographic News including a photograph of a side of the sarcophagus The tombs of the apostles Saint Paul Reliquary of St Anne s forearm venerated in a side chapel nbsp Media related to Basilica di San Paolo Fuori le Mura at Wikimedia Commons Preceded bySanta Maria Maggiore Landmarks of RomeBasilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls Succeeded bySan Lorenzo fuori le mura Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls amp oldid 1186944580, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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