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San Giovanni in Conca, Milan

San Giovanni in Conca was a church in the center of Milan, northern Italy, dedicated to Saint John the Evangelist. It had a Paleochristian origin and went through a renovation in Romanesque style. In the 13th century, it became part of the private compound of the Visconti house and transformed into the private chapel of Bernabò Visconti and his wife Regina Della Scala, Lord and Lady of Milan. After their deaths, it housed their burial site. In the 19th and 20th centuries, it was downsized and finally demolished. Only the crypt and part of the apse have been preserved and are today visible in Piazza Missori. Fragments of the frescoes decorating the walls and the burial monuments of Bernabò and his wife have been preserved and transferred to the Sforza Castle Civic Museums (Museo d'Arte Antica).

San Giovanni in Conca, Milan
Basilica di San Giovanni in Conca
San Giovanni in Conca (engraving by Marc'Antonio Dal Re)
San Giovanni in Conca, Milan
Location in Milan
45°27′39″N 9°11′18″E / 45.46083°N 9.18833°E / 45.46083; 9.18833
LocationPiazza Missori
20123 Milan
CountryItaly
DenominationRoman Catholic and Waldensian
TraditionAmbrosian Rite (Roman Catholic)
Religious instituteCarmelites (from 1548 to 1783)
History
DedicationJohn the Evangelist
Associated peopleBernabò Visconti and Regina della Scala (14th-century renovations)
Architecture
Functional statusDemolished (crypt and part of the apse preserved)
StylePaleochristian and Romanesque
Demolished19th and 20th centuries

History edit

Origins (5th–6th centuries) edit

The initial church had Paleochristian origins, dating back to the 5th century, with a single nave on a rectangular plan, 17 metres (56 feet) wide and about 35 m (115 ft) long. The early Christian origin was confirmed by the discovery in 1949 of a tomb along the wall of the first church, with frescoes on the external surface that go back to a period between the 5th and 6th centuries. The subsequent renovations do not seem to have changed the original perimeter of the initial church.[1]

Romanesque era (12th–13th centuries) edit

In the second half of the 12th century, the church was almost demolished during the wars of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa against Milan and subsequently rebuilt in Romanesque style. The church internally assumed a three-aisled form covered with a gabled roof supported by exposed wooden trusses. The new presbytery and the apse elevated on a crypt supported by ten small columns.[2] The painting of the Annunciation on the triumphal arch, partly preserved until the church's demolition, also belongs to the Romanesque period.[3]

Private church of the Visconti house (14th century) edit

The church was transformed and embellished in the 14th century by Bernabò Visconti to convert it into a family mausoleum. He incorporated the church into the compound of the Visconti private buildings.[4][5][6] The transept was transformed into an enclosed space, lighted by new windows on the two side walls.[3] The church was decorated with a vast cycle of frescoes, probably painted in 1355–60, representing the stories of Saint John the Evangelist. A second cycle of frescoes, known from 16th-century sources, showed the brothers Bernabò and Galeazzo Visconti fulfilling a vow to the Saints Cosmas and Damian.[7]

In 1363, Bernabò Visconti commissioned an equestrian statue representing him to Bonino da Campione, which he had installed in the apse above the central altar.[8] In 1384, on the death of his wife, Regina Della Scala, Bernabò had her body placed in the church inside a sarcophagus built by the workshop of Bonino da Campione.[5] When Bernabò died in 1385, for his sepulture, Bonino da Campione made a sarcophagus placed under the pre-existing equestrian statue.[9]

Early modern era (16th–19th centuries) edit

After the end of the Visconti and Sforza period, in 1548, the church passed to the Carmelites, who administered the local parish. In 1783, the Josephist suppressions led to the deconsecration of the church and its secular use.[10]

In 1814, the remains of Bernabò Visconti were moved to the nearby church of Sant'Alessandro, while the funeral monument was transferred to the archaeological museum of Brera and definitively placed in the Sforza Castle Civic Museums. Only later, in 1892, the same destiny was reserved for Regina Della Scala's remains which were removed and placed next to her husband. Her sarcophagus found a place near that of her husband.[11][12]

The church, stripped of all its furnishings and works of artistic interest, was reduced to a shelter for cars and carts, then it became a workshop and finally a warehouse. The bell tower served initially as a signal tower in the Chappe telegraph line, created in 1805 to connect Paris and Milan. Later it was used as a meteorological observatory.[11][13]

 
The bell tower in the days of its demolition

After the unification of Italy, the Municipality of Milan wanted to start an urban renewal plan in the city center. In 1877, the new Via Carlo Alberto, today Via Mazzini, required demolishing old houses and the church itself along the route.[14] Despite the opposition of the institutions responsible for cultural heritage conservation, the municipal administration suddenly decided to demolish the front part of the church. The Waldensian Milanese community bought the surviving portion, undertaking the recovery of the ancient façade, which was dismantled and reassembled in the new position, oblique to the previous one. They consecrated the church in 1881.[15]

 
The façade rebuilt after the demolition of the front of the church

Final demolition (20th century) edit

The new regulatory plan of 1928–1934 imposed many changes on the city, such as the covering of the canals, also providing for the entire church demolition. The intervention was interrupted during the Second World War. In the post-war period, demolition began. During the works, frescoes appeared on the walls. Detached and transferred to canvas, they were moved to the Sforza Castle Museum. Eventually, the demolition was stopped, making it possible to save the last portion of the apse and the crypt below.[16]

The statue in the niche at the top of the façade was also moved to the Sforza Castle Museum. The figure represents Saint John the Evangelist at the supposed ordeal. The church's name would have derived from the cauldron (Conca) where the saint would have entered.[4][17]

The façade was removed and reassembled in the new Waldensian church in Milan, located in Via Francesco Sforza. The street adjacent to the church was named Via San Giovanni in Conca after the old church.[18]

Today edit

The underground crypt, which survived the demolition, can be visited in Piazza Missori under the vestige of the apse[19] The façade is visible from Via Francesco Sforza in the newly built Waldesian church. The Sforza Castle Museum houses the funerary monuments of Bernabò Visconti and his wife Regina Della Scala, the statue of Saint John the Evangelist, and frescos discovered in the church during its demolition.[19] The tombs with the remains of Bernabò Visconti and Regina Della Scala are in the nearby church of Sant'Alessandro near the entrance.

References edit

  1. ^ Caciagli (1998), pp. 46–49.
  2. ^ Caciagli (1998), pp. 51–53.
  3. ^ a b Romano (2011), p. 653.
  4. ^ a b Cantù (1877), p. 296.
  5. ^ a b Caciagli (1998), p. 52.
  6. ^ Vergani (2001), p. 34.
  7. ^ Vergani (2001), p. 36.
  8. ^ Vergani (2001), pp. 121–122.
  9. ^ Vergani (2001), pp. 41–52].
  10. ^ Cantù (1877), p. 297.
  11. ^ a b Caciagli (1998), pp. 67–68.
  12. ^ Vergani (2001), p. 41].
  13. ^ Cantù (1877), p. 298.
  14. ^ Caciagli (1998), p. 68.
  15. ^ Caciagli (1998), pp. 68–69.
  16. ^ Caciagli (1998), p. 69.
  17. ^ Caciagli (1998), p. 47.
  18. ^ Caciagli (1998), p. 55.
  19. ^ a b Rapelli (2011), p. 297.

Sources edit

  • Caciagli, Mario (1998). Milano, le chiese scomparse (in Italian). Vol. I. Milano: Civica Biblioteca d’Arte. OCLC 249727470.
  • Cantù, Ignazio (1877). Milano diamante (in Italian). Milan, Naples: Francesco Pagnoni.
  • Romano, Serena (2011). "Il modello visconteo: il caso di Bernabò". In Quintavalle, Arturo Carlo (ed.). Medioevo: i committenti. Atti del Convegno internazionale di studi. Parma, 21-26 settembre 2010 (in Italian). Milano: Electa. pp. 642–656. ISBN 9788837088750. OCLC 800798480.
  • Rapelli, Paola (2011). Symbols of Power in Art. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, Getty Publications. ISBN 9781606060667. OCLC 672300144.
  • Vergani, Graziano Alfredo (2001). L'arca di Bernabò Visconti al Castello Sforzesco di Milano (in Italian). Milano: Silvana Editoriale. ISBN 9788882153847. OCLC 50948740.

External links edit

  • Civico Museo Archeologa - Cripta di S. Giovanni in Conca
  • Milano archeologia - La Basilica di San Giovanni in Conca
  • Touring Club Italiano - Cripta di S. Giovanni in Conca

giovanni, conca, milan, this, article, about, demolished, church, surviving, crypt, giovanni, conca, crypt, milan, giovanni, conca, church, center, milan, northern, italy, dedicated, saint, john, evangelist, paleochristian, origin, went, through, renovation, r. This article is about the demolished church For the surviving crypt see San Giovanni in Conca Crypt Milan San Giovanni in Conca was a church in the center of Milan northern Italy dedicated to Saint John the Evangelist It had a Paleochristian origin and went through a renovation in Romanesque style In the 13th century it became part of the private compound of the Visconti house and transformed into the private chapel of Bernabo Visconti and his wife Regina Della Scala Lord and Lady of Milan After their deaths it housed their burial site In the 19th and 20th centuries it was downsized and finally demolished Only the crypt and part of the apse have been preserved and are today visible in Piazza Missori Fragments of the frescoes decorating the walls and the burial monuments of Bernabo and his wife have been preserved and transferred to the Sforza Castle Civic Museums Museo d Arte Antica San Giovanni in Conca MilanBasilica di San Giovanni in ConcaSan Giovanni in Conca engraving by Marc Antonio Dal Re San Giovanni in Conca MilanLocation in Milan45 27 39 N 9 11 18 E 45 46083 N 9 18833 E 45 46083 9 18833LocationPiazza Missori20123 MilanCountryItalyDenominationRoman Catholic and WaldensianTraditionAmbrosian Rite Roman Catholic Religious instituteCarmelites from 1548 to 1783 HistoryDedicationJohn the EvangelistAssociated peopleBernabo Visconti and Regina della Scala 14th century renovations ArchitectureFunctional statusDemolished crypt and part of the apse preserved StylePaleochristian and RomanesqueDemolished19th and 20th centuries Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 5th 6th centuries 1 2 Romanesque era 12th 13th centuries 1 3 Private church of the Visconti house 14th century 1 4 Early modern era 16th 19th centuries 1 5 Final demolition 20th century 2 Today 3 References 4 Sources 5 External linksHistory editOrigins 5th 6th centuries edit The initial church had Paleochristian origins dating back to the 5th century with a single nave on a rectangular plan 17 metres 56 feet wide and about 35 m 115 ft long The early Christian origin was confirmed by the discovery in 1949 of a tomb along the wall of the first church with frescoes on the external surface that go back to a period between the 5th and 6th centuries The subsequent renovations do not seem to have changed the original perimeter of the initial church 1 Romanesque era 12th 13th centuries edit In the second half of the 12th century the church was almost demolished during the wars of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa against Milan and subsequently rebuilt in Romanesque style The church internally assumed a three aisled form covered with a gabled roof supported by exposed wooden trusses The new presbytery and the apse elevated on a crypt supported by ten small columns 2 The painting of the Annunciation on the triumphal arch partly preserved until the church s demolition also belongs to the Romanesque period 3 Private church of the Visconti house 14th century edit The church was transformed and embellished in the 14th century by Bernabo Visconti to convert it into a family mausoleum He incorporated the church into the compound of the Visconti private buildings 4 5 6 The transept was transformed into an enclosed space lighted by new windows on the two side walls 3 The church was decorated with a vast cycle of frescoes probably painted in 1355 60 representing the stories of Saint John the Evangelist A second cycle of frescoes known from 16th century sources showed the brothers Bernabo and Galeazzo Visconti fulfilling a vow to the Saints Cosmas and Damian 7 In 1363 Bernabo Visconti commissioned an equestrian statue representing him to Bonino da Campione which he had installed in the apse above the central altar 8 In 1384 on the death of his wife Regina Della Scala Bernabo had her body placed in the church inside a sarcophagus built by the workshop of Bonino da Campione 5 When Bernabo died in 1385 for his sepulture Bonino da Campione made a sarcophagus placed under the pre existing equestrian statue 9 Early modern era 16th 19th centuries edit After the end of the Visconti and Sforza period in 1548 the church passed to the Carmelites who administered the local parish In 1783 the Josephist suppressions led to the deconsecration of the church and its secular use 10 In 1814 the remains of Bernabo Visconti were moved to the nearby church of Sant Alessandro while the funeral monument was transferred to the archaeological museum of Brera and definitively placed in the Sforza Castle Civic Museums Only later in 1892 the same destiny was reserved for Regina Della Scala s remains which were removed and placed next to her husband Her sarcophagus found a place near that of her husband 11 12 The church stripped of all its furnishings and works of artistic interest was reduced to a shelter for cars and carts then it became a workshop and finally a warehouse The bell tower served initially as a signal tower in the Chappe telegraph line created in 1805 to connect Paris and Milan Later it was used as a meteorological observatory 11 13 nbsp The bell tower in the days of its demolitionAfter the unification of Italy the Municipality of Milan wanted to start an urban renewal plan in the city center In 1877 the new Via Carlo Alberto today Via Mazzini required demolishing old houses and the church itself along the route 14 Despite the opposition of the institutions responsible for cultural heritage conservation the municipal administration suddenly decided to demolish the front part of the church The Waldensian Milanese community bought the surviving portion undertaking the recovery of the ancient facade which was dismantled and reassembled in the new position oblique to the previous one They consecrated the church in 1881 15 nbsp The facade rebuilt after the demolition of the front of the churchFinal demolition 20th century edit The new regulatory plan of 1928 1934 imposed many changes on the city such as the covering of the canals also providing for the entire church demolition The intervention was interrupted during the Second World War In the post war period demolition began During the works frescoes appeared on the walls Detached and transferred to canvas they were moved to the Sforza Castle Museum Eventually the demolition was stopped making it possible to save the last portion of the apse and the crypt below 16 The statue in the niche at the top of the facade was also moved to the Sforza Castle Museum The figure represents Saint John the Evangelist at the supposed ordeal The church s name would have derived from the cauldron Conca where the saint would have entered 4 17 The facade was removed and reassembled in the new Waldensian church in Milan located in Via Francesco Sforza The street adjacent to the church was named Via San Giovanni in Conca after the old church 18 Today editMain article San Giovanni in Conca Crypt Milan The underground crypt which survived the demolition can be visited in Piazza Missori under the vestige of the apse 19 The facade is visible from Via Francesco Sforza in the newly built Waldesian church The Sforza Castle Museum houses the funerary monuments of Bernabo Visconti and his wife Regina Della Scala the statue of Saint John the Evangelist and frescos discovered in the church during its demolition 19 The tombs with the remains of Bernabo Visconti and Regina Della Scala are in the nearby church of Sant Alessandro near the entrance Bernabo Visconti s and Regina Della Scala s funeral monuments nbsp Bernabo Visconti s equestrian statue and sarcophagus nbsp Regina della Scala s sarchophagusReferences edit Caciagli 1998 pp 46 49 Caciagli 1998 pp 51 53 a b Romano 2011 p 653 a b Cantu 1877 p 296 a b Caciagli 1998 p 52 Vergani 2001 p 34 Vergani 2001 p 36 Vergani 2001 pp 121 122 Vergani 2001 pp 41 52 Cantu 1877 p 297 a b Caciagli 1998 pp 67 68 Vergani 2001 p 41 Cantu 1877 p 298 Caciagli 1998 p 68 Caciagli 1998 pp 68 69 Caciagli 1998 p 69 Caciagli 1998 p 47 Caciagli 1998 p 55 a b Rapelli 2011 p 297 Sources editCaciagli Mario 1998 Milano le chiese scomparse in Italian Vol I Milano Civica Biblioteca d Arte OCLC 249727470 Cantu Ignazio 1877 Milano diamante in Italian Milan Naples Francesco Pagnoni Romano Serena 2011 Il modello visconteo il caso di Bernabo In Quintavalle Arturo Carlo ed Medioevo i committenti Atti del Convegno internazionale di studi Parma 21 26 settembre 2010 in Italian Milano Electa pp 642 656 ISBN 9788837088750 OCLC 800798480 Rapelli Paola 2011 Symbols of Power in Art Los Angeles J Paul Getty Museum Getty Publications ISBN 9781606060667 OCLC 672300144 Vergani Graziano Alfredo 2001 L arca di Bernabo Visconti al Castello Sforzesco di Milano in Italian Milano Silvana Editoriale ISBN 9788882153847 OCLC 50948740 External links editCivico Museo Archeologa Cripta di S Giovanni in Conca Milano archeologia La Basilica di San Giovanni in Conca Touring Club Italiano Cripta di S Giovanni in Conca Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title San Giovanni in Conca Milan amp oldid 1167543260, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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