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Santa Maria sopra Minerva

Santa Maria sopra Minerva is one of the major churches of the Order of Preachers (also known as the Dominicans) in Rome, Italy. The church's name derives from the fact that the first Christian church structure on the site was built directly over (Italian: sopra) the ruins or foundations of a temple dedicated to the Egyptian goddess Isis, which had been erroneously ascribed to the Greco-Roman goddess Minerva[1] (possibly due to interpretatio romana).

Basilica di Santa Maria sopra Minerva
  • Basilica of Saint Mary above Minerva (English)
  • Basilica Sanctae Mariae supra Minervam (Latin)
Santa Maria sopra Minerva façade by Carlo Maderno
Click on the map for a fullscreen view
41°53′53″N 12°28′42″E / 41.89806°N 12.47833°E / 41.89806; 12.47833
LocationPiazza della Minerva 42, Rome
CountryItaly
DenominationCatholic
Websitesantamariasopraminerva.it/en
History
StatusMinor basilica, titular church
DedicationMary, mother of Jesus
Consecrated1370
Architecture
Architect(s)Fra Sisto Fiorentino
Fra Ristoro da Campi
Carlo Maderno
StyleGothic
Groundbreaking1280 (1280)
Completed1370
Specifications
Length101 m (331 ft)
Width41 m (135 ft)
Nave width15 m (49 ft)
Administration
ProvinceDiocese of Rome
Clergy
Cardinal protectorAntónio Marto

The church is located in Piazza della Minerva one block east the Pantheon in the Pigna rione of Rome within the ancient district known as the Campus Martius. The present church and disposition of surrounding structures is visible in a detail from the Nolli Map of 1748.

While many other medieval churches in Rome have been given Baroque makeovers that cover Gothic structures, the Minerva is the only extant example of original Gothic architecture church building in Rome. Behind a restrained Renaissance style façade[2] the Gothic interior features arched vaulting that was painted blue with gilded stars and trimmed with brilliant red ribbing in a 19th-century Neo-Gothic restoration.

The church and adjoining convent served at various times throughout its history as the Dominican Order's headquarters. Today the headquarters have been re-established in their original location at the Roman convent of Santa Sabina. The titulus of Sanctae Mariae supra Minervam was conferred upon Cardinal António Marto, on 28 June 2018.

History edit

 
Santa Maria sopra Minerva interior

In Roman times there were three temples in what is now the area surrounding the basilica and former convent buildings: the Minervium, built by Gnaeus Pompey in honour of the goddess Minerva about 50 BC, referred to as Delubrum Minervae; the Iseum dedicated to Isis, and the Serapeum dedicated to Serapis.[3] Details of the temple to Minerva are not known but recent investigations indicate that a small round Minervium once stood a little further to the east on the Piazza of the Collegio Romano.[1] In 1665 an Egyptian obelisk was found, buried in the garden of the Dominican cloister adjacent to the church. Several other small obelisks were found at different times near the church, known as the Obelisci Isei Campensis, which were probably brought to Rome during the 1st century and grouped in pairs, with others, at the entrances of the temple of Isis.[4] There are other Roman survivals in the crypt.

The ruined temple is likely to have lasted until the reign of Pope Zachary (741-752), who finally Christianized the site, offering it to Basilian nuns from Constantinople who maintained an oratorium there dedicated to the "Virgin of Minervum".[5] The structure he commissioned has disappeared.

In 1255 Pope Alexander IV established a community of converted women on the site. A decade later this community was transferred to the Roman Church of San Pancrazio thereby allowing the Dominicans to establish a convent of friars and a studium conventuale there. The Friars were on site beginning in 1266 but took official possession of the Church in 1275. Aldobrandino Cavalcanti (1279), vicarius Urbis or vicar for Pope Gregory X, and an associate of Thomas Aquinas ratified the donation of Santa Maria sopra Minerva to the Dominicans of Santa Sabina by the sisters of S. Maria in Campo Marzio.[6] The ensemble of buildings that formed around the church and convent came to be known as the insula sapientae or insula dominicana (island of wisdom or Dominican island).[7]

The Dominicans began building the present Gothic church in 1280 modelling it on their church in Florence Santa Maria Novella. Architectural plans were probably drawn up during the pontificate of Nicholas III by two Dominican friars, Fra Sisto Fiorentino and Fra Ristoro da Campi.[1] With the help of funds contributed by Boniface VIII and the faithful the side aisles were completed in the 14th century.

In 1453 church interior construction was finally completed when Cardinal Juan Torquemada ordered that the main nave be covered by a vault that reduced the overall projected height of the church.[2] In the same year of 1453 Count Francesco Orsini sponsored the construction of the façade at his own expense. However work on the façade remained incomplete until 1725 when it was finally finished by order of Pope Benedict XIII.[7]

In 1431, the Church and the adjacent Convent of the Dominicans was the site of a Papal conclave. The city of Rome was in an uproar upon the death of Pope Martin V (Colonna), whose family had dominated Roman political life for fifteen years, and enriched themselves on the wealth of the Church. There was fighting in the streets on a daily basis, and the Plaza in front of the Minerva, because of the configuration of streets, houses, church and monastery, could easily be fortified and defended.[8] The Sacristy of the Church served as the meeting hall for the fourteen cardinals (out of nineteen) who attended the Conclave, which began on 1 March 1431. The dormitory of the monks in the Convent to the immediate north of the Church, served as the living quarters for the cardinals and their refectory and kitchen. On 3 March they elected Cardinal Gabriele Condulmaro, who took the name Eugenius IV.[9] A second Conclave was held at the Minerva, on 4–6 March 1447, following the death of Pope Eugenius, once again in the midst of disturbances involving the Orsini supporters of Pope Eugenius and his enemies the Colonna. Eighteen cardinals (out of a total of twenty-six) were present and elected Cardinal Tommaso Parentucelli da Sarzana as Pope Nicholas V.[10]

The Minerva has been a titular church since 1557,[11] and a minor basilica since 1566. The church's first titular cardinal was Michele Ghislieri who became Pope Pius V in 1566. He raised the church to the level of minor basilica in that same year.

In the 16th century Giuliano da Sangallo made changes in the choir area, and in 1600 Carlo Maderno enlarged the apse, added Baroque decorations and created the present façade with its pilastered tripartite division in Renaissance style.[2] Marks on this façade dating back to the 16th and 17th centuries indicate various flood levels of the Tiber 65 feet (20 metres).

Between 1848 and 1855 Girolamo Bianchedi directed an important program of restoration when most of the Baroque additions were removed and the blank walls were covered with neo-gothic frescos giving the interior the Neo-Gothic appearance that it has today.

The basilica's stained glass windows are mostly from the 19th century. In 1909, the great organ was constructed by the firm of Carlo Vegezzi Bossi. The organ was restored in 1999.[12]

The inscriptions found in S. Maria sopra Minerva have been collected and published by Vincenzo Forcella.[13]

Convent and Studium edit

In 1288 the theology component of the provincial curriculum for the education of the friars was relocated from the studium provinciale at the Roman basilica of Santa Sabina to the studium conventuale at Santa Maria sopra Minerva which was redesignated as a studium particularis theologiae.[14] At various times in its history this studium served as a studium generale for the Roman province of the Order.

College of Saint Thomas edit

The late 16th century saw the studium at Santa Maria sopra Minerva undergo transformation. Thomas Aquinas, who had been canonized in 1323 by Pope John XXII, was proclaimed the fifth Latin Doctor of the Church by Pius V in 1567. In his honor, in 1577 the Spanish Dominican Msgr. Juan Solano, O.P., former bishop of Cusco, Peru, funded the reorganization of the studium at the convent of Santa Maria sopra Minerva on the model of the College of St. Gregory at Valladolid in his native Spain.[15] The result of Solano's initiative, which underwent structural change shortly before Solano's death in 1580, was the College of Saint Thomas (Latin: Collegium Divi Thomae) at Santa Maria sopra Minerva. The college occupied several existing convent structures, and new construction was required. At that time the convent underwent considerable reconstruction to accommodate the college and the cloister was redesigned so that side chapels could be added to the church's northern flank. A detail from the Nolli Map of 1748 gives some idea of the disposition of buildings when the Minerva convent housed the College of St. Thomas.

Offices of the Inquisition edit

On 14 September 1628, by papal decree, the convent of Minerva was designated as the seat of the Congregation of the Holy Office. It thus became the place where the tribunal of the Roman Inquisition set up by Paul III in 1542 held the Secret Congregation meetings during which the sentences were read out.[16] It was in a room of the Minerva Convent on 22 June 1633 that the father of modern astronomy Galileo Galilei, after being tried for heresy, abjured his scientific theses, i.e. those of the Copernican theory.[16]

In the late 18th and early 19th century the suppression of religious orders hampered the mission of the Order and the College of St. Thomas. During the French occupation of Rome from 1797 to 1814 the college declined and even briefly closed its doors from 1810 to 1815.[17] The Order gained control of the convent once again in 1815, only for it to be expropriated by the Italian government in 1870.

In 1873 the Collegium Divi Thomæ de Urbe was forced to leave the Minerva for good, eventually being relocated at the convent of Saints Dominic and Sixtus in 1932 and being transformed into the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum in 1963.

The Dominicans eventually were allowed to return to the Minerva and part of the convent.

Interior edit

Among several important works of art in the church are Michelangelo's statue Cristo della Minerva (1521) and the late 15th-century (1488–93) cycle of frescos in the Carafa Chapel by Filippino Lippi. The basilica also houses many funerary monuments including the tombs of Doctor of the Church Saint Catherine of Siena (1347-1380), who was a member of the Third Order of Saint Dominic; the Dominican friar Blessed Fra Angelico (c. 1395–1455); and ornate monuments to the Medici popes: Leo X (born Giovanni de Medici, c. 1475–1521) and Clement VII (born Giulio de Medici, c. 1478–1534), designed by Baccio Bandinelli.[18]

Carafa Chapel edit

 
Carafa chapel in 2010

The Carafa Chapel, with late 15th-century frescoes (1488–1493) by Filippino Lippi, was commissioned by Cardinal Oliviero Carafa in honour of Saint Thomas Aquinas. There are two Marian scenes, the Annunciation and the Assumption; over the altar is his St Thomas presenting Cardinal Carafa to the Blessed Virgin, and on the right-hand wall his Glory of St Thomas. It was inaugurated in 1493, and is also known as the Chapel of St Thomas Aquinas. The relics of St Thomas Aquinas were kept in this chapel until 1511, when they were moved to Naples. Designed by Pirro Ligorio in 1559, the tomb of Gian Pietro Carafa, who became Pope Paul IV in 1555, is also in the chapel.

Cappella Capranica edit

The chapel is also known as the Chapel of the Rosary. The stucco ceiling was made in 1573 by Marcello Venusti. The chapel contains the tomb of Cardinal Domenico Capranica by Andrea Bregno.

Michelangelo's Cristo della Minerva edit

 
Michelangelo's Christ the Redeemer near the altar

The Cristo della Minerva, also known as Christ the Redeemer or Christ Carrying the Cross, is a marble sculpture by Michelangelo Buonarroti, finished in 1521, located to the left of the main altar.

Cappella Aldobrandini edit

The Aldobrandini chapel was designed by Giacomo della Porta but it is Carlo Maderno that completed della Porta's project (after 1602). It was consecrated in 1611. The canvas depicting the Institution of the Eucharist and dated from 1594 is by Federico Fiori. The monument to the parents of Pope Clement VIII, Salvestro Aldobrandini and Luisa Dati, is by Giacomo della Porta. The first Confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament to be approved by the Holy See was established in this chapel, with St. Ignatius of Loyola as one of its earliest members. This chapel contains the Federico Barocci altarpiece depicting the Communion of the Apostles.

Cappella Raymond of Penyafort edit

The chapel dedicated to Raymond of Penyafort houses the tomb of Cardinal Juan Díaz de Coca, by Andrea Bregno. The ceiling fresco Jesus Christ as a Judge, between two angels is by Melozzo da Forlì.

Other major artworks edit

Burials edit

 
Sarcophagus of Saint Catherine of Siena beneath the High Altar

Saint Catherine of Siena is buried here (except her head, which is in the Basilica of San Domenico in Siena). Beyond the sacristy, the room where she died in 1380 was reconstructed here by Antonio Barberini in 1637. This room is the first transplanted interior, and the progenitor of familiar 19th and 20th century museum "period rooms." The frescoes by Antoniazzo Romano that decorated the original walls, however, are now lost.

The famous early Renaissance painter Fra Angelico died in the adjoining convent and was buried in the church. (He had painted a fresco cycle in the cloister on the initiative of Cardinal Juan de Torquemada, but those paintings have not survived.)

Before the construction of San Giovanni dei Fiorentini, the Minerva served as the church in Rome of the Florentines, and therefore it contains numerous tombs of prelates, nobles and citizens coming from that Tuscan city. For example, the elaborate tombs of the Medici Popes - Leo X (Giovanni de Medici) and Clement VII (Giulio de Medici) - are located here, designed by Florentine sculptor Baccio Bandinelli.[18] Curiously, Diotisalvi Neroni, a refugee who had taken part in the plot against Piero de' Medici, is also buried in the church.

The tombs of Popes Urban VII and Paul IV are located in Santa Maria sopra Minerva, as are the Cardinal-nephew of Pope Nicholas III Latino Malabranca Orsini, Michel Mazarin (Archbishop of Aix) who was the brother of Cardinal Jules Mazarin, the Byzantine philosopher George of Trebizond, and two Renaissance theorists and practitioners, Filarete in architecture and Mariano Santo in surgery.

Cardinal Astorgio Agnensi has his tomb monument in the cloister.

List of cardinal-priests from Santa Maria sopra Minerva edit

Minerva's Pulcino edit

 
The Pulcino della Minerva, the famous elephant sculpture by Bernini and Ercole Ferrata, making the base of one of Rome's eleven Egyptian obelisks.

In front of the church there is one of the most curious monuments of Rome, the so-called Pulcino della Minerva. It is a statue designed by the Baroque era sculptor Gian Lorenzo Bernini (and executed by his pupil Ercole Ferrata in 1667) of an elephant as the supporting base for the Egyptian obelisk found in the Dominicans' garden. It is the shortest of the eleven Egyptian obelisks in Rome and is said to have been one of two obelisks moved from Sais, where they were built during the 589 BC-570 BC reign of the pharaoh Apries, from the Twenty-sixth dynasty of Egypt. The two obelisks were brought to Rome by Diocletian, during his reign as emperor from 284 to 305, for placement at the Temple of Isis, which stood nearby. The Latin inscription on the base, chosen by the pope who commissioned the sculpture to support the obelisk found on the site, Alexander VII, is said to represent that "...a strong mind is needed to support a solid knowledge".

The inspiration for the unusual composition came from Hypnerotomachia Poliphili ("Poliphilo's Dream of the Strife of Love"), an unusual 15th century novel probably by Francesco Colonna. The novel's main character meets an elephant made of stone carrying an obelisk, and the accompanying woodcut illustration[20] in the book is quite similar to Bernini's design for the base for the obelisk. The curious placement of the obelisk through the body of the elephant is identical.

The sturdy appearance of the structure earned it the popular nickname of "Porcino" ("Piggy") for a while. The name for the structure eventually changed to Pulcino, the Italian for a small or little "chick". This may have been a reference to the comparatively short height of the obelisk or, an obscure reference to the major charity of the Dominicans to assist young women needing dowries, who made a procession in the courtyard every year. The latter were once depicted in a local painting as three tiny figures with the Virgin Mary presenting purses to them.

Cultural references edit

The elephant and obelisk monument and the church of Santa Maria sopra Minerva feature in the novel 'The Tomb of Alexander' by Sean Hemingway. In the novel it is claimed that a secret passageway beneath the church leads to a chamber beneath the elephant monument which contains the body of Alexander the Great, placed there in the 17th century by Pope Alexander VII. This is entirely a work of fiction and the theory is unproven.

Dali's painting 'Les Elephants' includes two elephants with long spindly legs that appear to be carrying obelisks; on closer inspection, the obelisks are floating. Dali also utilizes this motif in Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee Around a Pomegranate a Second Before Awakening (1944) and The Temptation of Saint Anthony (1946). See Monica Bowen's blog Alberti's Window.[21]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c Grundmann & Fürst 1998, pp. 96–97
  2. ^ a b c "S. Maria sopra Minerva" (in Italian). Ministry of the Interior. Retrieved 2013-03-12.
  3. ^ "Official website of Santa Maria sopra Minerva" (in Italian). Retrieved 2009-03-15.
  4. ^ Platner, Samuel Ball (1929), "Obeliscus Isei Campensis", A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome, Oxford, pp. 368–369{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^ Masetti 1855, p. 2
  6. ^ Bagliani, Agostino Paravicini. "Cavalcanti, Aldobrandino (Ildebrandinus)". Treccani.it- The Italian Encyclopedia (in Italian). Retrieved 2013-02-23.
  7. ^ a b "EUROPEAN HERITAGE DAYS 2012 - "ITALY TREASURE OF EUROPE"" (in Italian). Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities and Tourism. 2012-09-29. Retrieved 2013-12-19.
  8. ^ Ferdinand Gregorovius, The History of Rome in the Middle Ages (translated from the fourth German edition by A. Hamilton) Volume 7 part 1 [Book XIII, Chapter 1] (London 1900) 22-26.
  9. ^ J. P. Adams, Sede Vacante and Conclave of 1431. Retrieved: 2016-03-13.
  10. ^ J. P. Adams, Sede Vacante and Conclave of 1447. Retrieved: 2016-03-13.
  11. ^ David M. Cheney, Catholic-Hierarchy: Santa Maria sopra Minerva. Retrieved: 2016-03-13.
  12. ^ The Vegezzi Bossi Organ at the Minerva. Retrieved: 2016-03-13.
  13. ^ V. Forcella, Inscrizioni delle chese e d' altre edifici di Roma, dal secolo XI fino al secolo XVI Volume I. Roma: Tipografia delle scienze mathematiche e fisiche, 1869, pp. 409-539.
  14. ^ Mulchahey, Marian Michèle (1998). First the bow is bent in study": Dominican education before 1350. Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies. p. 323. ISBN 9780888441324. Retrieved 2011-05-26.
  15. ^ Longo O.P., Carlo (1996). "J. Solano O.P. (1505 c.-1580) e la fondazione del "collegium S. Thomae de Urbe" (1577)". La formazione integrale domenicana al servizio della Chiesa e della società (in Italian). Edizioni Studio Domenicano. ISBN 9788870942460. Retrieved 2011-04-21. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  16. ^ a b "Palazzo del Seminario (The Seminario Palace)". Chamber of Deputies. Retrieved 2013-12-19.
  17. ^ Renz, Christopher J. (2009). In This Light Which Gives Light: A History of the College of St. Albert the Great (1930-1980). Dominican School. p. 43. ISBN 9781883734183. Retrieved 2011-04-24.
  18. ^ a b c "Antonio da Sangallo, the Younger | Design for a Freestanding Tomb Seen in Elevation and Plan".
  19. ^ "Annunciation", Feminae, University of Iowa
  20. ^   Media related to Elephant hypnerno at Wikimedia Commons (illustration from Hypnerotomachia Poliphili)
  21. ^ Bowen, Monica. Bernini’s Elephant, Another Myth, and Dali. Alberti’s Window. March 21st, 2016.

Bibliography edit

  • Silvia Koci Montanari, Le Chiese papali a Roma: sulle tracce dei sepolcri dei Papi (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2000), pp. 243 ff.
  • Giancarlo Palmerio and Gabriella Villetti, Storia edilizia di S. Maria sopra Minerva in Roma, 1275-1870 (Roma: Viella, 1989).
  • Gianfranco Spagnesi, Antonio da Sangallo il giovane: la vita e l'opera (Roma: Centro di studi per la storia dell'architettura, 1986), pp. 109–115 (tombs of Leo X and Clement VII).
  • Grundmann, Stefan; Fürst, Ulrich (1998), The Architecture of Rome: an architectural history in 400 individual presentations, Stuttgart: Ed. Axel Menges, ISBN 3-930698-60-9
  • Masetti, Pio Tommaso (1855), Memorie istoriche della chiesa di S. Maria sopra Minerva e de' suoi moderni restauri (in Italian), Rome: Tip. di B. Morini, OCLC 24239739

External links edit

  • (in Italian) Santa Maria sopra Minerva: official site
  • "Beggar's Rome" - A self-directed virtual tour of S. Maria sopra Minerva and other Roman churches
  • June Hager, "Santa Maria sopra Minerva" 2019-12-01 at the Wayback Machine
  • Woodcut elephant that inspired Bernini 2007-01-17 at the Wayback Machine
  •   Santa Maria sopra Minerva travel guide from Wikivoyage
  •   Media related to Santa Maria sopra Minerva at Wikimedia Commons
Preceded by
Santa Maria del Popolo
Landmarks of Rome
Santa Maria sopra Minerva
Succeeded by
Santa Maria in Trastevere

santa, maria, sopra, minerva, confused, with, temple, minerva, assisi, major, churches, order, preachers, also, known, dominicans, rome, italy, church, name, derives, from, fact, that, first, christian, church, structure, site, built, directly, over, italian, . Not to be confused with Temple of Minerva Assisi Santa Maria sopra Minerva is one of the major churches of the Order of Preachers also known as the Dominicans in Rome Italy The church s name derives from the fact that the first Christian church structure on the site was built directly over Italian sopra the ruins or foundations of a temple dedicated to the Egyptian goddess Isis which had been erroneously ascribed to the Greco Roman goddess Minerva 1 possibly due to interpretatio romana Basilica di Santa Maria sopra MinervaBasilica of Saint Mary above Minerva English Basilica Sanctae Mariae supra Minervam Latin Santa Maria sopra Minerva facade by Carlo MadernoClick on the map for a fullscreen view41 53 53 N 12 28 42 E 41 89806 N 12 47833 E 41 89806 12 47833LocationPiazza della Minerva 42 RomeCountryItalyDenominationCatholicWebsitesantamariasopraminerva wbr it wbr enHistoryStatusMinor basilica titular churchDedicationMary mother of JesusConsecrated1370ArchitectureArchitect s Fra Sisto FiorentinoFra Ristoro da CampiCarlo MadernoStyleGothicGroundbreaking1280 1280 Completed1370SpecificationsLength101 m 331 ft Width41 m 135 ft Nave width15 m 49 ft AdministrationProvinceDiocese of RomeClergyCardinal protectorAntonio Marto The church is located in Piazza della Minerva one block east the Pantheon in the Pigna rione of Rome within the ancient district known as the Campus Martius The present church and disposition of surrounding structures is visible in a detail from the Nolli Map of 1748 While many other medieval churches in Rome have been given Baroque makeovers that cover Gothic structures the Minerva is the only extant example of original Gothic architecture church building in Rome Behind a restrained Renaissance style facade 2 the Gothic interior features arched vaulting that was painted blue with gilded stars and trimmed with brilliant red ribbing in a 19th century Neo Gothic restoration The church and adjoining convent served at various times throughout its history as the Dominican Order s headquarters Today the headquarters have been re established in their original location at the Roman convent of Santa Sabina The titulus of Sanctae Mariae supra Minervam was conferred upon Cardinal Antonio Marto on 28 June 2018 Contents 1 History 1 1 Convent and Studium 1 2 College of Saint Thomas 1 3 Offices of the Inquisition 2 Interior 2 1 Carafa Chapel 2 2 Cappella Capranica 2 3 Michelangelo s Cristo della Minerva 2 4 Cappella Aldobrandini 2 5 Cappella Raymond of Penyafort 2 6 Other major artworks 2 7 Burials 3 List of cardinal priests from Santa Maria sopra Minerva 4 Minerva s Pulcino 5 Cultural references 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 Bibliography 9 External linksHistory edit nbsp Santa Maria sopra Minerva interior In Roman times there were three temples in what is now the area surrounding the basilica and former convent buildings the Minervium built by Gnaeus Pompey in honour of the goddess Minerva about 50 BC referred to as Delubrum Minervae the Iseum dedicated to Isis and the Serapeum dedicated to Serapis 3 Details of the temple to Minerva are not known but recent investigations indicate that a small round Minervium once stood a little further to the east on the Piazza of the Collegio Romano 1 In 1665 an Egyptian obelisk was found buried in the garden of the Dominican cloister adjacent to the church Several other small obelisks were found at different times near the church known as the Obelisci Isei Campensis which were probably brought to Rome during the 1st century and grouped in pairs with others at the entrances of the temple of Isis 4 There are other Roman survivals in the crypt The ruined temple is likely to have lasted until the reign of Pope Zachary 741 752 who finally Christianized the site offering it to Basilian nuns from Constantinople who maintained an oratorium there dedicated to the Virgin of Minervum 5 The structure he commissioned has disappeared In 1255 Pope Alexander IV established a community of converted women on the site A decade later this community was transferred to the Roman Church of San Pancrazio thereby allowing the Dominicans to establish a convent of friars and a studium conventuale there The Friars were on site beginning in 1266 but took official possession of the Church in 1275 Aldobrandino Cavalcanti 1279 vicarius Urbis or vicar for Pope Gregory X and an associate of Thomas Aquinas ratified the donation of Santa Maria sopra Minerva to the Dominicans of Santa Sabina by the sisters of S Maria in Campo Marzio 6 The ensemble of buildings that formed around the church and convent came to be known as the insula sapientae or insula dominicana island of wisdom or Dominican island 7 The Dominicans began building the present Gothic church in 1280 modelling it on their church in Florence Santa Maria Novella Architectural plans were probably drawn up during the pontificate of Nicholas III by two Dominican friars Fra Sisto Fiorentino and Fra Ristoro da Campi 1 With the help of funds contributed by Boniface VIII and the faithful the side aisles were completed in the 14th century In 1453 church interior construction was finally completed when Cardinal Juan Torquemada ordered that the main nave be covered by a vault that reduced the overall projected height of the church 2 In the same year of 1453 Count Francesco Orsini sponsored the construction of the facade at his own expense However work on the facade remained incomplete until 1725 when it was finally finished by order of Pope Benedict XIII 7 In 1431 the Church and the adjacent Convent of the Dominicans was the site of a Papal conclave The city of Rome was in an uproar upon the death of Pope Martin V Colonna whose family had dominated Roman political life for fifteen years and enriched themselves on the wealth of the Church There was fighting in the streets on a daily basis and the Plaza in front of the Minerva because of the configuration of streets houses church and monastery could easily be fortified and defended 8 The Sacristy of the Church served as the meeting hall for the fourteen cardinals out of nineteen who attended the Conclave which began on 1 March 1431 The dormitory of the monks in the Convent to the immediate north of the Church served as the living quarters for the cardinals and their refectory and kitchen On 3 March they elected Cardinal Gabriele Condulmaro who took the name Eugenius IV 9 A second Conclave was held at the Minerva on 4 6 March 1447 following the death of Pope Eugenius once again in the midst of disturbances involving the Orsini supporters of Pope Eugenius and his enemies the Colonna Eighteen cardinals out of a total of twenty six were present and elected Cardinal Tommaso Parentucelli da Sarzana as Pope Nicholas V 10 The Minerva has been a titular church since 1557 11 and a minor basilica since 1566 The church s first titular cardinal was Michele Ghislieri who became Pope Pius V in 1566 He raised the church to the level of minor basilica in that same year In the 16th century Giuliano da Sangallo made changes in the choir area and in 1600 Carlo Maderno enlarged the apse added Baroque decorations and created the present facade with its pilastered tripartite division in Renaissance style 2 Marks on this facade dating back to the 16th and 17th centuries indicate various flood levels of the Tiber 65 feet 20 metres Between 1848 and 1855 Girolamo Bianchedi directed an important program of restoration when most of the Baroque additions were removed and the blank walls were covered with neo gothic frescos giving the interior the Neo Gothic appearance that it has today The basilica s stained glass windows are mostly from the 19th century In 1909 the great organ was constructed by the firm of Carlo Vegezzi Bossi The organ was restored in 1999 12 The inscriptions found in S Maria sopra Minerva have been collected and published by Vincenzo Forcella 13 Convent and Studium edit In 1288 the theology component of the provincial curriculum for the education of the friars was relocated from the studium provinciale at the Roman basilica of Santa Sabina to the studium conventuale at Santa Maria sopra Minerva which was redesignated as a studium particularis theologiae 14 At various times in its history this studium served as a studium generale for the Roman province of the Order College of Saint Thomas edit The late 16th century saw the studium at Santa Maria sopra Minerva undergo transformation Thomas Aquinas who had been canonized in 1323 by Pope John XXII was proclaimed the fifth Latin Doctor of the Church by Pius V in 1567 In his honor in 1577 the Spanish Dominican Msgr Juan Solano O P former bishop of Cusco Peru funded the reorganization of the studium at the convent of Santa Maria sopra Minerva on the model of the College of St Gregory at Valladolid in his native Spain 15 The result of Solano s initiative which underwent structural change shortly before Solano s death in 1580 was the College of Saint Thomas Latin Collegium Divi Thomae at Santa Maria sopra Minerva The college occupied several existing convent structures and new construction was required At that time the convent underwent considerable reconstruction to accommodate the college and the cloister was redesigned so that side chapels could be added to the church s northern flank A detail from the Nolli Map of 1748 gives some idea of the disposition of buildings when the Minerva convent housed the College of St Thomas Offices of the Inquisition edit On 14 September 1628 by papal decree the convent of Minerva was designated as the seat of the Congregation of the Holy Office It thus became the place where the tribunal of the Roman Inquisition set up by Paul III in 1542 held the Secret Congregation meetings during which the sentences were read out 16 It was in a room of the Minerva Convent on 22 June 1633 that the father of modern astronomy Galileo Galilei after being tried for heresy abjured his scientific theses i e those of the Copernican theory 16 In the late 18th and early 19th century the suppression of religious orders hampered the mission of the Order and the College of St Thomas During the French occupation of Rome from 1797 to 1814 the college declined and even briefly closed its doors from 1810 to 1815 17 The Order gained control of the convent once again in 1815 only for it to be expropriated by the Italian government in 1870 In 1873 the Collegium Divi Thomae de Urbe was forced to leave the Minerva for good eventually being relocated at the convent of Saints Dominic and Sixtus in 1932 and being transformed into the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas Angelicum in 1963 The Dominicans eventually were allowed to return to the Minerva and part of the convent Interior editAmong several important works of art in the church are Michelangelo s statue Cristo della Minerva 1521 and the late 15th century 1488 93 cycle of frescos in the Carafa Chapel by Filippino Lippi The basilica also houses many funerary monuments including the tombs of Doctor of the Church Saint Catherine of Siena 1347 1380 who was a member of the Third Order of Saint Dominic the Dominican friar Blessed Fra Angelico c 1395 1455 and ornate monuments to the Medici popes Leo X born Giovanni de Medici c 1475 1521 and Clement VII born Giulio de Medici c 1478 1534 designed by Baccio Bandinelli 18 Carafa Chapel edit Main article Carafa Chapel nbsp Carafa chapel in 2010 The Carafa Chapel with late 15th century frescoes 1488 1493 by Filippino Lippi was commissioned by Cardinal Oliviero Carafa in honour of Saint Thomas Aquinas There are two Marian scenes the Annunciation and the Assumption over the altar is his St Thomas presenting Cardinal Carafa to the Blessed Virgin and on the right hand wall his Glory of St Thomas It was inaugurated in 1493 and is also known as the Chapel of St Thomas Aquinas The relics of St Thomas Aquinas were kept in this chapel until 1511 when they were moved to Naples Designed by Pirro Ligorio in 1559 the tomb of Gian Pietro Carafa who became Pope Paul IV in 1555 is also in the chapel Cappella Capranica edit The chapel is also known as the Chapel of the Rosary The stucco ceiling was made in 1573 by Marcello Venusti The chapel contains the tomb of Cardinal Domenico Capranica by Andrea Bregno Michelangelo s Cristo della Minerva edit nbsp Michelangelo s Christ the Redeemer near the altar The Cristo della Minerva also known as Christ the Redeemer or Christ Carrying the Cross is a marble sculpture by Michelangelo Buonarroti finished in 1521 located to the left of the main altar Cappella Aldobrandini edit The Aldobrandini chapel was designed by Giacomo della Porta but it is Carlo Maderno that completed della Porta s project after 1602 It was consecrated in 1611 The canvas depicting the Institution of the Eucharist and dated from 1594 is by Federico Fiori The monument to the parents of Pope Clement VIII Salvestro Aldobrandini and Luisa Dati is by Giacomo della Porta The first Confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament to be approved by the Holy See was established in this chapel with St Ignatius of Loyola as one of its earliest members This chapel contains the Federico Barocci altarpiece depicting the Communion of the Apostles Cappella Raymond of Penyafort edit The chapel dedicated to Raymond of Penyafort houses the tomb of Cardinal Juan Diaz de Coca by Andrea Bregno The ceiling fresco Jesus Christ as a Judge between two angels is by Melozzo da Forli Other major artworks edit Annunciation 1485 by Antoniazzo Romano shows Cardinal Juan de Torquemada OP presenting girls who received a dowry by his Guild of the Annunciation to the Virgin 19 The cardinal is buried nearby The tombs of the Popes Leo X and Clement VII by Baccio Bandinelli 1541 18 Tomb of Urban VII Tomb of Fra Angelico by Isaia da Pisa 1455 Tomb of Guillaume Durand the Elder Bishop of Mende 1285 1296 the 13th century canonist signed by Giovanni di Cosma 1296 Memorial to Maria Raggi by Gian Lorenzo Bernini between 1647 and 1653 Tomb of Cardinal Domenico Pimentel by Gian Lorenzo Bernini 1653 Tomb of Francesco Tornabuoni 1480 one of the best works by Mino da Fiesole Burials edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Santa Maria sopra Minerva news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp Sarcophagus of Saint Catherine of Siena beneath the High Altar Saint Catherine of Siena is buried here except her head which is in the Basilica of San Domenico in Siena Beyond the sacristy the room where she died in 1380 was reconstructed here by Antonio Barberini in 1637 This room is the first transplanted interior and the progenitor of familiar 19th and 20th century museum period rooms The frescoes by Antoniazzo Romano that decorated the original walls however are now lost The famous early Renaissance painter Fra Angelico died in the adjoining convent and was buried in the church He had painted a fresco cycle in the cloister on the initiative of Cardinal Juan de Torquemada but those paintings have not survived Before the construction of San Giovanni dei Fiorentini the Minerva served as the church in Rome of the Florentines and therefore it contains numerous tombs of prelates nobles and citizens coming from that Tuscan city For example the elaborate tombs of the Medici Popes Leo X Giovanni de Medici and Clement VII Giulio de Medici are located here designed by Florentine sculptor Baccio Bandinelli 18 Curiously Diotisalvi Neroni a refugee who had taken part in the plot against Piero de Medici is also buried in the church The tombs of Popes Urban VII and Paul IV are located in Santa Maria sopra Minerva as are the Cardinal nephew of Pope Nicholas III Latino Malabranca Orsini Michel Mazarin Archbishop of Aix who was the brother of Cardinal Jules Mazarin the Byzantine philosopher George of Trebizond and two Renaissance theorists and practitioners Filarete in architecture and Mariano Santo in surgery Cardinal Astorgio Agnensi has his tomb monument in the cloister List of cardinal priests from Santa Maria sopra Minerva edit1557 1566 Michele Ghisleri later Pope Pius V 1566 1589 Michele Bonelli 1589 1602 Girolamo Bernerio 1602 1608 Francois Marie Thaurusi 1608 1616 Filippo Spinelli 1621 1639 Giulio Roma 1643 1654 Giambattista Altieri 1655 1679 Jean Francois Paul de Gondi 1679 1694 Philip Howard of Norfolk 1694 1699 Jose Saenz d Aguirre 1701 1729 Louis Antoine de Noailles 1729 1730 Agustin Pipia 1730 1747 Philipp Ludwig von Sinzendorf 1747 1762 Daniele Delfino 1758 1770 Giuseppe Pozzobonelli 1770 1782 Scipione Borghese 1783 1787 Tommaso Maria Ghilini 1787 1800 Vincenzo Ranuzzi 1801 1814 Giulio Maria della Somaglia 1816 1822 Francesco Fontana 1823 1828 Francesco Bertazzoli 1829 1832 Benedetto Barberini 1832 1836 Giuseppe Maria Velzi 1838 1850 Antonio Francesco Orioli 1850 1854 Raffaele Fornari 1857 1860 Francesco Gaude 1861 1864 Gaetano Bedini 1868 1870 Matteo Eustachio Gonella 1875 1885 John McCloskey 1887 1894 Zeferino Gonzalez y Diaz Tunon 1895 1896 Egidio Mauri 1896 1909 Serafino Cretoni 1911 1918 John Murphy Farley 1919 1922 Teodoro Valfre di Bonzo 1922 1926 Stanislas Touchet 1926 1929 Giuseppe Gamba 1930 1938 Giulio Serafini 1939 1946 Eugene Tisserant 1946 1965 Clemente Micara 1967 1974 Antonio Samore 1976 1977 Dino Staffa 1979 1998 Anastasio Ballestrero 2001 2017 Cormac Murphy O Connor 2018 present Antonio MartoMinerva s Pulcino editMain article Elephant and Obelisk nbsp The Pulcino della Minerva the famous elephant sculpture by Bernini and Ercole Ferrata making the base of one of Rome s eleven Egyptian obelisks In front of the church there is one of the most curious monuments of Rome the so called Pulcino della Minerva It is a statue designed by the Baroque era sculptor Gian Lorenzo Bernini and executed by his pupil Ercole Ferrata in 1667 of an elephant as the supporting base for the Egyptian obelisk found in the Dominicans garden It is the shortest of the eleven Egyptian obelisks in Rome and is said to have been one of two obelisks moved from Sais where they were built during the 589 BC 570 BC reign of the pharaoh Apries from the Twenty sixth dynasty of Egypt The two obelisks were brought to Rome by Diocletian during his reign as emperor from 284 to 305 for placement at the Temple of Isis which stood nearby The Latin inscription on the base chosen by the pope who commissioned the sculpture to support the obelisk found on the site Alexander VII is said to represent that a strong mind is needed to support a solid knowledge The inspiration for the unusual composition came from Hypnerotomachia Poliphili Poliphilo s Dream of the Strife of Love an unusual 15th century novel probably by Francesco Colonna The novel s main character meets an elephant made of stone carrying an obelisk and the accompanying woodcut illustration 20 in the book is quite similar to Bernini s design for the base for the obelisk The curious placement of the obelisk through the body of the elephant is identical The sturdy appearance of the structure earned it the popular nickname of Porcino Piggy for a while The name for the structure eventually changed to Pulcino the Italian for a small or little chick This may have been a reference to the comparatively short height of the obelisk or an obscure reference to the major charity of the Dominicans to assist young women needing dowries who made a procession in the courtyard every year The latter were once depicted in a local painting as three tiny figures with the Virgin Mary presenting purses to them Cultural references editThe elephant and obelisk monument and the church of Santa Maria sopra Minerva feature in the novel The Tomb of Alexander by Sean Hemingway In the novel it is claimed that a secret passageway beneath the church leads to a chamber beneath the elephant monument which contains the body of Alexander the Great placed there in the 17th century by Pope Alexander VII This is entirely a work of fiction and the theory is unproven Dali s painting Les Elephants includes two elephants with long spindly legs that appear to be carrying obelisks on closer inspection the obelisks are floating Dali also utilizes this motif in Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee Around a Pomegranate a Second Before Awakening 1944 and The Temptation of Saint Anthony 1946 See Monica Bowen s blog Alberti s Window 21 Gallery edit nbsp Tomb of Giovanni Vigevano by Gian Lorenzo Bernini 1618 1620 nbsp Memorial to Maria Raggi by Gian Lorenzo Bernini 1647 1653 nbsp Tomb of Fra Angelico by Isaia da Pisa 1455 nbsp Cristo della Minerva by Michelangelo 1519 1520 nbsp High Altar nbsp Vault nbsp Basilica interior nbsp Madonna and Child Giving Blessings by Benozzo Gozzoli 1449 nbsp Icon of Our Lady of the Holy Rosary crowned by the Vatican Chapter in 1640 as authorized by Pope Urban VIIISee also editRoman Catholic Marian churchesReferences editNotes edit Citations edit a b c Grundmann amp Furst 1998 pp 96 97 a b c S Maria sopra Minerva in Italian Ministry of the Interior Retrieved 2013 03 12 Official website of Santa Maria sopra Minerva in Italian Retrieved 2009 03 15 Platner Samuel Ball 1929 Obeliscus Isei Campensis A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome Oxford pp 368 369 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Masetti 1855 p 2 Bagliani Agostino Paravicini Cavalcanti Aldobrandino Ildebrandinus Treccani it The Italian Encyclopedia in Italian Retrieved 2013 02 23 a b EUROPEAN HERITAGE DAYS 2012 ITALY TREASURE OF EUROPE in Italian Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities and Tourism 2012 09 29 Retrieved 2013 12 19 Ferdinand Gregorovius The History of Rome in the Middle Ages translated from the fourth German edition by A Hamilton Volume 7 part 1 Book XIII Chapter 1 London 1900 22 26 J P Adams Sede Vacante and Conclave of 1431 Retrieved 2016 03 13 J P Adams Sede Vacante and Conclave of 1447 Retrieved 2016 03 13 David M Cheney Catholic Hierarchy Santa Maria sopra Minerva Retrieved 2016 03 13 The Vegezzi Bossi Organ at the Minerva Retrieved 2016 03 13 V Forcella Inscrizioni delle chese e d altre edifici di Roma dal secolo XI fino al secolo XVI Volume I Roma Tipografia delle scienze mathematiche e fisiche 1869 pp 409 539 Mulchahey Marian Michele 1998 First the bow is bent in study Dominican education before 1350 Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies p 323 ISBN 9780888441324 Retrieved 2011 05 26 Longo O P Carlo 1996 J Solano O P 1505 c 1580 e la fondazione del collegium S Thomae de Urbe 1577 La formazione integrale domenicana al servizio della Chiesa e della societa in Italian Edizioni Studio Domenicano ISBN 9788870942460 Retrieved 2011 04 21 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b Palazzo del Seminario The Seminario Palace Chamber of Deputies Retrieved 2013 12 19 Renz Christopher J 2009 In This Light Which Gives Light A History of the College of St Albert the Great 1930 1980 Dominican School p 43 ISBN 9781883734183 Retrieved 2011 04 24 a b c Antonio da Sangallo the Younger Design for a Freestanding Tomb Seen in Elevation and Plan Annunciation Feminae University of Iowa nbsp Media related to Elephant hypnerno at Wikimedia Commons illustration from Hypnerotomachia Poliphili Bowen Monica Bernini s Elephant Another Myth and Dali Alberti s Window March 21st 2016 Bibliography edit Silvia Koci Montanari Le Chiese papali a Roma sulle tracce dei sepolcri dei Papi Vatican City Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2000 pp 243 ff Giancarlo Palmerio and Gabriella Villetti Storia edilizia di S Maria sopra Minerva in Roma 1275 1870 Roma Viella 1989 Gianfranco Spagnesi Antonio da Sangallo il giovane la vita e l opera Roma Centro di studi per la storia dell architettura 1986 pp 109 115 tombs of Leo X and Clement VII Grundmann Stefan Furst Ulrich 1998 The Architecture of Rome an architectural history in 400 individual presentations Stuttgart Ed Axel Menges ISBN 3 930698 60 9 Masetti Pio Tommaso 1855 Memorie istoriche della chiesa di S Maria sopra Minerva e de suoi moderni restauri in Italian Rome Tip di B Morini OCLC 24239739External links edit in Italian Santa Maria sopra Minerva official site Beggar s Rome A self directed virtual tour of S Maria sopra Minerva and other Roman churches June Hager Santa Maria sopra Minerva Archived 2019 12 01 at the Wayback Machine Woodcut elephant that inspired Bernini Archived 2007 01 17 at the Wayback Machine nbsp Santa Maria sopra Minerva travel guide from Wikivoyage nbsp Media related to Santa Maria sopra Minerva at Wikimedia Commons Preceded bySanta Maria del Popolo Landmarks of RomeSanta Maria sopra Minerva Succeeded bySanta Maria in Trastevere Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Santa Maria sopra Minerva amp oldid 1214627466, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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