New Superiors Seminar, Rome Jan-Feb 2011
In-service training and appropriate learning from the
Eternal City.
The venue for the Seminar was in the neighbourhood of
the Cistercian (Trappist) monastery of Tre Fontane.
It was an excellent opportunity to visit the Abbey.
The Abbot welcomed the international representative group.
Mark succeeeded in having a fine collection of photos and this is
easily augmented from the The Abbazia delle Tre Fontane Website:
http://www.abbaziatrefontane.it/index.php
http://www.abbaziatrefontane.it/index.php
The Abbey
Cloister Garth
From memory I am mystified by two Chapels, near
to the monastery.
The Website provides information on these
two sanctuaries below.
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hurch of Santa Maria Scala Coeli
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Open: 8.00 to 13.00, from 15.00 to 18.00 (winter) or 19.00
(summer).
S. Mass: Monday to Friday: 16.30.
In 1138 San Bernardo, in the place where today stands the church
of Santa Maria Scala Coeli, while he was celebrating a Mass for the dead, in
the presence of Pope Innocent II, had a vision in a trance, he saw a stairway
that, in a continual coming and going, the Angels led the liberated souls to
heaven from purgatory. This event comes from the name given to the
Church, the smallest of the three in the abbey.
In principle, the name "Scala Coeli" was given to the existing church oratory, in turn, allegedly built on the ruins of a pagan temple in memory of the martyrdom of San Zeno and the legionnaires' Christians. The current church building, brick and travertine, dates back to the sixteenth century, the work was started in 1582 by Giacomo della Porta, on commission of Cardinal Alessandro Farnese, and ended in 1584, when Cardinal Pietro Aldobrandini was the successor to Cardinal Farnese following his death. The church is octagonal, surmounted by a dome and a lantern, the facade is complemented by a tympanum and an eye placed in a lunette, also you can see, added to the ledge left of the façade with a piece of marble pluteus inscription dating from the ninth century. The lintel of the door reads, between the emblems of the Farnese, under a small gable, the word "Scala Coeli" Inside there are three apses with their altars. The right one is dedicated to San Zeno and the Roman soldiers martyred, there was a canvas for decoration, author unknown, but it was stolen. Yet instead of the canvas (again by an unknown author) of the central altar, one at the front entrance of the church and dedicated to SS. Virgin. The left apse contains an altar dedicated to St. Bernard and embellished by two columns with Corinthian capitals and a shovel Desiderio de Angelis in depicting the scene of the vision of the saint. The Florentine Francesco Zucchi, designed by Giovanni de Vecchi, is the author of the fine mosaic, executed in 1591, decorating the vault of the church, the composition is a Madonnna and Child surrounded by St. Bernard, St. Clement and Robert of Molesmes VIII - right - and - left - from St. Vincent, and Cardinal Sant'Anastasio Aldobrandini. The floor of this chapel had been decorated, but now the ancient mosaic of Cosmati work of the school, there are only a few tracks together with a fragment of an inscription dating from the third Christian century. Below is the crypt, which houses an altar dedicated to San Zeno century martyrs and soldiers, on whose sides two windows allowing a glimpse - left - a small altar dedicated to the pagan goddess and Dia - right - a corner where, according to tradition, St. Paul was imprisoned before decapitation. Of the two frescoes representing a San Zeno and the other soldiers and martyrs St. Paul in prison, only one is left. The church also houses the remains of the Cistercian Ferdinando Ughelli, abbot of the monastery, who died in 1670, was famous for having built the monumental nine-volume "Sacred Italy, built between 1644 and 1662, the history of the Italian episcopal sees. The church is a plaque which says that Giacomo della Porta has acted on the basis of designs of Vignola: the information is not documented, however, at the time of the construction of the church door was considered the most important architect of the Vatican , and contributed his |
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