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Sant'Andrea della Valle |
Sant'Andrea
della Valle is a basilica church in Rome, in the rione of Sant'Eustachio.
It was initially planned when Donna Costanza Piccolomini
d'Aragona, duchess of Amalfi and descendant of the family of
Pope Pius II, bequeathed her palace and the adjacent church of
San Sebastiano in central Rome to the Theatine order for
construction of a new church. Since Amalfi's patron was Saint
Andrew, the church was planned in his honor. Work initially
started around 1590 under the designs of Giacomo della Porta and
Pier Paolo Olivieri, and under the patronage of Cardinal
Gesualdo. With the prior patron's death, direction of the church
passed to Cardinal Alessandro Peretti di Montalto, nephew of
Sixtus V. By 1608, and banked by the then enormous endowment of
over 150 thousand gold scudi, work restarted anew with a more
grandiose plans mainly by Carlo Maderno. The interior structure
of the church was finally completed by 1650, with additional
touches added by Francesco Grimaldi.
The fresco decoration of Sant'Andrea's dome was one of the
largest commissions of its day. The work was disputed by two
Carracci pupils, Giovanni Lanfranco and Domenichino. In 1608,
Lanfranco had been chosen by Cardinal Alessandro, but the
Ludovisi papacy of Pope Gregory XV favored the Bolognese
Domenichino. In the end, both artists were employed, although
Lanfranco's lavish dome decoration (completed 1627) set the
model for such decorations for the following decades
The Lancellotti Chapel, the first on the right was designed by
Carlo Fontana in 1670, while the sculptural marble relief
depicting Angel Urges Sacred Family to Flee to Egypt (1675) is
work of Antonio Raggi. The second Strozzi Chapel has a Pietà, Leah and Rachele (1616) copies in bronze by Gregorio De Rossi
from originals by Michelangelo. In the right transept is the
Chapel of S.Andrea Avellino with Death of a Saint (1625) by
Giovanni Lanfranco who also frescoed the impressive Glory of
Paradise [1625-28] in the cupola, with figures by the
evangelists in the spandrels (1621-8) by his rival, Domenichino.
The presbytery decoration is by Alessandro Algardi. In the apse
half-dome the History of Sant'Andrea and Virtues are frescoed by
Domenichino. In the apse walls are a Crucifixion, Martyrdom and
burial of Sant'Andrea by Mattia Preti (1650-1651). In the left
transept, the Chapel of S.Gaetano Thiene has statues of
Abundance and Wisdom by Giulio Tadolini. Over the entrance to
the left circular chapel is the tomb of Pius II (1475) finished
by a follower of the Andrea Bregno. In the third chapel on the
left "S.Sebastiano" (1614) by Giovanni De Vecchi, while the
second chapel houses the tomb Giovanni Della Casa, author of Il
Galateo. In the first chapel is an Assumption and a Lucia
collects the body of S. Sebastiano by Passignano. In the niches
to right is a statue of Santa Marta (1629) by Francesco Mochi
and San Giovanni Evangelista by Ambrogio Buonvicino.
The Baroque facade was added between 1655 and 1663 by Carlo
Rainaldi, at the expense of Cardinal Francesco Peretti di
Montalto, nephew of Alessandro. In the church are present the
cenotaphs of popes Pius II and Pius III, whose corpses are
buried somewhere in the church. In 1650, Mattia Preti painted
three frescoes regarding the martyrdom of Andrew with his
Crucifixion in the center[3] in the apse, as commissioned by
Donna Olimpia, sister in law of Pope Innocent X.
The church contains a Saint John the Baptist by Pietro Bernini (Gianlorenzo
Bernini's father).
Plan of the basilica.The first act of the opera Tosca by Puccini
is set in Sant'Andrea della Valle. However, the Cappella
Attavanti used was a poetic invention.
The Cardinal Priest of the Titulus S. Andreae Apostoli de Valle
is Giovanni Canestri.
Sant'Andrea della Valle later became a model for the
construction of other churches like the St.Kajetan church in
Munich.
On the square in front of the church stands now the fountain of
Carlo Maderno, placed until 1937 at the center of the destroyed
Piazza Scossacavalli in Borgo.
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