Oratorio del Gonfalone, Rome
The Oratorio del
History
The Confraternity of the Gonfalone was a group of
Over the centuries the group dedicated itself to various activities, including the participation in religious processions as banner carriers (wearing white gowns with peaked blue hoods), and also of putting on a yearly passion play. They also were involved in charity towards the poor and needy, and during 1581–1765, of freeing Italians enslaved in Muslim and Slavic lands.
Pope Martin V assigned to the confraternity, the old Church of Santa Lucia Vecchia, which had served as a hospice for pilgrims. A fair called "La Sposa", was held in the area annually on the Feast of St. Lucy. In 1486, Pope Innocent VIII, united a number of confraternities under the name " Confraternita del Gonfalone". As the church was close to the Tiber and subject to flooding, he transferred the confraternity to Santa Lucia ai Banchi Vecchi.
The Oratorio was built between 1544 and 1547, by the Confraternity on the ruins of the Church of Santa Lucia Vecchia which can still be seen in the basement. In 1579 Pope Gregory XIII raised it to the rank of an archconfraternity.
In 1890, the Archconfraternity was dissolved and its property devolved to the state. In October 1960 the Oratory, restored by the Superintendency of the Galleries and the works of art of Rome, was entrusted to the Roman Polyphonic Choir. It now serves as a concert venue.[2]
Description
The building on Via del Gonfalone 32a (near corner of Via Giulia and Vicolo della Scimmia) has a modest façade, designed by Domenico Castelli, resembling a simple church.[3]
Inside, a team of prominent
Note there are at least two other Oratorio del Gonfalone in Italy, also highly decorated in the interior, one at Fabriano and the other at Vicenza.
References
- ISBN 9780916101749
- ^ "Oratorio del Gonfalone", Turismo Roma, Major Events, Sport, Tourism and Fashion Department
- ^ Strinati, Claudio, "History", Oratorio del Gonfalone
- ^ Röttgen, Herwarth. "Notes on the ‘Oratorio Del Gonfalone’ in Rome." The Burlington Magazine, vol. 110, no. 780, 1968, pp. 141–43. JSTOR
- ^ "Via del Gonfalone", Roma Segreta
- ISBN 9788882654771