San Giovanni del Toro

Coordinates: 40°39′05″N 14°36′45″E / 40.6514°N 14.6126°E / 40.6514; 14.6126
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Chiesa di San Giovanni del Toro.

The Chiesa di San Giovanni del Toro (Italian: "Church of St. John of the Bull") is a church in Ravello, southern Italy.

History

Consecrated in the 11th century, the church was restored in 1715 after damage caused by an earthquake, and it was restored again in the 1990s.[1] The church is named for John the Apostle and for "Il Toro", the former name of the old aristocratic quarter in which it was built.[2] It is especially noted for its pulpit, dating from around the 13th century.

Early 20th-century English writers describe the church as in dilapidated condition,

Dukes of Amalfi.[4]

The pulpit

The

M.C. Escher,[5] who spent time in Ravello in the 1920s and studied the church and the pulpit; Ravello was one of his favorite places.[6] One mosaic is of Jonah emerging from the whale. An eagle supports the reading desk, and it holds a book opened to the first sentence of the Gospel of John. The "beautiful"[7] pulpit, which dates from the time of Roger I of Sicily,[8] also contains Oriental pottery ("underglaze-painted and lustre-painted stonepaste bowls, probably Syrian"[9]) and Arabic script,[4] and the steps up to it contain well-preserved frescoes with scenes from the life of Christ.[10] There is a side chapel with a stucco figure of Saint Catherine and her wheel.[10]

References

  1. .
  2. ^ Vaughan, Herbert Millingchamp (1908). The Naples Riviera. F.A. Stokes. pp. 164.
  3. ^ a b Ross, Janet (1912). The fourth generation: reminiscences by Janet Ross. Charles Scribner's sons. pp. 384.
  4. ^ .
  5. .
  6. .
  7. ^ Shearer, Craswell (1935). The renaissance of architecture in southern Italy: a study of Frederick II of Hohenstaufen and the Capua Triumphator archway and towers. W. Heffer and Sons.
  8. ^ The Brochure series of architectural illustration, Vol. 1. Bates & Guild. 1895. pp. 133.
  9. .
  10. ^ a b Southern Italy and Sicily: with excursions to Malta, Sardinia, Tunis, and Corfu; handbook for travellers. K. Baedeker. 1908. pp. 191.

Sources

  • Gandolfo, Francesco (1999). "Il Pulpito di San Giovanni del Toro a Ravello". La scultura normanno-sveva in Campania: botteghe e modelli. Laterza. pp. 96ff. .

40°39′05″N 14°36′45″E / 40.6514°N 14.6126°E / 40.6514; 14.6126