Sancta Sanctorum (Lateran, Rome)

Coordinates: 41°53′15″N 12°30′25″E / 41.8876°N 12.5070°E / 41.8876; 12.5070
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Main altar of the Sancta Sanctorum, enshrining the Uronica.

The Sancta Sanctorum (

Vatican Palace
. The chapel is the only building from the old Lateran Palace that was not destroyed during its reconstruction.

Name

The chapel acquired the Sancta Sanctorum sometime in the ninth century.[1] The spelling is Sancta, the neuter plural form of the Latin adjective "holy": this is a reference to the multiple relics preserved there (i.e. "the holy things") and to the Holy of Holies in Jerusalem, traditionally called in Latin both sanctum sanctorum (the singular form) or sancta sanctorum.

History

The founder of the chapel is unknown. It was originally dedicated to Saint Lawrence, and served as the pope's private oratory until the Renaissance. It is located at the top of the Scala Sancta, ("Holy Stairs"). The first mention of the chapel is found in the Liber Pontificalis, during the tenure of Pope Stephen III (†772). The antiquarian Marangoni along with Onofrio Panvinio quote documents that cite the acquisition in 583 by Pope Gregory of relics from Constantinople, including an arm of St Lawrence, that were housed in the church of St Lawrence in Lateran palace.[2]

It formed part of the

Sixtus V in 1586.[3][4]

Artwork

Sancta sanctorum, cosmatesque pavement from 1278

The chapel is relatively small and rectangular, with a nave seven meters long and an apse nearly 6 meters wide. rectangular apse measuring 2.73 by 5.85 metres.

The main altar contains a cypress wood reliquary box, placed under the altar by Pope Leo III (†816).[5][6][7] It supposedly houses the bones of at least 13 saints (whereof the chapel derives the name "holy of holies"). The reliquary box itself is taken to represent the Ark of the Covenant in Solomon's Temple.

Over the course of time, other relics were added, including the cloisonné enameled cross commissioned by

Paschal I (†824).[3]

The opus sectile floor dates from 1278. This style of intarsiated pavement was created in the 12th century by the Cosmati family of stonecutters and widely copied throughout Rome in the 13th century.

The chapel also houses the Uronica or

Saint Luke and finished as an acheiropoieta (which translates to "images not made by human hands") since finished by an angel.[8][9] Other acheiropoieta include the image of Christ’s face that miraculously imprinted itself on the sudarium of Veronica.[10]

References

  1. ^ a b "The Sancta Sanctorum", Scala Santa di Roma
  2. ^ Istoria dell'antichissimo oratorio, o Capella di San Lorenzo nel patriarchio lateranense, comunemente appellato Sancta Sanctorum, e della celebre immagine del SS. Salvatore detta Acheropita, che ivi conservasi, by Giovanni Marangoni, Stamperia San Michele, Rome, 1747.
  3. ^ a b "New Display of Sacred Objects from the Sancta Sanctorum", Patrons of the Arts in the Vatican Museums, September 1, 2015
  4. ^ Leonardo Mazzucconi, Memorie storiche della Scala Santa e dell'insigne santuario di Sancta Sanctorum, Ferretti, 1840
  5. ^ Giovanni Diacono, De Ecclesia lateranensi, ed. J. Mabillon, Museum Italicum seu collectio veterum scriptorum ex bibliothecis italicis eruti, 2 vols, Paris, 1724.
  6. ^ Il tesoro della cappella Sancta Sanctorum, Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, 1941
  7. ^ Salomoni Generoso, Memorie sacre della cappella di Sancta Sanctorum e della scala del palazzo di Pilato detta volgarmente la Scala Santa, Roma 1775
  8. ^ Sancta sanctorum. Ediz. illustrata, Electa, 1995
  9. ^ Paolo Mencacci, Alcune memorie sull'immagine Acheropita del SS. Salvatore di Sancta Sanctorum, Monaldi, 1863
  10. .

41°53′15″N 12°30′25″E / 41.8876°N 12.5070°E / 41.8876; 12.5070