Santa Maria della Fava
Santa Maria della Fava | |
---|---|
Roman Catholic | |
Province | Venice |
Location | |
Location | Venice, Italy |
Geographic coordinates | 45°26′13″N 12°20′18″E / 45.43694°N 12.33833°E |
Santa Maria della Fava, also originally known as Santa Maria della Consolazione, is an ancient
The suffix of della Fava (of the bean) attributed to the church, bridge and piazza has a number of attributed derivations. One explanation is that this area in Venice was used for the commerce of beans or the home of pastry shops for bean cake. A more colorful legend, perhaps for consumption of tourists, is that a man smuggling salt and beans was apprehended at the site, but when he kneeled before a local icon of the Madonna painted on a wall of Ca' Dolce, the salt from his bag disappeared, and thus he escaped imprisonment.[1] The church then was built to house the miraculous icon. Finally, the church may have been endowed by the Fava family from Ferrara.
The original church at the site was completed by 1500. While by 1662, it was under the jurisdiction of the
Sources
- G.Lorenzetti, Venezia e il suo estuario, Edizioni Lint, Trieste, 1974
- Marcello Brusegan, Le chiese di Venezia, Ed. Newton-Compton, 2008
- Notizie storiche delle chiese e monasteri di Venezia, e di Torcello, tratte dalle chiese veneziane, Torecellane..., Stamperia del Seminario, Appresso Giovanni Manfrè, Padua. By Flaminio Cornaro (1758) page 89–92.[1]