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San Matteo Church - Spherical Panorama
Italy
san Matteo church in Lecce . Apulia The interior has a single elliptical nave. The chapels, which open along the walls, are interspersed with pilasters with high semicircular plinths on which the twelve stone statues of the Apostles rest, made in 1692 by Placido Buffelli of Alessano. In the nave, in correspondence with the chapels, there are ten double lancet windows from which the religious attended the functions. The roof was rebuilt at the beginning of the 19th century to replace the ancient wooden ceiling. The altars, typical of the Lecce Baroque, are attributed to the school of Giuseppe Cino. Along the left side of the nave there are several altars: the first is dedicated to Saint Agatha and preserves the painting of Il Martirio di Sant'Agata, created in 1813 by Pasquale Grassi. The second altar is dedicated to St. Francis of Assisi; follows that of Saint Rita of Cascia with a papier-mâché statue by Raffaele Caretta. The fourth and fifth altars are dedicated respectively to the Immaculate Virgin and the Pietà; the latter houses a valuable polychrome wooden statue of the Pietà built in Venice in 1693. The apse, covered by a star-shaped vault, is embellished by an artistic high altar characterized by an exuberant decoration with small statues of saints in the intercolumns. At the center of the altar there is a niche containing the wooden statue of St. Matthew the Apostle, sculpted in 1691 by the Gaetano Patalano from Ischia. Along the right side of the nave, continuing towards the entrance, there are four other altars: the first bears a painting of the Madonna della Luce, a sixteenth-century fresco from the ancient church of Santa Maria della Luce depicting the Virgin and Child showing the neck a coral croissant. Next are the altars of Saint Anne and the Holy Family, both bearing a painting by Serafino Elmo. Between the two altars there is a wooden pulpit, a refined work of carving, flanked by four allegorical stone statues. The last altar is dedicated to Saint Oronzo with an altarpiece from 1736. On the front door there is a wooden, sculpted and gilded cover of the eighteenth-century organ of the Basilica of Santa Croce. Wikipedia source - Thanks
Copyright: Franco Melechi
Type: Spherical
Resolution: 11752x5876
Taken: 19/05/2019
Chargée: 16/06/2019
Published: 16/06/2019
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Tags: interior; church; religion; architecture; arts
More About Italy

The name "Italy" is shrouded in mystery; some etymologists trace it to a Greek word meaning "the land of young cattle."Italy was fond of Jupiter and Mars from the very start, Jupiter for fatherly good luck and Mars for war!But it all began with Rome. Rome was founded by Romulus and Remus who were sons of Rhea and Mars.The twins were abandoned at birth out of a fear that they would grow up and later overthrow Amelius, usurper of their grandfather's rightful throne.Wrongful mis-doings most foul! Treachery and sabotage!! HOW would these two blessed infants make their way in such a world?As it turns out, the twins didn't have to make their way very far, because one of them killed the other one and then they weren't twins anymore. But that happens later.First they got rescued by a she-wolf who suckled them with her milk and raised them as her own until they were discovered by the shepherd Faustulus.Faustulus fed them meat and bread and also raised them as his own until they were old enough to return to Amelius and hack him up as planned. They reinstated the grandfather Numitor to his rightful throne and went off to celebrate by starting a town of their own.They chose a hilly area where the mama wolf had saved them from certain death in the barren wilderness and began scouting locations.Romulus liked one hill. Remus liked another. The circle of crows like Romulus' hill, so Romulus killed Remus and named the town after himself. Thus Rome was born and Italy with it.Text by Steve Smith.


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