San Biagio della Pagnotta | |
---|---|
Church of Saint Blaise of the Loaf | |
Chiesa di San Biagio degli Armeni | |
41°53′54″N12°27′58″E / 41.8983°N 12.4661°E | |
Location | 64 Via Giulia, Ponte, Rome |
Country | Italy |
Language(s) | Armenian |
Denomination | Armenian Catholic Church |
Tradition | Armenian Rite |
History | |
Status | national church |
Dedication | Blaise of Sebaste |
Relics held | throat (larynx?) of St Blaise |
Architecture | |
Functional status | active |
Architectural type | Baroque |
Groundbreaking | 11th century |
Completed | 1832 |
Administration | |
Diocese | Rome |
San Biagio della Pagnotta [1] or San Biagio degli Armeni [2] is a church in Rome, in the Ponte district, on via Giulia, near Palazzo Sacchetti. It is dedicated to Saint Blaise and is the national church of the Armenian community in Rome. [3]
The church is frequently recorded in medieval catalogues. [4] It originated before the 10th century, but is first recorded in a 1072 inscription preserved inside it, which records that Domenico, abbot of the adjoining monastery (now a hotel), rebuilt the church under pope Alexander II.
The church was rebuilt in the 18th century, including its present facade by Giovanni Antonio Perfetti - at its top is a fresco of Saint Blaise's miracle. The interior was rebuilt in the first part of the 19th century by Filippo Navone. It houses the relic of the throat of Saint Blaise as well as a Pietro da Cortona painting of angels adoring the Holy Sacrament and a painting of the Madonna delle Grazie which was Canonically crowned in 1671. In 1836 Pope Gregory XVI gave the church to the Armenians as their national church.
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