Sant'Agnese in Agone

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Sant'Agnese in Agone
Church of Saint Agnes at the Circus Agonalis
Sant'Agnese in Piazza Navona
Chiesa di Sant'Agnese in Agone
Sant'Agnese in Agone (Rome) esterno.jpg
Sant'Agnese from Piazza Navona
Sant'Agnese in Agone
Click on the map to see marker.
41°53′56″N12°28′21″E / 41.89877°N 12.4726°E / 41.89877; 12.4726
LocationVia di Santa Maria dell'Anima 30/A,, Rome
Country Italy
Language(s)Italian
Denomination Catholic
Tradition Roman Rite
Website santagneseinagone.org
History
Status titular church
Foundedearly 12th century
Dedication Agnes of Rome
Consecrated 28 January 1123
Architecture
Architect(s) Girolamo Rainaldi, Carlo Rainaldi, Borromini, Bernini
Style Baroque
Completed1859
Administration
Diocese Rome

Sant'Agnese in Agone (also called Sant'Agnese in Piazza Navona) is a 17th-century Baroque church in Rome, Italy. It faces onto the Piazza Navona, one of the main urban spaces in the historic centre of the city and the site where the Early Christian Saint Agnes was martyred in the ancient Stadium of Domitian. Construction began in 1652 under the architects Girolamo Rainaldi and his son Carlo Rainaldi. After numerous quarrels, the other main architect involved was Francesco Borromini. [1]

Contents

The church is a titular deaconry, with Gerhard Ludwig Müller being the current Cardinal-Deacon. As well as religious services, the church hosts regular classical concerts in the Borromini Sacristy, from sacred Baroque works to chamber music and operas.

History

View into frescoed cupola and pendentives; apse on left, entrance with organ and tomb of Pope Innocent X on right Sant'Agnese in Agone (Rome) - Dome interior (Wide view).jpg
View into frescoed cupola and pendentives; apse on left, entrance with organ and tomb of Pope Innocent X on right

The building of the church was begun in 1652 at the instigation of Pope Innocent X whose family palace, the Palazzo Pamphili, is adjacent to this church. The church was to be effectively a family chapel annexed to their residence (for example, an opening was formed in the drum of the dome so the family could participate in the religious services from their palace). [2]

The first designs for a centralised Greek Cross church were prepared by the Pamphili family architect, Girolamo Rainaldi, and his son Carlo Rainaldi in 1652. They reorientated the main entrance to the church from the Via Santa Maria dell’Anima, a street set one urban block away from the piazza, to the Piazza Navona, a large urban space that Innocent was transforming into a showcase associated with his family. It had been the intention to build the new church over the old church which would become the crypt; this meant the new church was to be raised well above piazza level, but this idea was abandoned once construction started. The original drawings are lost but it is thought that the Piazza Navona façade design included a narthex between two towers and broad stairs descending to the piazza. [3]

Harsh criticism was made of the design, including the steps down to the piazza which were thought to project excessively, so Carlo Rainaldi eliminated the narthex idea and substituted a concave façade so that the steps would not be so intrusive. [4] The idea of the twin towers framing a central dome may be indebted to Bernini's bell towers on the façade of Saint Peter's Basilica. Nonetheless, Rainaldi's design of a concave façade and a central dome framed by twin towers was influential on subsequent church design in Northern Europe. [5] In 1653, the Rainaldis were replaced by Borromini.

Borromini had to work with the Rainaldi ground plan but made adjustments; on the interior for instance, he positioned columns towards the edges of the dome piers which had the effect of creating a broad base to the dome pendentives instead of the pointed base which was the usual Roman solution. [6] His drawings show that on the façade to Piazza Navona, he designed curved steps descending to the piazza, the convex curvature of which play against the concave curvature of the façade to form an oval landing in front of the main entrance. His façade was to have eight columns and a broken pediment over the entrance. He designed the flanking towers as single storey, above which there was to be a complex arrangement of columns and convex bays with balustrades.

By the time of Innocent's death in 1655, the façade had reached the top of the lower order. Innocent's nephew, Camillo Pamphili, failed to take interest in the church and Borromini became disheartened, eventually leading to his resignation in 1657.

Carlo Rainaldi was reappointed and made a number of modifications to Borromini's design including an additional storey to the flanking towers and simplifying their uppermost parts. On the death of Camillo Pamphili, his wife Olimpia Aldobrandini, commissioned Bernini to take over. He was responsible for the straightforward pediment above the main entrance and for the emphatic entablature in the interior.

In 1668, Camillo Borghese (Olimpia's son & Camillo Pomphii's step-son) took over responsibility for the church. He reinstated Carlo Rainaldi as architect and engaged Ciro Ferri to create frescoes for the interior of the dome. Further decorations were added; there were large scale sculptures and polychrome marble effects. None of these are likely to have been intended by Borromini.

Interior

Skull of Saint Agnes Skull Saint Agnes.JPG
Skull of Saint Agnes
Main altar with the relief of The Holy Family by Domenico Guidi SantAgneseAgone-Altare01-SteO153.JPG
Main altar with the relief of The Holy Family by Domenico Guidi

The cupola is frescoed with the Apotheosis of Saint Agnes , begun in 1670 by Ciro Ferri and finished after his death in 1689 by Sebastiano Corbellini. The pendentives of the dome were painted with the Cardinal Virtues (1662–1672) by Bernini's protégé, Giovanni Battista Gaulli. In the sacristy, there is a painting depicting the Glory of Saint Agnes by Paolo Gismondi.

The near-circular interior, actually a Greek cross design, is circumferentially surrounded by marble sculptural Baroque masterpieces, dedicated to individual martyred saints. There are four altars in the pillars with reliefs, unusually set in semi-circular niches. Among the sculptural decoration are the following:

Inside the church is also a shrine for Saint Agnes, containing her skull and a marble relief by Alessandro Algardi.

Origin of name and legends

The name of this church is unrelated to the ‘agony’ of the martyr: in agone was the ancient name of Piazza Navona (piazza in agone), and meant instead, from the Greek, ‘in the site of the competitions’, because Piazza Navona was built on the site of an ancient Roman stadium of the Greek model, with one flat end, and was used for footraces (Latin agōn, "contest"). From ‘in agone’, the popular use and pronunciation changed the name into ‘Navona’, but other roads in the area kept the original name. [9]

Bernini's Fountain of the Four Rivers is situated in front of the church. It is often said that Bernini sculpted the figure of the "Nile" covering his eyes as if he thought the façade designed by his rival Borromini could crumble atop him. This story, like many urban legends, persists because it has a ring of authenticity, despite the fact that Bernini's fountain predates the façade by some years.

Borromini and Bernini became rivals, and more, for architectural commissions. Most prominently, during the Pamphili papacy, an official commission was established to study defects that had arisen in the foundations of the belltowers (built under Bernini's guidance) in the façade of Saint Peter's Basilica. In testimony before the commission, Borromini was one of many harsh critics that assailed the project's engineering. Ultimately, in a severe blow to Bernini's prestige as an architect, the façade bell-towers were torn down, and never rebuilt.

Cardinal-Deacons

See also

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References

  1. For the building history of the church and extensive documentation, see Gerhard Eimer, La Fabbrica di S. Agnese in Navona, Stockholm 1970
  2. The Doria-Pamphili family owns the church to this day.
  3. T. Magnuson. Rome in the Age of Bernini, Stockholm, 1986, vol. 2, p. 56
  4. Magnuson, 1986, vol. 2, p. 60
  5. Magnuson, 1986, vol. 2, p. 61.
  6. Anthony Blunt. Borromini, Harvard University Press, p. 157
  7. Jennifer Montagu (1985). Alessandro Algardi. Yale University Press., cat. no. 45.
  8. Gerhard Bissell, Pierre Le Gros 1666–1719, Reading (Si Vede) 1997, pp. 121–122.
  9. As, for example, the Corsia Agonale, a short road that connects the piazza with the Palazzo Madama.