Sant'Agostino, Rimini

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Sant'Agostino
Chiesa di Sant'Agostino
Rimini, sant'agostino 01.JPG
The church in September 2013
Sant'Agostino, Rimini
44°3′33.65″N12°33′58.21″E / 44.0593472°N 12.5661694°E / 44.0593472; 12.5661694
Location Rimini, Emilia-Romagna
AddressVia Cairoli 36
CountryItaly
Language(s)Italian
Denomination Roman Catholic
History
Status Church
Dedication Augustine of Hippo
Relics held Alberto Marvelli
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Administration
Archdiocese Ravenna-Cervia
Diocese Rimini
Clergy
Priest in charge Bartoli Renato

Sant'Agostino is a Romanesque-Gothic-style Roman Catholic church located in Via Cairoli in Rimini, Italy. It is one of the city's oldest extant church buildings.

Contents

History

A small parish church or oratory at the site dates to the 1069, originally dedicated to San Giovanni Evangelista. In 1247, with the establishment of monks of the Augustinian order the church was rededicated.

On January 20, 1498, Pandolfo IV Malatesta, then lord of Rimini, sought refuge from a conspiracy to assassinate him called the congiura degli Adimari. He was rescued by some followers, and the conspirators were hung from the walls of the nearby Rocca.

The building was refurbished in 1618 through 1626. In 1797, after the suppression of the order, the church served as cathedral from 1798 to 1809, then it became again the parish church of San Giovanni Evangelista. The reconstruction of the convent, begun in 1787 with designs by Giuseppe Achilli, was never completed. The facade also remains incomplete in brick. On the left of the outer wall of the facade, a marble monument holds the remains of Gian Battista Paci, cavaliere di Santo Stefano, who died in 1615. [1] A 55-meter bell-tower with a pyramidal top is at the rear of the church. [2]

The mortal remains of Blessed Alberto Marvelli were moved to the church of Sant'Agostino, from the city cemetery, in 1974.

Interior decorations

To the right of the entrance is the neoclassical funereal monument to Alberto Mattioli, designed by Luigi Poletti and with a bas-relief sculpted by Pietro Tenerani.

An inventory from 1864 found in the church, the following works: [3]

Fragments of frescoes, circa 1300, attributed to Giovanni da Rimini, a follower of Giotto, are found in the main chapel and the bell-tower.

The earthquake of 1916 caused eighteenth-century plaster on the church's apse to collapse, [4] revealing forgotten fourteenth-century frescoes, which have been attributed to the Maestro dell'Arengo. These frescoes depict the Life of the Saint and the Last Judgement. The latter fresco is now displayed in the Civic Museum on Via Tonini. [2]

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References

  1. La patria; geografia dell' Italia: pte. 2. Provincie di Ravenna, Ferrara, Forli', Luigi Borsari, 1901, page 282.
  2. 1 2 Rimini Turismo, entry.
  3. Guida del forestiere nella città di Rimini, by Luigi Tonini, 1864, page 43-44.
  4. "Rimini, visite guidate: biblioteca Gambalunga, pittura Riminese del Trecento, teatro Galli..." [Rimini, guided tours: Gambalunga Library, fourteenth-century Rimini painting, Galli Theatre...]. La Piazza (in Italian). 22 September 2022. Retrieved 11 January 2024.