Hermitage of Santo Spirito a Majella

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Hermitage of Santo Spirito a Majella
Eremo di Santo Spirito a Majella
View of the hermitage
Religion
AffiliationRoman Catholic
ProvinceProvince of Pescara
RegionAbruzzo
Location
MunicipalityRoccamorice
StateItaly
Architecture
Completed11th century

Eremo di Santo Spirito a Majella (Italian for Hermitage of Santo Spirito a Majella) is an hermitage located in Roccamorice, Province of Pescara (Abruzzo, Italy).[1]

The date of the origin of the hermitage is unknown, although it is believed to be before the 11th century and founded by Benedictine monks from the Monastery of San Benedetto in Montecassino. The first historical source dates back to 1055 and reports the presence of the monk Desiderio, the future Pope Victor III, who built a church there.[2] In 1246, Pietro da Morrone, the future Pope Celestine V, resided there. He renovated the hermitage and built the oratory and a first cell, followed by a second oratory and additional cells as the community grew.[3]

At Pietro da Morrone's request, Pope Urban IV, in a letter dated 1 June 1263, asked the bishop of Chieti to incorporate the hermits of the hermitage into the Order of Saint Benedict, and in 1278 the hermitage was granted autonomy and the title of monastery. It remained the head of the Order until 1293, when the main monastery function of the Order was transferred to the Hermitage of Sant'Onofrio al Morrone. Between 1310 and 1317, the prior of the monastery was Roberto da Salle, and in 1347 it hosted Cola di Rienzo.

This was followed by a period of decline until 1586, when the hermitage was granted the title of Abbey. The Scala Santa was built to access the oratory of Santa Maria Maddalena, and on 11 April 1591, the bones of Stefano del Lupo were transferred to Santo Spirito from the monastery of Vallebona in Manoppello. At the end of the 17th century, Prince Caracciolo of San Buono built the three-story guesthouse building.

With the suppression of monastic orders in 1807, the monastery was definitively abandoned, and its contents were moved to Roccamorice.

Architecture

References

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