San Francesco, Pavia

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Church of Saint Francis of Assisi
Façade.
Religion
AffiliationCatholic
ProvincePavia
Year consecrated13th Century
StatusActive
Location
LocationPavia, Italy
Interactive map of Church of Saint Francis of Assisi
Coordinates45°11′14.31″N 9°9′34.85″E / 45.1873083°N 9.1596806°E / 45.1873083; 9.1596806
Architecture
TypeChurch
StyleGothic
Completed14th Century

The church of San Francesco of Assisi is a Catholic religious building in Pavia, Lombardy, Italy.

The first Franciscan community settled in the city around 1220. Initially the friars settled in a church dedicated to the Madonna, located outside the city walls, where they are still reported in a document dated 1234, and in 1267 the construction of the current one began. church of San Francesco of Assisi. The construction of the new building proceeded very slowly, given that, despite the numerous donations, the church and the nearby convent could be said to be almost completed in 1298, when the Franciscans definitively abandoned the suburban complex which was ceded by them to the Carmelites.[1] After the capture of Pavia in 1359,[2] Galeazzo II moved his court from Milan to Pavia and the church was chosen by the lord, and then by his son Gian Galeazzo, to house the burials of members of the family or prominent figures; In fact, Isabella of Valois (first wife of Gian Galeazzo), Carlo and Azzone (sons of Gian Galeazzo and Isabella), the Marquis Manfred V of Saluzzo, Baldus de Ubaldis and, later, Facino Cane were buried here.[3] Almost all the funerary monuments were, following the dictates of the Council of Trent, were eliminated between the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, while that of Baldus deg Ubaldis was placed in 1790 on the recommendation of Leopoldo Pollack inside one of the courtyards of the university.[4]

Façade

In addition, the church received donations from prominent figures of the Visconti court, as in 1388, when Ottone Mandelli left the Franciscans three Gothic busts in gilded copper (still preserved in the church) containing the relics of Saint Apollonius, Saint Victor and Saint Corona, taken from Mandelli in the Canossa Castle in 1381. In 1781 the convent was suppressed and the church became an urban parish.[5]

Architecture

References

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