Santa Maria in Turri

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The facade of the church of S. Maria in Turri, drawn from descriptions in the ancient sources.

Santa Maria in Turri was an ancient church in the city of Rome, demolished in the Renaissance. It adjoined the outside atrium of the ancient Basilica of St. Peter, one of a complex of small churches or oratories that grew up around the site.

Besides the name in turri ("in the tower"), other names of the church were S. Maria ad grada,[a] ante Salvatorem,[b] in atrio,[c] or in medium.[d] In an eighth-century description of the Vatican basilica,[3] it is called S. Maria quae nova dicitur,[e] which helps in dating the origin of the structure.[1]

Location

The Augustinian historian Onofrio Panvinio (1529–1568) describes four oratories or small churches that still existed in his time, around the Basilica of St. Peter.[1] They were built in the four porticoes that surrounded the paradiso (atrium) of the basilica complex. S. Maria in turri was located at the left of the entrance; at the right in the corner, S. Apollinaris; then beyond those two, facing them in the portico immediately in front of the basilica, S. Vincentius, which lay immediately to the right of the corner; and S. Maria de febre, situated to the left where the ancient secretarium was, which was also called oratorium S. Gregorii ("oratory of Saint Gregory") because of its proximity to his tomb.[1]

Function

History

Notes and references

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