Saint Lucius, Brugherio

Coordinates: 45°32′52″N 9°17′35″E / 45.54769°N 9.29313°E / 45.54769; 9.29313

Saint Lucius
(Chiesa di San Lucio)

Exterior view of the church
Basic information
Location Brugherio, Italy
Affiliation Roman Catholic
District Lombardy
Province Monza and Brianza
Architectural description
Architect(s) Tommaso Rodari
Giocondo Albertolli
Architectural type Church
Architectural style Neoclassicism
Groundbreaking 1520
Completed 1542

Saint Lucius in Brugherio, Italy, (Italian: Chiesa di San Lucio) is a small church dedicated to Saint Lucius[1] in the grounds of the Villa Sormani. First located in Lugano, Switzerland, where it was a Franciscan chapel, the building was disassembled and transported to Brugherio where its reconstruction was completed 17 years later.

History

Origins and purchase by Count Andreani

Pope Lucius's shrine had been designed by Tommaso Rodari, an architect influenced by Bramante's style in Lombardy, or by Bramante himself.[2] Built in Lugano, Switzerland, from 1520 to 1542 as Anthony of Padua's chapel, it was annexed to Francis of Assisi's friary.[3] It is clear that the building was initially located in the Swiss city as evidenced by Giulio Pocobelli's inscription of 1813 and by Lugano's depiction from the 17th century.[4] After Napoleon's suppression of all religious orders, in 1812 it was auctioned by the Gran Consiglio of Canton Ticino,[4] and bought by Natale Albertolli, a rich businessman who was the brother of architect Giocondo Albertolli.[5] Impressed by the shrine's beauty, he managed to prevent its demolition by his brother Natale who had planned to use its materials.[4] Albertolli owed his success to its purchase by Gian Mario Andreani (1760–1830), the brother Count Paolo Andreani, the first man in Italy to fly a balloon.[6] He asked Albertolli to "bring" the church close to the Villa in Moncucco.

Giocondo Albertolli and reconstruction

In order to transport the chapel from Lugano to Moncucco, Albertolli developed an extremely risky and laborious plan. He first disassembled it, then he rebuilt it near count Gian Mario's Villa Sormani. After it had been dismantled, he had the pieces shipped over Lake Lugano and then transported by land to Como. The pieces travelled over ten kilometers through the Naviglio della Martesana arriving at the river port of "Mattalino Bridge",[7] where they were unloaded near Count Andreani's property. The work took 17 years, from 1815–16 [7] until after 1832.[8] Anthony of Padua's chapel, by then detached from the monastery, acquired its new designation, becoming a "little church"[9] which was dedicated to Saint Lucius.[10]

Acquisition by Sormani to restoration in 1992–94

Gian Mario did not see the work completed as he died in 1830.[11] The chapel was then included as a piece of property under the Villa Sormani. It was first owned by Gian Mario's cousin, Count Sormani. Thereafter, at the end of the 19th century, Umberto I and Margherita of Savoy attended mass in the chapel.[12] Villa Sormani and the little church's last owners, the Stanzani family, decided to sell the complex to the Brugherio Commune in 1987,[13] which from 1992 to 1994[14] restored the chapel to its former appearance. In 1994, it was reopened in the presence of the authorities of both cities, owing to a fostered cultural relationship between them.[15]

Description

Exterior

The Exterior

Unlike the original building, after its relocation and reconstruction the church's exterior was decorated. Since the little church was to be used as a noble family's place of worship rather than a Franciscan chapel, Albertolli decided to enhance the exterior with Neoclassical features to compensate for its plain appearance.[16] The building, with a quadrangular layout, stands on a high base, a wide stairway leading up to the Neoclassical tetrastyle entrance; on the opposite (north) side, there is a sacristy. These additions were needed to compensate for the absence of the original complex to which the chapel was attached.[17] The facade is marked by ionic pillars that support the triangular tympanum on a cornice bearing an attic; furthermore, the chapel is crowned by a circular tambour and a hemispherical dome.[18]

Interior

The interior is the same as it used to be in Lugano, consisting of a combination of sacred and profane components. On one side there are 24 medals depicting saints (completed between 1520 and 1542 as indicated by the insciptions on the medals[19] as well as those on the columns)[20] while on the other side can be found mythological decorations.[21] Of special note is the bas-relief Cristo in pietà at the top of the dome.[20] Finally, placed on a parapet, the altar is decorated with paintings of the four evangelists on the sides of the tabernacle, which is surmounted by a portrait of Pope Lucius.[22]

See also

References

  1. Grenci, Don Damiano. "IL SANTO A MONCUCCO – SAN LUCIO I PAPA" (in Italian).
  2. Albertolli, Giocondo. Cenni storici sovra una capella antica ricostruita in oratorio a Moncucco nella provincia di Milano. p. 9. The illustrious emeritus professor Giocondo Albertolli...said that was realized by Bramante d'Urbino [...] The tradiction registers that Little Church as Bramante's work; the style confirms this tradiction.
  3. Valli, Laura; Cannella, Calogero. Il tempietto di Moncucco. Restauro e considerazioni sull'ex oratorio dei conti Andreani-Sormani in Brugherio già cappella di S.Antonio presso il Convento di S. Francesco in Lugano. (in Italian). p. 8.
  4. 1 2 3 Valli, Laura; Cannella, Calogero. Il tempietto di Moncucco. Restauro e considerazioni sull'ex oratorio dei conti Andreani-Sormani in Brugherio già cappella di S.Antonio presso il Convento di S. Francesco in Lugano. (in Italian). p. 9.
  5. Mezzanotte, Paolo (1960). Giocondo Albertolli. Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani (in Italian) 1. Treccani. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  6. Cfr. Paolo Andreani
  7. 1 2 Valli, Laura; Cannella, Calogero. Il tempietto di Moncucco. Restauro e considerazioni sull'ex oratorio dei conti Andreani-Sormani in Brugherio già cappella di S.Antonio presso il Convento di S. Francesco in Lugano (in Italian). p. 10.
  8. Agliati, Marco. Il tempietto di due santi e di due città. Da Sant'Antonio da Padova in Lugano a San Lucio papa in Brugherio (in Italian). p. 28.
  9. Valli, Laura; Cannella, Calogero. Il tempietto di Moncucco. Restauro e considerazioni sull'ex oratorio dei conti Andreani-Sormani in Brugherio già cappella di S.Antonio presso il Convento di S. Francesco in Lugano (in Italian). p. 11.
  10. Valli, Laura; Cannella, Calogero. Il tempietto di Moncucco. Restauro e considerazioni sull'ex oratorio dei conti Andreani-Sormani in Brugherio già cappella di S.Antonio presso il Convento di S. Francesco in Lugano (in Italian). [the little church] changes also the patron, here dedicated to Saint Lucius, maybe in memories of a pre-existing recreation center in this place, but already dedicated to Saint Pope and martyr. About a pre-existing recreation center, used as family-chapel, we have information since 1646, when it was part of sir Lucio Cotta's property in Moncucco Commune. He in 1633 consecrated it to Saint Lucius who, after that moment, becomes the family's patron.
  11. Gamba, Ermis (18 June 2014). "Andreani, famiglia" (in Italian). LombardiaBeniCulturali. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  12. Movimento Terza Età. Brugherio: la nostra gente (in Italian). p. 76. regarding that countess Sormani has been companion of Regina Margherita
  13. Virgilio, Giovanna. Brugherio, percorsi tra storia e arte (in Italian). p. 9.
  14. Valli, Laura; Cannella, Calogero. Il tempietto di Moncucco (in Italian). p. 21.
  15. Il Tempietto dell'amicizia: cronaca delle giornate dedicate alla riapertura del Tempietto di Moncucco in Brugherio: Brugherio 15/18 settembre 1994, Lugano 18 marzo 1995. p. 4.
  16. Valli, Laura; Cannella, Calogero. Il tempietto di Moncucco (in Italian). p. 11. [Gian Mario Andreani] asks that "...inside nothing would be added, to preserve all the whole authenticity", "...however, commanding them to give to the exterior a grandeur like the inside".
  17. Valli, Laura (1989). Il viaggio di pietra (in Italian). Brugherio: Comune di Brugherio.
  18. Bianconi, Piero (1973). Il tempietto di San't Antonio da Padova di Lugano (in Italian). Lugano: Editore – Stampatore Giulio Topi. p. 8.
  19. Valli, Laura; Cannella, Calogero. Il tempietto di Moncucco (in Italian). p. 47.
  20. 1 2 Vicky Porfidio, Tempietto di San Lucio. To look through, click on the third immage above on the left. It is a PDF file and it collects informations about all the churches of Brugherio. To see Brugherio Commune's website, click here.
  21. Valli, Laura; Cannella, Calogero. Il tempietto di Moncucco (in Italian). p. 24. Beyond the tonds about Christ's life, in particular focusing on hagiographical area, other tonds are decorated with "odd" patterns of "grotesque" and "candelabre"...
  22. "Tempietto di San Lucio in Moncucco su 'Ville aperte in Brianza'". Retrieved 27 February 2015.

Bibliography

External links

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