Hello Friends, Family and Readers,
We are at home in Chicago, and thinking of our return to Rome this coming February. As usual, I have far too many factoids, tales and photos to fit on the Christmas greeting card I am in the midst of preparing, and so am putting the “extra bits” into this blog entry.
A few of my friends heave a large sigh when they see another posting about something "religious"; to them I offer an apology, and ask for their indulgence. Rome is chock-a-block with churches, chapels, and shrines. Many Italians do not attend services any more, but nonetheless will often come for baptisms, weddings and funerals--the rituals that mark important turning points in human lives. Some individuals still come when they are troubled or need to find peace, so these places are not empty or without meaning. The churches of Rome also provide a small window into historical eras, mainly via the art remaining there from chapels and ex voto gifts.
The people and the tales behind this church and its chapels and tombs could generate a nifty detective novel and also a dramatic thriller; but that requires a much better writer than myself.
The people and the tales behind this church and its chapels and tombs could generate a nifty detective novel and also a dramatic thriller; but that requires a much better writer than myself.
The Chapel of Sant’Anna in the
Basilica of Sant’Agostino, Roma.
First, a couple of maps. Sant'Agostino is in the red circle on the general area google map below. there is a brown line under the Colosseum, lower right, and the Pantheon, center, to help orient you. St. Peter’s Basilica, San Pietro is at the left edge, center height, the Piazza Navona is a long, rounded ended piazza to the lower left of the oval around Sant'Agostino.
It looks HUGE on a map, and feels huge when walking it, especially on a warm day, but the distances are not all that far. From the Piazza Venezia, (the red star), this church is about 2/3 of a mile, or 1 kilometer by foot.
You will notice how the blue line of the Tiber (Tevere) river bends around Rome. The floods in this area were frequent and often devastating; so much so that the ancient Romans did not live in this area. Since the 1880's there are nearly 70 foot high embankments along both sides of the Tiber, which prevent most of the flooding. But buildings erected before then sometimes are high up on a platform, in an attempt to stay dry.
Below is a closer-in satellite view map. Marked with a green underline are the Pantheon, which looks like an ant hill, mid right; and the Piazza Navona, mid left. Sant’Agostino has a green circle around it to show the size of its surrounding monastery. There’s a bit of the Tiber showing in the upper left hand corner, less than 400 feet from the monastery complex and church of Sant'Agostino.
Google maps kindly provided a scale measure
in the lower right hand corner.
An Overview of the Church itself.
Begun in 1479, the present day church was constructed to replace a previous one that proved to be too small for the growing Augustinian monastery, and also too prone to flooding from the nearby Tiber River.
Cardinal Guillaume d’Estouteville paid for this new church, and had his name carved on the front. (There is a GREAT tale behind this, much further along in this blog. A hint - his wealth had something to do with his living long enough to participate in five papal conclaves or elections.)
The church’s full name is “Basilica of Saints Trifone and Agostino”, in memory of the much smaller, initial church of St. Trifone, that was later incorporated into the new monastic complex. (I've come across hints that prayers for fertility and children have been offered in this location from earlier pagan times to modern supplicants; again, I'll have to put that "further along" in this blog.)
The church’s full name is “Basilica of Saints Trifone and Agostino”, in memory of the much smaller, initial church of St. Trifone, that was later incorporated into the new monastic complex. (I've come across hints that prayers for fertility and children have been offered in this location from earlier pagan times to modern supplicants; again, I'll have to put that "further along" in this blog.)
The new church was finished in four years, an unusually quick pace at the time. This also probably helped it to have its harmonious layout. The monks were also following St. Augustine’s writings about the symbolism of numbers, e.g., twelve pillars (12 tribes of Israel, 12 Apostles), and the list continues.

The Stadium was about 275 meters long and 106 meters wide (about 900 feet long by 350 feet wide), which represents a goodly quantity of stone. Remember it is nearly 2/3 of a mile from the red oval to the red star, and the Colosseum is about that much further to the right.
There's loads more to tell you about the history of this church, but that will be much further down on this blog.
I should mention a bit about the Saint himself. Augustine of Hippo was an early "Father of the Church", one who helped develop doctrine and theology. A Roman citizen born in North Africa in 354 AD, he died in 430 and led a most interesting and unusual life, eventually becoming Bishop of the North African town of Hippo. He wrote many letters, and famous books, and was a leading intellectual light of the early Church. VERY long books have been written about his life and his influence on others through the ages, which I will omit now. If you'd like a fairly compact biography, try visiting
http://justus.anglican.org/resources/bio/50.html
(2004/Feb/14 La Repubblica)
I can't say if this noble endeavor of a real "spring cleaning" has been repeated in subsequent years. I'll tell you more about the Madonna del Parto statue and its legends further down.
A general view from about
two thirds up the nave.
The church has a goodly amount of natural light in it, which is not usual with the earlier, medieval churches. Scholars have pointed out that mid-1800's visitors remarked on comparative darkness of the church after the marble cladding/coloring was added throughout the nave then.
The large angels above the main altar and also scattered around the church were designed by Bernini in the mid 1600’s. This church holds a surprising number of very fine artworks. It has taken me a while to appreciate this church, mainly because we'd be a bit tired when we would wander into it. Sant'Agostino is about 100 feet from a favorite museum hosted in the Palazzo Altemps, where we gleefully spend many jolly hours, which can leave us too tired to explore the other delights of this neighborhood.

There are also a couple of very good cafes nearby, too, but I'm taking far too long to even approach the subject at hand!
This church has chapels, tombs and altars to a variety of saints, philosophers, and well known persons, especially from the 1500’s and 1600’s. I will concede I had not heard of most of them before.
The church houses many tombs including:
Saint Monica, mother of St. Augustine;
the humanist poet Maffeo Vegio from Lodi;
a daughter of Lorenzo the Magnificent, the
Contessina de 'Medici;
the Cardinal Girolamo Verallo; and the
cardinal and humanist Augustinian
Giles of Viterbo.
Giles of Viterbo.
The best artists, sculptors, architects and craftsmen of the time worked on this church's original construction and additions. I will show you more later about one of the bigger attractions, a fabulous painting by Caravaggio, shown in situ. He donated it to this church in thanksgiving for being able to claim sanctuary there when he needed protection after killing a man nearby. It's almost a pure soap opera story! More details further down!
A view along one of the side aisles of the nave. There are full chapels along the right wall, some deeper than others. There are also small memorial plaques. I have been regretting my not applying myself as a teen to my Latin classes, which would come in handy now when reading inscriptions, although I can take a mumbly-guess.

died in 1868 at age 56.
The inscription partially says she was devoted to God and to Mary, charitable to the poor, and it seems she was a very good speaker. This memorial is done in the neo-classical style, popular in the 1800's, with a personification of the virtue of self-knowledge, rather than a portrait of the deceased. No, she ain't fixin' her hair.
The hand mirror is a classical motif for the virtue of being able to see oneself. Self-knowledge is held to be a vital step along the path to wisdom.
The snake, here carefully held by the figure, has since pagan times represented wisdom. For the pagans, this view of a snake is quite the opposite from the Biblical tale of the Garden of Eden and the ensuing, cataclysmic results when Adam and Eve encountered a snake.
I'm enough of a heathen that I didn't pay a great deal of attention to most of the other tombs and chapels in this church, being a little overwhelmed by the Caravaggio, the chapel below to St. Thomas of Villanova in the transept, and the St. Anne Chapel.
Chapel of St. Thomas of Villanova
True to form, I'm continuing to digress. The below is the underside of the church's dome, above the crossing of the transept and nave. Those odd barriers of grey pipes and beige planks are for the restorers at work in 2010. Somehow $1.5 million Euros (about $1.25 million US dollars) were allocated in 2007 to pay for restorations to fix the ceiling plaster that was literally falling down. It was a long project, and in spring 2015 it seemed to be nearly complete, but not quite. The ceilings were sufficiently unsafe that the church had to be closed to the public for a while when the repairs began.
The reason for showing you the dome is to relate it to the Chapel of San Tommaso. The photo on the right is not the clearest photo, but I think it conveys something of the intense decoration of this church. In the left arch of this photo, you will notice something that looks like strong light beams coming through a small high window. It is the netting that was still in place in April 2015 to protect people from falling plaster bits.
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Main altar of St. Thomas of Villanova's chapel. |
Above, two views of a chapel done by associates of Bernini, started two years after the canonization of Saint Thomas of Villanova, a Spanish Augustinian Archbishop. This chapel is in a very important spot in the church, functioning as one of the transepts, or an arm next to the center of the cross-shaped church.
The chapel was worked on in the 1660’s, and there have been later changes and additions. I will concede that the ceiling decorations of this chapel don't help it much, but those were added later.
The chapel was worked on in the 1660’s, and there have been later changes and additions. I will concede that the ceiling decorations of this chapel don't help it much, but those were added later.
I found this chapel breathtaking when I first saw it, especially because of the tenderness of the saint. A brief look now into his life gives me the feeling that even this tender, generous statue understates the character of the man. The saint is shown distributing alms to Dame Charity, a reflection of one of his virtues.
I'm adding in the above close-up detail photo, in the hope you can see the detail on the marble of the Saint's hand bones, and how he is handing her some coins with a very sweet and humble expression. Dame Charity is usually shown with at least two children, one being nursed. It is due to Bernini's influence that all these textures and little details are here, along with the statues' seeming as if they are breathing, sentient, emotive beings, not mere slabs of marble with interesting shapes. This chapel also is one of the spurs to my learning something about of several of Bernini's principle associates and pupils.
Very LARGE, very splendid books have been written about Bernini and also about his highly organized workshop. The works of those artists is almost always recognizable, even when it does devolve into cutesy cherubs, (thankfully, largely absent here).
(a few basics:
Gian Lorenzo Bernini, lived from 1598 to 1680.
Sculptor, architect, painter, he was also the master of a highly organized and efficient workshop. Bernini trained many of the best Roman sculptors of the next two generations, and is cited as the creator of the Baroque style.
The historian Howard Hibbert, in an Encyclopedia Brittanica entry, called Bernini "the last of Italy's remarkable series of universal geniuses". )
Two more chapels before St. Anne's.
There are two more chapels I want to show you before starting on the Chapel of St. Anne. First is the Chapel of St. Monica, the mother of St. Augustine/Agostino.
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This web photo of St. Monica's chapel is from augnet.org. It is a nicely done chapel, probably better than many, but compared to the rest of the church, I didn't bother taking many photos here. |
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I did nab this photo of Santa Monica's tomb during an evening visit. There were usually a few people praying in this chapel, so I would try to avoid interrupting them. |
Santa Monica is revered, although she appears to have had a reputation in her lifetime for being overly strict. I was rather certain the below photos were taken in her chapel, but I now doubt this, and can't dredge up an image of whatever chapel this is on the internet to better identify it. So this may not be Santa Monica herself, but still, it was put up in this church for a reason. I hope it was not to "encourage" the young novices into good behavior?
Some of you may remember the comedian Flip Wilson,
whose tag line in the 1970’s became part of the American vernacular:
“the Devil made me do it”.
That "excuse" would bring no mercy from this nun, who is driving devils out of an unfortunate lad. Paintings showing the devil being driven or beaten out of someone were more usual in earlier centuries. I am guessing from its position and style this is from the mid 1800's.
In all fairness, I must add that the little I have seen of the Augustinian monks of this church has impressed me with their kindliness and forbearance with their many visitors. The church, the monastery itself and the library all host a variety of programs for the public, and a goodly number of charitable works.
Second Chapel:
The shrine to the Madonna del Parto.
For this important shrine, I have only two photos. I didn't know about its background and I didn't grasp its obvious importance of it on earlier visits to this church. Also, there were usually at least a few of the faithful before it, saying their prayers.
This little chapel is easily missed when you enter, because it is very near the main door. It LOOKS like a Madonna and Child, it is dedicated to the aspect of Mary as a protectress of childbirth (Madonna del Parto) and it was done by a famous sculptor, Andrea Sansovino, probably as put together using an ancient statue as the core of the work. (If you look up who did the statue, you will also find reference to Andrea's pupil Jacobo Sansovino as the sculptor.)
Many ancient statues were being literally unearthed in the 1500’s, and often were adapted for contemporary use. This group is believed to be an adaptation of a statue of Agrippina and her son, Nero. Yes, THAT Nero, the infamous Emperor who reigned from 54 to 68 A.D.
Nonetheless, it is a lovely statuary group. I’ve read that in the early 1800’s, a very poor worker prayed here for a child to be safely borne by his wife. Time passed, and she not only delivered a healthy child, but, to an Italian papa’s dream, a son. In gratitude this poor worker bore the expense and care to keep a small oil lamp burning on the altar for decades.
Word of the "miracle" spread, and soon many others wishing for children came to pray. A ritual developed at the end to their prayers to humbly kiss or touch the left foot of the Madonna. So many devout prayers were offered here over the last two centuries that the Madonna’s left foot has been badly eroded. (The remaining left foot area is now protected by a small metal shield, allowing the faithful to continue their devotions without inadvertently further harming the statue.)
Word of the "miracle" spread, and soon many others wishing for children came to pray. A ritual developed at the end to their prayers to humbly kiss or touch the left foot of the Madonna. So many devout prayers were offered here over the last two centuries that the Madonna’s left foot has been badly eroded. (The remaining left foot area is now protected by a small metal shield, allowing the faithful to continue their devotions without inadvertently further harming the statue.)
Their answered prayers generated donations of items of great value from the people. The narrow case of silver ex voto donations (on the left edge of the photo) seemingly runs up to Heaven itself. Over the decades, grateful parents would donate valuable necklaces, rings, gems, gold, et cetera. A popular Roman poet in the 1800’s G. G. Belli wrote a sonata in a local dialect about the statue's nearly disappearing beneath this accretion of very valuable gifts.
This tradition of thank-offerings continues to today, although without the piles of gold and gems, as evidenced by the photos of infants, flowers, heart-shaped blue or pink cushions, et cetera, all in gratitude for the birth (or good health) of a longed-for child.
This tradition of thank-offerings continues to today, although without the piles of gold and gems, as evidenced by the photos of infants, flowers, heart-shaped blue or pink cushions, et cetera, all in gratitude for the birth (or good health) of a longed-for child.
There was a major restoration project for this chapel, finished in 2003, paid for partly by direct contributions from the public.
http://ricerca.repubblica.it/repubblica/archivio/repubblica/2003/09/27/roma-da-scoprire-poi-da-salvare.html?ref=search
The Chapel of St. Anne
This is the chapel that launched my inquiries about Sant'Agostino. A few years ago I stumbled across a reference to an article in a 1980's arts journal, "The Burlington Magazine". The piece was quite an eye-opener for me, and I paid more attention to the chapel when we visited in 2014.
I THOUGHT I knew more when we were on our 2015 visit to Rome, but I now know I barely knew a fraction of the story as I have been digging around in anticipation of our return trip to Rome in early 2016. There are many, many features and aspects of the church itself, as well as its large library and monastery I need to read about and to visit.
I THOUGHT I knew more when we were on our 2015 visit to Rome, but I now know I barely knew a fraction of the story as I have been digging around in anticipation of our return trip to Rome in early 2016. There are many, many features and aspects of the church itself, as well as its large library and monastery I need to read about and to visit.
This is yet another reason why we return to Rome every year, for I can NEVER, ever manage to deeply understand and to know even somewhat familiar places.
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If a person were standing in front of this pier, the top of their head would not be visible. |
Below are two views of the chapel of Sant'Anna,
the first is from augnet.org,
looking towards the church's entrance and the
lower one is a slightly fuzzy 2009 photo
that I shot from 1/3 of the way up the nave
looking towards the main altar.
Below is a crossways view of the nave. (The little squibble in the lower right is an adult leaning back to look at the underside of the dome. The diagonal line across the right lower corner is the main altar's communion rail.)
The piers still have some altars or chapels attached to them. In the mid 1700’s there were so many of these memorials that most of them were cleared out during a general renovation of the church.
The above photo of the pier with a fresco of the Old Testament prophet Ezechiel (added in the mid 1800's along with others on all the piers, ostensibly in a vain attempt to "match" the Raphael fresco) is basically what the St. Anne chapel below devolved into until the 1980's. The 1980's renovations removed the bronze curlicues and frame from the fresco, and removed the cladding that had been added to smooth out the surfaces of the piers. The statuary group of St. Anne, her daughter Mary and the infant Jesus had been moved to a nearby chapel in the mid 1700's renovation and decluttering of the nave, leaving the Prophet Isaiah holding his scroll at an unusual, unfathomable angle over a blank wall which was not at all was Raphael's intention.

The below three photos contain inscriptions at the base of this group. The one I have on the upper left is the dedication in 1512 by the donor Johannes Goritz of Luxembourg. The one on the upper right explains that the statuary group by Andreas Sansovino was moved to a nearby chapel in 1760. The bottom one explains briefly that the recomposition and restoration of this chapel was paid for by Lydia Bonito and her children in memory of Dr. Fedele Bonito, with the dedication date of November 1998.
What the bottom inscription does not say it was a certain Virginia Anne Bonito who did mountains of scholarly detective work, and who moved mountains to convince the authorities to make preliminary investigations about this entire chapel. They soon found that the bronze frame around the fresco covered part of the painting, the niche had been covered over, and that the holes in the niche for support beams matched exactly the holes in the back of the statuary group in a nearby chapel. Ms. Bonito wrote her doctoral dissertation on her researches and on the restoration project.
I am going to pause now, and will resume again soon.
I'm not kidding, there are loads of
(interesting at least to me) tales about
the foundation of this church;
about the special meaning of the parts of this chapel (thanks to the art historian who did ALL the hard work of discovery and restoration);
about the donor of this chapel and the highly intellectual circle that often met in the church and the monastery;
about who had special permission to attend services in the Church (the high-class courtesans,
normally banned from any church);
what happened to several courtesan's tombs during the Counter-Reformation crack down on earlier, looser standards;
the lurid tale of Caravaggio's needing sanctuary in the church after a thoughtless street murder; the later "renovations" of the church in the mid 1700s and 1800s, Napoleon's troops causing problems,
and a few other things!
End of posting!