Santi Giuseppe e Teresa, Viterbo

Santi Giuseppe e Teresa is a Baroque-style, deconsecrated Roman Catholic church in the historic Viterbo, regio of Lazio, Italy. The church is mainly vacant, with some municipal offices, and its fate undecided; amid the proposals are an open market or museum.[1]

Santi Giuseppe e Teresa
Façade
Religion
Affiliationdeconsecrated Roman Catholic
Ecclesiastical or organizational statusUnclear
Location
LocationPiazza Fontana Grande #40, Viterbo, region of Lazio, Italy
Geographic coordinates42°24′54″N 12°06′26″E / 42.41497°N 12.10709°E / 42.41497; 12.10709
Architecture
TypeChurch
StyleBaroque

History

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Façade with pink stucco and with Fontana Grande in forefront

The frieze on the church indicates the church was erected in 1675 by and adjacent to the Convent of the Discalced Carmelite nuns. Just diagonal to the facade is the Fontana Grande. South of the apse on Via La Fontaine, is the Palazzo Gatti. In the church is putatively buried the painter Giovanni Francesco Romanelli[2] and Lorenzo da Viterbo. It was consecrated in 1725 by bishop Adriano[3] and built with the patronage of Giovan Battista Pettirosso. The church in the 19th-century became a Palace of Justice (Aula di Giustizia) and Court of Assize, and so functioned till 2005. The Judge's dais was located at the main altar, and cages for the accused were inside side chapels. The church hosted the Cuocolo Trial in 1911 and the trial of the Giuliano band in the 1950s. Altarpieces from the church are now in the civic museum.[4][5]

Notes

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  1. ^ Per la ex chiesa dei santi Giuseppe e Teresa a Fontana Grande serve un atto di saggezza per una destinazione culturale, by Luciano Constantino 24 July 2024.
  2. ^ Viterbo Nei Suoi Monumenti, by Andrea Scriattoli (1920), page 179.
  3. ^ Le chiese d'Italia: dalla loro origine sino ai nostri giorni, by Giuseppe Cappelletti( 1847): page 165.
  4. ^ Anna Zelli website on Viterbo.
  5. ^ Illustrated London news, photographs of the 1911 Camorra trial proceedings].