Harman Patil (Editor)

Abbey of San Cassiano, Narni

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Abbey of San Cassiano, Narni wwwitalianwayscomwpcontentuploads201511san

Similar
  
Ponte d'Augusto, Museo della Città di Narni, Speco di San Francesco, Santa Maria Impensol, Saint Juvenal Church

Abbey of san cassiano narni top 6 facts


The Abbey of San Cassiano is a former Benedictine monastery, located on Monte Santa Croce, outside of the town of Narni in the Province of Terni, in the Region of Umbria in Italy.

Documentary evidence dates the monastery in 1091 falling under the governance of the Abbey of Farfa in Lazio. However epigraphs at the site point to an earlier foundation. One sarcophagus notes the 10th-century discovery during the reign of Crescentius I (a near relative of Pope John XIII) of relics of the Blessed Orso, a local monk. It is possible that an abbey at the site dates to the occupation of Italy by the Byzantine general Belisarius in the 6th-century.

By the 15th century, the abbey was surrounded by defensive walls. Ownership was disputed between Benedictine abbots and the bishops of Narni. By the 19th-century, the abbey was abandoned, and nearly a ruined shell, when it passed to private hands in 1849. Spolia from other structures were used in its construction.

In 1960, it was appropriated by the Italian government. Restored in 1963-1970, it still remains closed. The Romanesque architecture stone church with belltower was stripped of Baroque accretions during the latest restoration. The church has a Greek-cross layout.

References

Abbey of San Cassiano, Narni Wikipedia