Harman Patil (Editor)

San Francesco, Volterra

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Location
  
Volterra, Italy

Groundbreaking
  
13th century

Architectural style
  
Gothic architecture

Affiliation
  
Catholic Church

Architectural type
  
Church

Opened
  
1315

Province
  
Province of Pisa

Architect
  
Mone Todirigi

San Francesco, Volterra

Address
  
56048 Volterra, Province of Pisa, Italy

Similar
  
Pinacoteca e Museo Civico, San Michele Arcangelo, San Lino - Volterra, Ecomuseo dell'Alabastro, Volterra Cathedral

The church of San Francesco is an ancient church Volterra in the province of Pisa.

The plain stone church was built in the 13th century for a community of Franciscan monks. The interior has marble monuments to members of the aristocratic family of Counts Guidi, who were patrons of the order. The monument to bishop Guidi (1588) was designed by Felice Palma. Among the paintings in the altars flanking the nave is a Concession (1585) by Giovanni Battista Naldini, a Nativity (1591) by Giovanni Balducci, a Crucifixion attributed to Bartolomeo Neroni, and a Crucifixion (1602) painted by Cosimo Daddi. The paintings of the Circumcision of Christ (1490-91) by Luca Signorelli and the stunning masterpiece of the Deposition (1521) by Rosso Fiorentino are no longer here, the church for which they were painted; the former is in the National Gallery of London, while the latter has been moved to the Pinacoteca Civica of Volterrra. The baptismal font was sculpted by Giovanni Battista Bava in 1552.

Chapel of the Daily Cross (Cappella della Croce di Giorno)

This chapel, originally built (1315) by architect Mone Todirigi for a confraternity associated with the church, was decorated in 1410 with frescos by Cenni di Francesco and Jacopo da Firenze with scenes from the Legends of the True Cross. These frescoes were inspired by those of Agnolo Gaddi in the Santa Croce of Florence, and the Golden Legend of Jacopo da Varagine.

References

San Francesco, Volterra Wikipedia