Suvarna Garge (Editor)

San Jacopo sopr'Arno

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Location
  
Florence, Italy

Province
  
Province of Florence

Affiliation
  
Greek Orthodox

Architectural type
  
Church

San Jacopo sopr'Arno

Address
  
Borgo S. Jacopo, 50125 Firenze, Italy

Architectural styles
  
Romanesque architecture, Baroque architecture

Similar
  
Bartolini Salimbeni Chapel, San Salvatore al Vescovo, Torre degli Alberti, Palazzo dell'Arte dei Beccai, Loggia Rucellai

San Jacopo sopr'Arno (Ι.Ν. Αγιος Ιακοβος) is a church in Florence, Italy.

The church was built in the 10th–11th centuries in Romanesque style. It subsequently experienced heavy modifications including the addition of a triple-arched portico.

According to the Renaissance art historian Giorgio Vasari, Filippo Brunelleschi built here a chapel, the Ridolfi Chapel, in which he studied, in smaller scale, architectural elements later used in his famous dome of Santa Maria del Fiore. The chapel is now destroyed. Since 1542 it was held by Franciscans of the Minorite Order. The entrance portico was remade by order of Cosimo I de' Medici in 1580, using the architect Bernardino Radi. The bell tower was designed by Gherardo Silvani in 1660.

The church was damaged when the Arno River flooded Florence in 1966. Repairs of the church after flood led to the restoration of some of the historical architectural features, and the discovery of columns belonging to the original Romanesque church in the Baroque interior.

References

San Jacopo sopr'Arno Wikipedia


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