Puneet Varma (Editor)

Sant'Ivo dei Bretoni

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Location
  
Rome

Website
  
Official website

Opened
  
1890

Affiliation
  
Roman Catholic

Architectural type
  
Church

Architect
  
Luca Carimini

Sant'Ivo dei Bretoni

Ecclesiastical or organizational status
  
National Church in Rome of France

Leadership
  
Don Jean Patrick Louis-Jacques

Address
  
Vicolo della Tinta, 11, 00186 Roma, Italy

Architectural style
  
Renaissance Revival architecture

Similar
  
San Nicola dei Lorenesi, Santi Claudio e Andrea d, Sant'Antonio dei Portoghesi, Torre della Scimmia -, Saint Jerome of the Croats

The Church of Saint Ivo of the Bretons (Italian: Sant'Ivo dei Bretoni, French: Saint Yves-des-Bretons) is a Roman Catholic church dedicated to Saint Ivo of Kermartin, patron of Brittany. It is one of the national churches in Rome dedicated to France (Brittany).

History

Pope Callixtus III (1455-1458) gave the church of St. Andrea de Mortarariis to the Breton community in Rome. It became a center for assistance to Breton pilgrims. The church was pulled down and rebuilt in 1878 by Luca Carimini in Neo-Renaissance style.

The hypothesis that the elements of the ancient church walls have been retained in the new construction, which consists of buildings and the new church, is founded. The maintenance of the old apse, would coincide with the current chapel of the Blessed Virgin (Santa Vergine). Some considerations in support of this hypothesis relate to the form of the new church. The persistence of the masonry structure of the apse, with its proportions, would have affected the plan and the elevation development. The 90 ° rotation of the axis of the church (necessary for obtaining a building of smaller dimensions in the same lot), would have required the construction of a symmetric chapel, equally great.

References

Sant'Ivo dei Bretoni Wikipedia