Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Santa Maria della Vittoria, Mantua

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Location
  
Mantua, Italy

Architectural type
  
Church

Opened
  
1496

Architectural style
  
Gothic architecture

Affiliation
  
Roman Catholic

Completed
  
1496

Province
  
Province of Mantua

Groundbreaking
  
1495

Santa Maria della Vittoria, Mantua

Address
  
Via Claudio Monteverdi, 1, 46100 Mantova MN, Italy

Similar
  
Palazzo degli Studi, Chiesa di Santa Paola, Macina Palace, Palazzo Ducale, Palazzo del Massaro

Santa Maria della Vittoria was a medieval chapel or small church in Mantua located on Piazzetta di San Simone.

It was built by Marchese Francesco Gonzaga in 1496 in memory of the French army of Charles VIII in the battle of Fornovo. The site had previously been the house of a Jewish moneylender, Daniele da Norsa. Apparently he had overpainted a fresco representation of the Virgin on the façade with his own coat of arms. The ruler at the time, Sigismondo Gonzaga, demanded that the iconic painting be restored, or Daniele would face execution. Despite having accepted the unrefusable offer, a mob razed the house at the site. When Francesco returned, he pardoned the Jew, if he were to fund construction of the chapel . The architect Bernardino Ghisolfi designed the two story edifice. It once housed a famous altarpiece, the Madonna della Vittoria, painted by Mantegna; the painting was looted in 1797, is now at the Louvre.

References

Santa Maria della Vittoria, Mantua Wikipedia