Shrine of Nostra Signora della Guardia

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Shrine of Nostra Signora della Guardia.
Shrine of Nostra Signora della Guardia.

The “Shrine of Nostra Signora della Guardia” is a Catholic place of pilgrimage and is located on the top of Mount Figogna (804 m asl), in the Municipality of Ceranesi, about 20 km from the city of Genoa, in the northwest of Italy.

It is the most important Marian shrine in Liguria.

The name “Guardia” in Italian means “watch” and the shrine is so called because the Mount Figogna, in the Middle Ages was a strategic observation post to control displacement of armies along Valpolcevera and ships in the sea in front of Genoa.

From the esplanade in front of the shrine, in a clear day, you can view all the underlying Polcevera valley and part of the city of Genoa and the Ligurian Riviera (and also, but only in a very clear day, mainly in winter, also the skyline of the mountains of the French island of Corse).

The Shrine is the destination of pilgrimages from Genoa and surroundings and all over Italy.

The worship has been disseminated all over Italy and also abroad, so many churches and shrines have been consecrated to “Nostra Signora della Guardia”.


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[edit] History

According to tradition, Virgin Mary appeared to the peasant Benedetto Pareto on August 29th, 1490 and asked him to build a chapel on the mountain.

He was surprised and replied he was only a poor man and would not be able to do that, but Mary exhorted him by saying “Do not be afraid!”

Nevertheless, Pareto went home but did not speak with anyone about the apparition. A few days later he felt from a tree and was seriously injured. Virgin Mary appared again to him and he was miraculously healed. This event convinced him to speak about the apparition and seek for help to build the chapel.


[edit] The first chapel

According to tradition, the first chapel was built by Pareto himself in the same place of apparition.

This is a small rectangular building with a wooden roof, now included inside a new chapel.

Within a niche is a marble Madonna dated 1530.


[edit] The shrine

The old shrine, acquatinta by Marco Nicolosino (1820)
The old shrine, acquatinta by Marco Nicolosino (1820)
The Shrine seen from the esplanade
The Shrine seen from the esplanade












Due to the increasing flow of pilgrims a shrine was built (on the top of the mountain) between 1528 and 1530, thanks to a donation of the noble family Ghersi.

Near the shrine was built also a hospice for the pilgrims, which was rebuilt at the end of the 18th century.

In the second half of 19th century a new shrine was built. Some troubles rose, both technical and financial, but at last the church was completed in 1889 and inaugurated on May 26th 1890.

In the following years the number of pilgrims continued to increase, so in 1903 the old church was demolished to make room for a new "hospice" for the pilgrims and guesthouse.

On March 11th, 1915 the Genoese Pope Benedict XV assigned to the church the title of Basilica. Then, in 1917, the same pope built in the gardens of Vatican City a small temple, where a statue of N.S. della Guardia (given to the Pope by Genoese people) was arranged.


The small temple of N.S. della Guardia in the gardens of Vatican City
The small temple of N.S. della Guardia in the gardens of Vatican City


In 1929 a charachteristic train (the “Autoguidovia”) was constructed, allowing pilgrims to reach the shrine from the bottom of the valley (this was then the only alternative to go on foot).

In 1963 a new road for vehicles was constructed (provincial road No 52 from Bolzaneto, 11 km long), and the “Autoguidovia”, considered uneconomic, was closed in 1967.

On September 22nd, 1985 the shrine was visited by Pope John Paul II.

On May 18th, 2008 the shrine was visited by Pope Benedict XVI.


[edit] Structure of the basilica

The new church was designed by Guglielmo Calmieri. It has a Latin cross shape with three aisles.

The main aisle is painted with frescoes (1963) by the Genoese painter Antonio Santagata (1888-1985) with scenes of the life of the Virgin Mary.

The frescoes in the dome, painted by the Lombard painter Pasquale Arzuffi (1897-1965), represent Mary surrounded by the Republic of Genoa patron saints.

In the church are also other statues representing the Virgin Mary and saints (St. John the Baptist, St. Joseph, St. Eusebius) and on the left of the high altar, a black procession crucifix.

A door in the left aisle leads to the hall of voting offerings, where are exhibited hundreds of paintings, photos and objects, left by faithful people to express their gratitude to Virgin Mary for having been cured or protected from illnesses, accidents, wars and shipwrecks.


[edit] References

• Giovanni Meriana , Guida ai santuari della Liguria (Guide of shrines in Liguria), Sagep Editrice publisher, Genoa (Italy), 1990.



[edit] External links (Italian language only)


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