San Gregorio della Divina Pietà

San Gregorio della Divina Pietà

Façade viewed from west
Basic information
Geographic coordinates 41°53′29″N 12°28′44″E / 41.8914°N 12.4788°ECoordinates: 41°53′29″N 12°28′44″E / 41.8914°N 12.4788°E
Affiliation Roman Catholic
Architectural description
Architect(s) Filippo Barigioni
Architectural type Church
Architectural style Baroque
Direction of façade W
Completed 1729

San Gregorio della Divina Pietà is a small church in Rome, Italy, located in Rione Sant'Angelo, near the Great Synagogue of Rome. It is also known as San Gregorio a Ponte Quattro Capi or Pons Judaeorum due to its proximity to the bridge of that name, or San Gregorietto due to its small size.

Location

The church is in the rione Sant'Angelo of Rome at the Piazza Gerusalemme, north of Tiber Island at the north end of the Pons Fabricius (Ponte Quattro Capi) and east of the Great Synagogue of Rome (Tempio Maggiore).

History and Art

Bilingual inscription above the door of the church from Isaiah 65:2–3

The shrine has a very ancient origin, but the first document citing it stems only from the twelfth century.[1]

It was built over the houses of the gens Anicia, and later dedicated to Pope St. Gregory the Great because of the tradition that the saint was born here.[1]

San Gregorio was declared a parish church and remained so until 1729, although in the 16th century it lost almost all its territory due to the establishment of the nearby Ghetto.[1] In 1729 the rectangular building was restored by Filippo Barigioni on behalf of Pope Benedict XIII, and given to the Congregation of the Operai della Divina Pietà (Workers of the Divine Mercy), founded in 1679 to help families once well off which had fallen into poverty—its modern appellation comes from that.[1] Low on the external north wall is an 18th-century alms slot with an Italian inscription reading "Alms for poor, honorable and ashamed families".[1] A few yards away is another slot inscribed "MEMORIALI", used to give the priests the names of the persons or families in difficulty.[2]

Alms slot on the north wall

The church belonged originally to the rione Ripa, but after the demolitions around the Theater of Marcellus between 1926 and 1930, it was assigned to the rione Sant'Angelo.[3] Until 1870, the pope required the Jews living in the nearby ghetto to attend compulsory sermons (Italian: prediche coatte)[1] every sabbath in front of the church, which faced two gates of the Jewish quarter, but they avoided hearing them by putting wax in their ears.[4] Because of this, during a restoration in 1858, a bilingual (Hebrew and Latin) inscription with a passage from the Old Testament Book of Isaiah (Isaiah 65:2–3), in which the Lord complains about the obstinacy of the Jews, was put on the facade.[1][5]

The facade by Barigioni is decorated with Etienne Parrocel's painting of the Crucifixion, framed in an oval.[1] The interior is rectangular with one nave: painted on the vault, the Assunzione di Maria of Giuseppe Sereni; on the main altar, the Madonna della divina pietà of Gilles Hallet. Andrea Casali painted on the altar to the right a St Philip Neri in ecstasy[6] and two ovals representing Franciscan saints.

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to San Gregorio della Divina Pietà (Rome).
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Pietrangeli, 14.
  2. Racioppi, Pier Paolo. "San Gregorio della Divina Pietà" (PDF). historywalk. Retrieved 2 June 2013. "Un’altra buca, in via di Monte Savello, reca un’iscrizione che recita invece “memoriali”: serviva per segnalare il nome di persone o famiglie in difficoltà."
  3. Pietrangeli, 7.
  4. Delli, sub vocem "Via del Portico d'Ottavia"
  5. The inscription says: "I have spread out my hands all the day unto a rebellious people, that walk in a way that is not good, after their own thoughts; a people that provokes me to my face continually . . ."
  6. Pietrangeli, 16.

Sources