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Rome's Oldest Church
Santa Maria in Trastevere is the oldest church in Rome and preserves some its most glorious medieval mosaics
Rome's oldest church dedicated to the Virgin was established before AD 337 on the site of an inn where a well of olive oil sprang from the floor at the precise moment Christ was born (look for this detail in the mosaics of the apse inside).
The current structure was raised in 1140, with a
Romanesque bell tower
(when I lived a few blocks away in the early 1990s, this was how I measured time, by the quarter-hourly tolling of its bells) and a
12th– to 13th-century mosaic on the facade
(lit up at night) of the Madonna and ten women.
The interior preserves a gorgeous
Cosmatesque-like opus sectile floor
(which is a fancy way of saying "bits of colored stone pieced together in pleasing patterns"), 21
columns
pilfered from nearby ancient buildings, and a 1617 wood ceiling by
Domenichino.
Filling the
apse
are some of Rome's most beautiful
mosaics,
the half dome picturing Christ and the Madonna (1140) and below that, six scenes from the
Life of the Virgin by Pietro Cavallini
(1291). These show the artist's remarkable use of color tones and foreshortening to create depth and facility with expressing character psychology and story line.
(Cavallini was really the only artist in Rome who, as a slightly earlier contemporary of Florence's Giotto, was helping break art from its static Byzantine traditions to plunge it into a vibrant, proto-Renaissance mode. Sadly, few of his large-scale works survive, though you can see some marvelous frescoes in Santa Cecilia in Trastevere and in Santa Maria in Aracoeli.)
The
piazza
out front is Trastevere's open-air living room, with an ongoing soccer game on the south edge and an
ancient Roman fountain
at the center (scallop shells added by Carlo Fontana in 1692). The fountain steps are usually occupied by latter-day vagabond minstrels, a bit scruffy but freely sharing their guitar renditions of Bob Dylan, the Beatles, and Guns and Roses with the crowds.
Piazza S. Maria in Trastevere
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This article was last updated in January 2007. All information was accurate at the time.
Copyright © 1998–2008 by Reid Bramblett. All rights reserved.

