Small Church Of Saint Anne (other)
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Small Church Of Saint Anne (other)
Small Church of Saint Anne or Chiesetta di Sant'Anna may refer to * Small Church of Saint Anne (Alcamo) * Small Church of Saint Anne (Brugherio) See also * Church of St. Ann (other) {{Disambiguation, church ...
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Small Church Of Saint Anne (Alcamo)
The chapel of Sant'Anna is a Catholic church located in Alcamo, in the Italian province of Trapani. History The first time it was called a chapel dates back to a notarial deed in 1582; De Blasi affirms that, on 15 January 1653, the baron Francesco Triolo received by Pope Innocentius X the licence to transform the chapel into a Church, and adds that its roof had been collapsed for several years.Carlo Cataldo, Accanto alle aquile: Il castello alcamese di Bonifato e la chiesa di S. Maria dell’Alto p.108-110, Palermo, Brotto, 1991. The Church was reconstructed after 1845: among the registered possessions of the baron Benedetto Triolo in the same year, there was only a building "with a room on the ground-floor and two on the first floor, a millstone and a warehouse in that district. The two brothers, Stefano and Giuseppe Triolo, patriots of the revolutionary uprisings in 1848 and 1860, were buried there; according to the historians’ assertions, confirmed by the documents of ...
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Small Church Of Saint Anne (Brugherio)
The Chiesetta di Sant'Anna, or Small Church of Saint Anne, is a Roman Catholic church located in San Damiano, a hamlet of Brugherio, in the Province of Monza and Brianza, Italy. History The church, known as "geseta de Sant'Anna", is located on the site of a ninth century church dedicated to Saints Cosmas and Damian, itself attached to a monastery. During his pastoral visit in 1578, Charles Borromeo decided to demolish the building. In the eighteenth century the new church was built, consisting of a private chapel adjacent to the Villa Viganoni-Benavides, the summer residence of the Parravicini family during the nineteenth century. This was also demolished. The church was dedicated to Saint Anne probably by Antonio Parravicini and his wife Isabella Blasi. They placed the marble altar painting of the ''Education of the Virgin'' that came from another church in Milan. In 1808 Isabella Blasi added two plaques of black marble at the sides of the altar. The first is a petition to Sai ...
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