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The Church and Monastery of Buon Gesù are adjacent buildings, still occupied by Clarissan nuns, with facades on Via Ghibellina between Piazza Clementini and Piazza Santa Clara in the southwest corner of
Orvieto Orvieto () is a city and ''comune'' in the Province of Terni, southwestern Umbria, Italy, situated on the flat summit of a large butte of volcanic tuff. The city rises dramatically above the almost-vertical faces of tuff cliffs that are compl ...
, region of
Umbria Umbria ( ; ) is a Regions of Italy, region of central Italy. It includes Lake Trasimeno and Cascata delle Marmore, Marmore Falls, and is crossed by the Tiber. It is the only landlocked region on the Italian Peninsula, Apennine Peninsula. The re ...
, Italy. The gardens behind the monastery overlook the cliffs surrounding the town built on a rocky plateau. The
Baroque architecture Baroque architecture is a highly decorative and theatrical style which appeared in Italy in the late 16th century and gradually spread across Europe. It was originally introduced by the Catholic Church, particularly by the Jesuits, as a means to ...
church is flanked to the north by Piazza Clementini. This remains an active convent of Franciscan order nuns.


History and description

In 1559, the bishop of Orvieto and cardinal,
Girolamo Simoncelli Girolamo Simoncelli (1522, Orvieto, then in the Papal States – 24 February 1605, Rome) was an Italian cardinal. Life Simoncelli was made a cardinal by his great-uncle, Pope Julius III, in the consistory of 22 December 1553. He was elected bis ...
, had acquired this property for the monastery, and slowly over the years, Poor Clares were introduced into a monastery. It was decided to build, using an endowment from the merchant Muzio Cappelletti, a new church for the nuns which now stands as the Chiesa del Buon Gesù. This endowment also paid for the Jesuit Collegio Cappelletti founded next the church of Santi Apostoli in town. The first abbess was Suor Todeschina de' Massimi who came with 12 either postulants or novices. The monastery was consecrated by Cardinal Sannesio with the support of the Franciscan Cornelio da Bologna. Further endowment of the monastery and church came from one of its nuns, Suor Ippolita Simoncelli, almost certainly family of the cardinal Simoncelli of Orvieto, who died in 1661. In 1633, under Cardinal
Fausto Poli Fausto Poli (17 February 1581 – 7 October 1653) was a Roman Catholic prelate and Cardinal. Biography Born in Usigni in Umbria, as a young man he went to Rome and was soon noticed by Maffeo Barberini, a cleric of the Apostolic Chamber and ...
, the chapel of San Onofrio, which belonged to the Priorate of
Santo Spirito in Sassia Church of the Holy Spirit in the Saxon District (Italian language, Italian: ''La chiesa di Santo Spirito in Sassia'') is a 12th-century Titular church, titular church in Rome, Italy. It is in ''Borgo Santo Spirito'', a street which got its name fr ...
, was donated by Cardinal Ippolito Aldobrandini, Prior of church. The chapel, located behind the facade to the west of church, was incorporated into the monastery, and used by the nuns as a chapel. This monastery as well as the nearby monastery of Santa Chiara were suppressed with the arrival of the Napoleonic armies. After the reinstitution of the Papal state, this monastery was restored, but Santa Chiara was not renewed. There was a subsequent suppression of the monastery, but by 1901 they had re-acquired the property. The richly decorated interior of the church of Buon Gesu had a choir section for the cloistered nuns to attend services. The church also received a donation in 1647 from Giovanni Battista Cecchetti, whose sister was a nun here; the money was used to decorate the apse, including frescoes, depicting events in the life of Jesus and Mary, attributed to Giovanni Maria Colombi. Also attributed to this painter are the altarpieces on the 3rd altars on the left and right, depicting respectively the ''Birth of the Virgin'' and the ''Profession by St Clare''. The later canvas is attributed by Picolomini Adami to
Cesare Nebbia Cesare Nebbia (c.1536–c.1614) was an Italian Mannerism, Mannerist painter from Orvieto. Biography Nebbia was born in Orvieto. He trained with Girolamo Muziano, with whom he helped complete a flurry of decoration that was added to the Cathe ...
, by other to Colombi. The painting had been looted from the Monastery of Santa Chiara during the Napoleonic occupation. It was taken to Paris in the Napoleonic era, when the nunneries of Orvieto were suppressed, but subsequently returned to the church of Buon Gesù, since Santa Chiara never reconsecrated. The second altar to the right has a ''Jesus child adored by a kneeling St Francis, Clare, and Agnes'' painted by Vincenzo Pontani. The main altarpiece depicts a 15th-century ''Madonna and Child'', peculiarly called the ''Morto vivo'', which was once a wall fresco outside the Porta Maggiore of Orvieto. In 1572, Monsignor Timoteo Mucci, Vicar of Cardinal Simoncelli, gave orders to remove it and transfer it to this spot. Putatively this event healed the Cardinal from an illness. Construction of the church began in 1618, but the church was consecrated only by 1740 under bishop Marsciano. A 1637 plaque to the right of the counterfacade inside recalls the endowment by ''Mutio Cappelletto'' (Muzio Cappelletti) and the execution of the will by city and church officers from the prominent aristocratic families Simoncelli, Gualterio, and
Monaldeschi The House of Monaldeschi was one of the powerful noble families of Orvieto, central Italy, members of the Guelph party who contested with murders and violence the Ghibelline Filippeschi for control of the commune of Orvieto and the ''castelli'' o ...
.Guida Storico-artistica della citta di Orvieto
by Tomasso Piccolomini Adami, Tipografia Bernadini, Siena (1883); pages 160-163.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Buon Gesu Orvieto Roman Catholic churches in Orvieto Baroque architecture in Umbria