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The Basilica of Saint Praxedes (, ), commonly known in Italian as Santa Prassede, is an early medieval titular church and located near the papal basilica of Saint Mary Major, on Via di Santa Prassede, rione Monti in , . The current of Titulus Sancta Praxedis is .

The church is dedicated to the second-century , who with her sister , was said to have provided comfort and care to Christians persecuted in the Roman Empire. Since 1198 it has been served by monks of the order.


History
The church incorporates mosaic decoration that mark it among the oldest churches in Rome. The Titulus S. Praxedis was established by in c. 112 and church near this site was present since at least the fifth century. The church in its current place and general layout was commissioned by Pope Hadrian I around the year 780 to house the relics (bones) of () and (), the daughters of , traditionally St. Peter's first Christian convert in Rome. The church was built atop of the remains of a 4th-century ancient Roman , privately owned by the family of Pudentiana, and called Terme di Novato. Accurata, E Succinta Descrizione Topografica, E Istorica Di Roma, Volume 1, by Ridolfino Venturini, published by Carlo Barbellieni, Rome (1768); page 43. The two female saints were murdered for providing Christian burial for early in defiance of Roman law. The basilica was enlarged and decorated by Pope St. Paschal I in c. 828.

Paschal, who reigned 817–824, was at the forefront of the Carolingian Renaissance started and advocated by the emperor . They desired to get back to the foundations of Christianity theologically and artistically. Paschal, thus, began two, linked, ambitious programs: the recovery of martyrs' bones from the of Rome and an almost unprecedented church building campaign. Paschal dug up numerous skeletons and transplanted them to this church. While on a pilgrimage to Rome with his father around 855-856, the young and future English king Alfred the Great was reportedly deeply impressed and inspired by the church's beauty.Woodruff, Douglas, The Life and Times of Alfred the Great (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1993), p. 33

In 1198 the monks, an Italian reform movement in the Benedictine Order inspired by , were granted the monastery attached to the basilica by Pope and have been present without interruption for more than 800 years since. They still maintain the monastery and the church and minister its liturgy today.

The inscriptions found in Santa Prassede, a valuable source illustrating the history of the church, have been collected and published by Vincenzo Forcella.V. Forcella, Inscrizioni delle chese e d' altre edifici di Roma, dal secolo XI fino al secolo XVI Volume II (Roma: Fratelli Bencini, 1873), pp. 489–524.

The church contains the oratory of St. Zeno.

The church provided the inspiration for 's poem "The Bishop Orders His Tomb at Saint Praxed's Church."


Interior

Frescos, Paintings, & Carvings
The main altarpiece is a canvas of St Praxedes Gathering the Blood of the Martyrs (c. 1730–35) by Domenico Muratori. On the right column of the triumphal arch, above the plaque, there is the Portrait of Cardinal Angelo Maria Querini (1747) by . It also contains an Annunciation by .

Mosaics
The most famous element of the church is the decorative program. Paschal hired a team of professional mosaicists to complete the work in the apse, the apsidal arch, and the triumphal arch. In the apse, Jesus is in the center, flanked by Sts. Peter and Paul who present Prassede and Pudenziana to God. On the far left is Paschal, with the square halo of the living, presenting a model of the church as an offering to Jesus. Below runs an inscription of Paschal's, hoping that this offering will be sufficient to secure his place in heaven.

On the apsidal arch are twelve men on each side, holding wreaths of victory, welcoming the souls into heaven. Above them are symbols of the four Gospel writers: Mark, the lion; Matthew, the man; Luke, the bull; and John, the eagle, as they surround a lamb on a throne, a symbol of Christ's eventual return to Earth.

Those mosaics, as well as those in the Chapel of Saint Zeno, a funerary chapel which Pope Paschal built for his mother, Theodora, are the best-known aspects of the church.


Column of the Flagellation
Santa Prassede also houses an alleged segment of the pillar or column upon which was flogged before his crucifixion in (see Flagellation of Christ). The relic is alleged to have been discovered in the early 4th century by Saint Helena (mother of the ) who at the age of 80 undertook a to the , where she founded churches for Christian worship and rescued relics associated with the crucifixion of Jesus on . In 1223, Cardinal Giovanni Colonna, as emissary to the holy land in 1223 was said to have obtained this artifact and brought it to Rome.

Among these legendary relics retrieved by Helena, which included pieces of the (now venerated at St. Peter's Basilica Basilica of St. Peter, with fragments in Santa Croce in Gerusalemme, also in Rome) and wood from the Jesus' crib enshrined at S. Maria Maggiore. These items, including the Santa Prassede pillar, lack indisputable authenticity, due to absence of forensic evidence and the abundance of other objects claimed during the medieval period to have the same historic function.Grzegorz Górny, Witnesses to Mystery: Investigations into Christ's Relics, (San Francisco CA USA: Ignatius Press 2013), pp. 250-261.


List of cardinals
  • Benedict, under Pope Gregory VII (1073–1085)
  • Deodatus (1091), appointee of Antipope Clement III
  • Romanus (1105–1112)
  • Lambert (1112–1115)
  • Desiderius (1115–1138)
  • Chrysogonus (1138–1141)
  • Hubald of Lucca (1141–1158)
  • William (1173)
  • Radulfus Nigellus (1188)
  • Rufinus (1190–1192) Klaus Ganzer (1963), Die Entwicklung des auswärtigen Kardinalats im hohen Mittelalter. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte des Kardinalkollegiums vom 11.bis 13. Jahrhundert , Tübingen: Max Niemeyer, pp. 146-148.
  • Soffred of Pistoia (1193–1210)
  • Giovanni da Ferentino (1212–1217)
  • Giovanni Colonna di Carbognano (1217–1245)
  • (1262–1286)
  • Bernard de Languissel (1286–1291?)
  • Regnaud de La Porte (1321–1325)
  • Pedro Gómez de Barroso (1327–1341)
  • (1350–1353)
  • Marco da Viterbo (1366–1369)
  • Pedro Gómez de Barroso Albornoz (1371–1374)
  • Pietro Pileo di Prata (1378–1384)
  • (1405–1409)
  • (1426–1427)
  • Jean Le Jeune (1440–1441)
  • Alain de Coëtivy (1448–1465); (1465–1474)
  • Giovanni Arcimboldo (1476–1488)
  • Antoniotto Pallavicini (1489–1503)
  • Gabriele de' Gabrielli (1507–1511)
  • Christopher Bainbridge (1511–1514)
  • Antonio Maria Ciocchi del Monte (1514–1521)
  • Ippolito de' Medici (1529–1532)
  • Tommaso De Vio (1534)
  • Francesco Cornaro (1535–1541)
  • Philippe de la Chambre (1541–1542)
  • Gasparo Contarini (1542)
  • Giovanni Maria Ciocchi del Monte (1542–1543)
  • Miguel da Silva (1543–1552)
  • Cristoforo Guidalotti Ciocchi del Monte (1552–1564)
  • (1564–1584)
  • Nicolas de Pellevé (1584–1594)
  • Alessandro Ottaviano de' Medici (1594–1600)
  • Simeone Tagliavia d'Aragona (1600)
  • Antonio Maria Galli (1600–1605)
  • Ottavio Acquaviva d'Aragona (1605–1612)
  • (1613–1620)
  • Roberto Bellarmino (1620–1621)
  • François d'Escoubleau de Sourdis (1621–1628)
  • (1628–1629)
  • (1629–1635)
  • Guido Bentivoglio (1635–1639)
  • (1639–1644)
  • Ernst Adalbert von Harrach (1644–1667)
  • (1667)
  • (1667–1668)
  • Alderano Cybo-Malaspina (1668–1677)
  • Pietro Vito Ottoboni (1680–1681)
  • Francesco Albizzi (1681–1684)
  • (1684–1689)
  • (1689–1691)
  • Francesco Maidalchini (1691–1700)
  • Galeazzo Marescotti (1700–1708)
  • (1708–1710)
  • Bandino Panciatichi (1710–1718)
  • Francesco Barberini, Jr. (1718–1721)
  • Giuseppe Sacripante (1721–1726)
  • Filippo Antonio Gualterio (1726–1728)
  • Lodovico Pico della Mirandola (1728–1731)
  • Antonio Felice Zondadari (1731–1737)
  • (1737–1738)
  • Luis Belluga y Moncada (1738–1743)
  • Angelo Maria Quirini (1743–1755)
  • Domenico Silvio Passionei (1755–1759)
  • (1759–1763)
  • Carlo Vittorio Amedeo delle Lanze (1763–1783)
  • Vitaliano Borromeo (1783–1793)
  • Francesco Saverio de Zelada (1793–1801)
  • (1801–1807)
  • Carlo Antonio Giuseppe Bellisomi (1807–1808)
  • vacant (1808–1814)
  • Giovanni Filippo Gallarati Scotti (1814–1818); in commendam (1818–1819)
  • vacant (1819–1823)
  • Francesco Serlupi Crescenzi (1823–1828)
  • Antonio Domenico Gamberini (1829–1839); in commendam (1839–1841)
  • (1841–1847)
  • Luigi Vannicelli Casoni (1847–1877)
  • (1878–1881)
  • (1883–1889)
  • Tommaso Maria Zigliara (1891–1893)
  • Gaetano Aloisi Masella (1893–1902)
  • Rafael Merry del Val y Zulueta (1903–1930)
  • Raffaele Carlo Rossi (1930–1948)
  • vacant (1948–1953)
  • (1953–1964)
  • (1965–1994)
  • (since 1996)

==Gallery==

.
, 14th century]]


See also
  • Episcopa Theodora


Bibliography
  • B. M. Apollonj Ghetti, Santa Prassede (Roma: Edizioni Roma, 1961).
  • Gillian Vallance Mackie, The Iconographic Programme of the Zeno Chapel at Santa Prassede, Rome M.A..
  • Marchita B. Mauck, “The Mosaic of the Triumphal Arch of Santa Prassede: A Liturgical Interpretation.” Speculum 62–64 (1987), pp. 813–828.
  • Rotraut Wisskirchen, Mosaikprogramm von Santa Prassede in Rom (Münster: Aschendorff, 1990).
  • Anna Maria Affanni, La chiesa di Santa Prassede: la storia, il rilievo, il restauro (Viterbo: BetaGamma, 2006) Testimonianze.
  • Mary M. Schaefer, Women in Pastoral Office: The Story of Santa Prassede, Rome (New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2013).
  • Maurizio Caperna, La basilica di Santa Prassede: il significato della vicenda architettonica (Roma: Edizioni Quasar, 2013).
  • Benedictine Monks of Vallombroso, The Basilica of Saint Praxedes, in memory of their eighth century of presence at Saint Praxedes: 1198–1998 (Genova, Italia: B.N. Marconi, Fourth Edition, January 2014).


External links

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