Santa Marta al Collegio Romano

Church building in Rome, Italy
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Church in Rome, Italy
41°53′51″N 12°28′48″E / 41.897611°N 12.479917°E / 41.897611; 12.479917LocationRomeCountryItalyHistoryConsecrated1696ArchitectureFunctional statuscultural centerArchitectural typeChurchGroundbreaking1543

Santa Marta al Collegio Romano is a deconsecrated church located in the Piazza del Collegio Romano in the Rione Pigna of Rome, Italy.

A House of Saint Martha was founded in 1543 by St Ignatius of Loyola to rehabilitate women considered of poor morals, because they were adulterous or married women shamelessly living in public sin without fear of God or men[1] Saint Martha is considered the patron saint of married women. The church became a monastery, and by 1560 was under the Augustinian order. The church was consecrated in 1696, with a reconstruction by Carlo Fontana. Deconsecrated by Napoleonic invasions, it presently functions as a cultural center.

The interior art has been mostly transferred. Some of the stucco and architectural decoration remains. The ceiling is frescoed by Baciccio.

Bibliography

  1. ^ malmaritate, or le donne coniugate in peccato pubblico senza timor d'Iddio et senza vergogna delli uomini” che volevano riabilitarsi.

See also

Authority control databases: National Edit this at Wikidata
  • Germany