Catania

Church of San Giuliano (St. Julian) on Via dei Crociferi: reconstruction

Via dei Crociferi is a street a little more than one hundred metres long where some of Catania’s major Baroque architecture was built.
Among these is the exquisite church of San Giuliano (St. Julian), part of the architectural complex of the former Benedictine monastery. When the building in the old town (now Piazza Cutelli) was destroyed by the earthquake, the abbess Bonaiuto began its reconstruction. In 1703, with the help of her brother Don Fernando and the Bishop Riggio, the abbess sold the ruins of the old monastery and land, and began reconstruction on Via dei Crociferi.
The construction was long and complex. In 1741, when the final piece of land was purchased to build the church, the monastery had a dormitory, parlour and sacristy.

foto facciata chiesa frontale
When you are inside San Giuliano ai Crociferi it seems to be in a casket. The church has a central plan. Carved into the walls there are four niches, a small chapel and the high altar. The dome is painted with frescoes by the Catania painter Giuseppe Rapisardi. The scene shows Saint Berillo, the city’s third patron, while receiving from Saint Peter the task of founding the Catanese Church. Under the dome are four windows. Below are potbellied grates that allowed nuns to attend church celebrations.

Giuseppe Palazzotto was the architect and site manager; though tradition attributes this role to Vaccarini, in all likelihood he was only the designer of the project.

The theatre of taste

The Barresi-Branciforte lords

The façade used as a puppet theatre

The Supernatural dimension of the chapel of the Santissimo Sacramento

From St. Thomas to St. Joseph

Places of knowledge: the Benedictines’ library

A small room with a golden entrance

The role of the religious orders in rebuilding the Val di Noto

Prominent façade

New roads for Catania

Palazzo Nicolaci di Villadorata, who is the architect?

The senses tell the story of the Church of San Benedetto

A square as the heart of the city

The chocolate of Modica

A majestic and luminous church

The colours of the cathedral

The disastrous earthquake

A colourful floor

A new entrance for Santa Chiara (St. Claire)

The senses tell the story of the Church of San Sebastiano

From International Gothic to present day

Some masterpieces

A museum to save a tradition

The senses tell about Palazzo La Rocca

The senses tell the story of the church of Santa Maria del Carmelo

A Nobel Prize in Modica

The city of museums

Connections with other UNESCO sites

Feast days

Norman apses

The senses tell the story of the church of San Giuseppe

The cathedral of Sant’Agata: a lengthy reconstruction

The character of Badia Sant’Agata

The senses tell the story of the Badia di Sant’Agata

Modica, a city with ancient origins

Freedom of worship and the role of the Catholic Church in the diffusion of Baroque

Limestone, the colour of harmony

Fontana della Ninfa Zizza, public water in the town

San Nicolò l’Arena: an unfinished church

Searching for colour

A long reconstruction

The two churches

A miniature city

Church of San Giuliano (St. Julian) on Via dei Crociferi: reconstruction

The senses tell about Palazzo Napolino Tommasi Rosso

Garden of Novices and the restorations by Giancarlo De Carlo

A design by Vincenzo Sinatra

An eagle-shaped city

Wonderful quick decorations

The senses tell about Palazzo Nicolaci

Rosario Gagliardi, the maestro of the Val di Noto

The senses tell the story of the staircase of Santa Maria del Monte

The internal colours

A talking palace

Discovering the mother church

Baroque and the loss of equilibrium in the 16th century

One city, three sites

The senses tell the Cathedral of Sant’Agata

San Benedetto: a treasure reopened to the public

The Infiorata, a feast of colours and flowers

A triumph of colour

Many owners, one palace

The Maiolica of the staircase

The senses tell the story of the Church of San Giovanni Evangelista

A new site for a new city

Between white and black

The Benedictine Monastery, one of the largest in Europe

A city in colour

The Baroque town by the sea

Some prestigious works

A new palace for the La Rocca lords

The interior and its masterpieces

The senses tell the story of the Church of San Giuliano ai Crociferi

The senses tell the story of the church of San Giovanni Battista

Corbels: a celebration of the Nicolaci family

The senses tell the story of the Church of the Annunciation

From the contrast of the exterior to the internal jubilation of colours

St. Agatha and the giant candelabras

A symbol for the town

The senses tell the story of the Church of Santa Chiara

A prominent church

Two illustrious patron saints

Feasting in Palazzolo

The Feast of San Giacomo (St. James)

The senses tell the Benedictine Monastery and San NicoIò l’Arena

The Staircase of Angels

Militello, the story of an enlightened fiefdom

One city, two sites

The kitchen, a treasure chest of colours

A hall for the feasts

The wall comes to life

The Burgos crucifix

A feast only for Scicli

The senses tell the story of the Church of Santa Chiara

The church of Carmine

A new site for a new church

A half-Baroque church

St. Sebastian, so much work!

The senses tell the Mother Church of San Nicolò and of the Santissimo Salvatore