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San Marziale

Coordinates: 45°26′38″N 12°19′58″E / 45.4438°N 12.3329°E / 45.4438; 12.3329
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Church of San Marziale
Facade & Ponte San Marziale
Religion
AffiliationRoman Catholic
ProvinceVenice
Year consecrated1721
Location
LocationVenice, Italy
San Marziale is located in Venice
San Marziale
Shown within Venice
San Marziale is located in Italy
San Marziale
San Marziale (Italy)
Geographic coordinates45°26′38″N 12°19′58″E / 45.4438°N 12.3329°E / 45.4438; 12.3329
Architecture
TypeChurch
Groundbreaking1133
Completed1714

San Marziale is a church building in the sestiere or neighborhood of Cannaregio in Venice.

The church dates to 1133. The present church was rebuilt in 1693–1714 at the commission of Pietro Barbarigo, and reconsecrated in 1721. It contains works by Antonio Vassilacchi (L'Aliense) (Resurrection), Domenico Cresti (il Passignano), Tintoretto (one of the altar pieces Saint Martial in Glory with Saints Peter and Paul), and Giulia Lama (four paintings including two of the Evangelists St Matthew and St Mark).[1] The Scuola del Santissimo Sacramento commissioned the altar (1691-1704) in the chancel attributed to Tommaso Rues. He also sculpted the elaborate marble main altar, depicting Christ Ruler of World with Saints and Angels is dedicated to the Blessed Virgin of the Graces. The icon is a copy of the original image supposedly sculpted in Rimini in 1286 by a shepherd named Rustico and miraculously brought to Venice.

The ceiling frescoes are by Sebastiano Ricci and depict The arrival of the icon of the Madonna in Venice, Apotheosis of Saint Marziale, Rustico observing angels sculpt the statue of the Madonna, and finally God the Father in Glory. It once contained a Titian painting of Tobias and the Angel,[2] which is now in Madonna dell'Orto[3]

References

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  • Manno, Antonio (2004). The Rizzoli Art Guides (ed.). The Treasures of Venice. New York: Rizzoli International Publications. pp. 366–377.
  1. ^ Razzal, Katie (3 May 2022). "Save Venice: The forgotten female artists being rediscovered". BBC News. Retrieved 4 May 2022.
  2. ^ Northern Italy including Leghorn, Florence, Ravenna and routes through France, Switzerland, and Austria: handbook for travellers (Google eBook) Page 388, Karl Baedeker, 1913, Scribner and Sons, NY.[1]
  3. ^ http://www.chorusvenezia.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&lang=en&id=25 orto-eng.pdf
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