The church dates back to the second half of the 13th century and was founded,
together with an adjacent hospital, by the teutonic Knights, thus explaining the
name "Alemanna", by which it is still known.
The knights set up their priory here and used the hospital to receive and tend
veterans from the Holy Land. Only a small trace of the ancient hospital remains,
in the form of a lancer arch and a fragment of wall near the apses of the
church. The church itself, abandoned by the knights at the end of the 14th
century, was struck by lightning at the beginning of the 17th century, and was
further damaged in the earthquake of 1783, which caused the facade to collapse.
Today it is under restoration, after having been dismantled stone by stone to
allow consolidation. The regional museum contains a fine portal from this church
which is the purest example of Gothic architecture in Sicily, since it was built
using entirely German methods.
The knights hospital, which later passed to the Confraternita dei Rossi,
admitted a famous patient after the battle of Lepanto in 1571, in the person of
the great Miguel Saavedra Cervantes.
Santissima Annunziata dei Catalani
The church of the "Annunziata dei Catalani" stands on one of the most
historically important sites of the Straits. Nearby, there was once the
Byzantine shipyard, guarded by the fortress of Castellamare. The church was
built between 1150 and 1200 on the remains of a pagan temple dedicated to
Neptune. It is an interesting example of how various architectural styles were
added to a late Byzantine construction typical of those built by the Basilian
Order of monks. The blind loggias and the play of color created by the exterior
stonework, along with the two-tone arches of the interior and the elongated
layout of the church, are all indications of Islamic and Byzantine influence,
and also reflect contemporary architecture on mainland Italy.
The original lenght of the naves was almost double their present length: they
were shortened and the facade was redone following a flood in the Middle Ages,
wich caused the front section of the church to collapse.
The church has been known by the name "Catalani" ever since the 16th century,
when the senate of Messina gave it to the powerful guild of the Catalan
merchants. The guild made it their headquarters and placed the coats of arms of
Catalonia on the main entrance. The great difference in height between the
ground level of the church and that of the surrounding streets and buildings is
due to the piles of rubble caused by the eartquake of 1908, which were later
levelled for reconstruction.
Il Monte di Pieta'
Monte di Pieta', the ruins of the church of the Pieta' and is spectacular
staircase, are found on what is now Via XXIV Maggio, but which was originally
via del Duomo.
The complex is today missing many of it original parts (the firdt floor of Monte
di Pieta' is missing, as are the bell tower and the whole of the church, except
for a section on the facade). The massive building of the Monte, the work of
Natale Masuccio, dating back to 1616, is a fine example of mannerist
architecture and was built as the headquarters of an institution set up to fight
usury.
The institution was run by the religious brotherhood of the "Azzurri", who met
in the adiacent church of the Pieta', constructed in the second half of the 16th
century, on the site of a more ancient demolished Greek Orthodox church, San
Basilio.
In the 18th century, extensive renovation work was carried out, involving the
construction of the first flour of the Monte building, of the adiacent
bell-tower and of the staircase, designed by Placido Campoli ed Antonio Basile,
which lies between the Monte and the church. At the center of the staircase, the
fountain representing Abundance, designed by Ignazio Buceti, bears the date of
1741, year of the second centenary of the foundation of the Monte Pieta'.
The Cathedral
The church was originally built in Norman times, but only in 1197, in a ceremony
presided over by Henry VI of Swabia ( the father of Frederick II, who lived and
was buried in Messina), was it dedicated to the Virgin Mary.
Nothing of the Norman construction remains today except the general layout and
the overall exterior appearance which, after the 1908 earthquake, the architect
Valenti reconstructed on the basis of ancient documents.
Since at least the 14th century the Cathedral has undergone various structural
changes.
Guidotto de Tabiatis, the bishop whose tomb, sculpted by Goro di Gregorio in
1333, can be admired in the transept- ordered the construction of an additional
section, along the south front of the cathedral, decorated with blach and white
stone bands and beautiful mullioned windows.
The 14th century also saw the addition of the baptisimal font by Florentine
Gaddo Gaddi and the mosaics in the vaults of the apses. These depict, from south
to north: St Giovanni between St Nicola and St. Basilio; Christ Pantocrator; and
the Virgin and Child between, Archangels, St Lucia and St Agata. The three
portals of the Cathedral facade, with their elaborate decorations in polycrome
bands and sculpted features, date from the same period. The central portal is by
Baboccio da Piperno and shows figures of kings and saints, cherubs intently
observing a mystic harvest, heraldic devices and symbols of the Evangelists. The
triangular gable with God the Father at the top and a tondo depicting Christ
crowning the Virgin were added in 1468 by Pietro di Bonate. The statue of
Madonna and Child, in the lunette of the portal, is from 1534, and is the work
of Giovambattista Mazzeo.
The 16th century saw radical intervention also inside the buiding: Montorsoli
designed a marble inlay floor and the arrangement, along the walls of the side
naves, representing the Apostolate.
The sculptor from Carrara, Andrea Calamech, sculpted the marble pulpit, and
Jacopo Lo Duca built the chapel of the Sacrament in the north apse. The canopy
in wood and copper and the high altar in mixed marble act as a kind of
theatrical device to focus attention on the painting of the Madonna della
Lettera (patron saint of Messina), and date bach to the 17th century. The altar,
designed by Simone Gulli - who was also responsible for a unique series of
buildings along the port known as the "Maritime Theatre", was begun in 1628 and
finished at the end of the 18th century. A large number of artists collaborated
on its construction, including the great goldsmiths of the Juvarra family, who
also made the other altar, in silver and gold, built into the modern one at the
center of the transept, depicting the Virgin handing over her letter to the
ambassadors of Messina.
In 1930, the Cathedral became home to what is the largest organ in Italy and the
third largest in Europe: 5 keyboards, 170 stops, 16000 pipes arranged in both
sides of the transept, behind the altar, above the main portal and above the
triumphal arch.
The bell-tower of the Cathedral
At the beginning of the 16th century, Martino Montanini
planned what was to be, at 90 meters, the highest bell-tower in Sicily..
Struck by lightning in 1588, it was rebuilt by Andrea Calamech in around 1575.
The base of the belltower originally housed the city archives, which were taken
by the Spanish in 1678 and transported to Seville, where they remain to this
day.
The old bell-tower, damaged in the earthquake of 1783, was demolished soon
afterwards. The present tower, designed by Valenti, imitates the forms of its
predecessor.
It was built after 1908, and in 1933 became home to the largest animated clock
in the world, work of the Ungerer brothers from Strasbourg.
Fountain of Nettuno
The splendid monumental fountain representing Nettuno were built in 1557 by Fra'
Giovanni Angelo da Montorsoli, on commission of the Senate of Messina and in
close collaboration with the great umanist and local mathematican Francesco
Maurolico.
The fountain of Nettuno is a assimilation of the powerful style of
Michelangelo in sculpture. The figure of the god rises calm and invincible,
holding his terrible trident with its power to shake the earth; the monstrous
Scilla and Cariddi chained at is feet, hurl animal screams.
The fountain, which in the 16th century was situated only a few feet from the
sea, with Nettuno turned towards the city, was designed to be seen with the blue
backdrop of the harbour, as if the figures had just risen from the water, and as
if the god was laying claim to the city.
Gallery and Theatre Vittorio Emanuele
The Galleria inaugurated in 1939, the building represents the major work of the
local civil engineer and architect Camillo Puglisi Allegra, an important figure
in the eclectic school of architecture.
This building is one of only two examples of its kind in the south of Italy, the
other being the gallery in Naples. Puglisi Allegra, who personally designed all
the decorations (sculpted by the artists Bonfiglio and Lovetti), drew
inspiration from 18th century Sicilian Art.
The extremely elegant effect was completed by the decorations in wrought iron,
multicolored windows and carefully designed lighting, based on lamps hidden
behind cornices to give an effect of sheet light.
The Theatre up until 1861 called the Sant'Elisabetta theatre, this building is
the only example in the historic center, and one of the few in the city as a
whole, of neo classical architecture.
It was constructed in 1852 according to the plans of the Neapolitan Pietro
Valente, assisted by the local architect, Carlo Falconieri.
The earthquake of 1908 left the building seriously unsafe, and the hall and
stage (mostly wooden constructions) were subsequently lost. Between 1911 the
rear section of the theatre was extended, to create a small auditorium still in
use today, named after the local musician, Antonio Laudamo. The new theatre,
which retains the perimeter walls of the front section wuth their neo-classical
stuccoes and decorations, was not reopened to the public until 1985.
Inside, the ceilling is decorated with the "Legend of Colapesce" by Renato
Guttuso.
Church of Saint Francesco
In 1255, Pope Alexander IV sent, from Rome, the foundation stone for the
construction of the first church built by the Franciscan Order in Sicily.
The work was completely funded by the nobles of Messina and, in particular by
Violante Palizzi, Eleonora Procida and Beatrice Belfiore, who all entered the
Third Franciscan Order. This extremely high church evokes architectural forms
from continental Europe, and was one of the very few Angevin constructions in
Sicily; it was in fact against the Angevin king Charles that the island rebelled
in the Sicilian Vespers.
The church and its adjacent convent originally stood outside the city walls, but
were absorbed by the espanding town in the 16th century. Patiently reconstructed
after the 1908 earthquake, the fine crenellated aspes, "quoted" by the great
Antonello, in the background of his painting "Deposition" in the Correr Museum
in Venice, were rebuilt using the fallen stones. The portal of the facade, the
rosette and the side entrance portal were likewise completely rebuilt. Inside,
it is still possible to admire part of the ancient floor showing a large star in
inlaid stone.
The church is known to the local people as the "Immacolata" due to its silver
statue of the Virgin. In the past, the church also contained important examples
of 16th and 17th century paintings, as well as the tombs of Federick III of
Aragon and other members of his family.
Santa Maria della Valle, the "Badiazza"
The ruins of the antique church and convent of Santa Maria della Valle, commonly
said "Badiazza", forms one the most antique and interesting monuments of the
Medieval Messina. It is placed on the bottom of the San Rizzo, stream and is
reached by the trunk-road of the Peloritani mountains passing a difficult road
trought the village Scala, and going upstream the pebbly river- bed. It belonged
to a Benedictine monastery founded most likely in the 12th century. Some
historians believe that it was built in the 12th century or at the benigging of
the following century, near or over previous Roman constructions of which traces
were found. After the devastation of the fire in 1282, it was most likely
restored in the 14th century a small furnace was built nearby, which used the
calcareous stone blocks of the building damaged it even more.
It has a basilical plant with three naves with a wide antuary and a hight
transept with three apses; higher than the rest of the church and in the middle
of it a spherical cusp, now fallen, was raised held by four huge pillars.
This planemetry recalls - for similarity - that of other Messenese's Churches,
partycularly the one of SS. Annunziata of the Catalani with wom it would hae the
cusps in common. But this one was elevated on cilindrical pendentives, while the
one of the Santa Maria della Valle is elevated on pillars with degrated small
arches of which clear traces have remained.
On the four angles of the santuary, at the height of the cusp impost, there were
square rooms, which were most likely used as women's gallery. Quadrilobate
pillars hold the ribbed vaults of the nave; the capitals are of various
composition. On the outside, the monument presents itself as a single bloked
mass, geometrically composed; the Gotic windows in regular order, and the merlon
completition give the churh a reinforced civil construction appearence.
San Tommaso
In Via Romagnosi, we can find the little Church of San Tommaso, almost hidden
among buildings and walls and inacessible to the pubblic. Not much is konwn
regarding its origns and its history, but its essential structures show its
antiquity, most likely of the Byzantine epoch, even if it was changed in the
16th century as underlined by the date "1530" visible on the trabeation. It has
two sections: the first covered with a barrel cault, the second squared with a
tambour and an emispheric cupola.
Sanctuary of Saint Antony
Messina is full of pride cause Beato Annibale Maria di Francia was born here.
Sanctuary is one of the most important and well-known and, every years it's
destination of thousands of pilgrims from far away.
Sanctuary was erected in the same place where there was Avignone quarter: here Annibale di Francia starts his apostolate in needy and poor people
favor.