Saint Matthew à cheveux rouges l'évangéliste est assis à un bureau écrivant son Evangile en 1400s piémontais cycle de fresque gothique tardif. Sur la voûte au plafond dans l'église de l'ancien couvent franciscain à Susa, Piémont, Italie.
2400 x 3600 px | 20,3 x 30,5 cm | 8 x 12 inches | 300dpi
Date de la prise de vue:
27 mai 2007
Lieu:
Susa, Piedmont, Italy
Informations supplémentaires:
Cette image peut avoir des imperfections car il s’agit d’une image historique ou de reportage.
Susa, Piedmont, Italy: Red-haired Saint Matthew sits at a desk poised to write his Gospel in this detail of a 15th century fresco cycle covering a quadripartite vault in the church of the former Franciscan convent of San Francesco di Susa. The other three Evangelists, Mark, Luke and John, are depicted writing their own gospels in the three other quarters of the ceiling. The elaborate thrones on which they sit are painted with an exaggerated use of perspective. According to legend, the church was built after St Francis of Assisi, founder of the Franciscan monastic order, visited Susa as he journeyed to France in 1214. St Francis is said to have stayed there as a guest of Beatrice of Geneva, wife of Tommaso I, Count of Savoy, and to have given her the sleeve of his cassock in exchange for land on which to build a convent. A sleeve said to be the one he gave Beatrice is preserved as a relic in the church of the Capuchin Friars Minor in Annecy, France. The former convent is the earliest building in Piedmont to be dedicated to St Francis. It was supressed and used as a warehouse during the Napoleonic era, but was regained by Franciscan friars in 1899. They finally left in 2007 and the convent buildings are now used as a guesthouse for modern travellers following the ancient Via Francigena Christian pilgrimage route from Canterbury in England to Rome, via France, the alpine Moncenisio Pass and the Val di Susa. D0342.A4070