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Sant'Andrea di Mantova

Basilica di Sant'Andrea
Paolo Monti - Servizio fotografico (Mantova, 1972) - BEIC 6346687.jpg
Photo by Paolo Monti
Basic information
Location ItalyMantua, Italy
Geographic coordinates 45°9′32″N 10°47′39″E / 45.15889°N 10.79417°E / 45.15889; 10.79417Coordinates: 45°9′32″N 10°47′39″E / 45.15889°N 10.79417°E / 45.15889; 10.79417
Affiliation Roman Catholic
Country Italy
Ecclesiastical or organizational status Minor basilica, co-cathedral
Leadership Bishop Roberto Busti
Website www.diocesidimantova.it
Architectural description
Architect(s) Leon Battista Alberti
Architectural type Church
Architectural style Renaissance
Groundbreaking 1472
Completed 1790

The Basilica of Sant'Andrea is a Roman Catholic co-cathedral and minor basilica in Mantua, Lombardy (Italy). It is one of the major works of 15th-century Renaissance architecture in Northern Italy. Commissioned by Ludovico III Gonzaga, the church was begun in 1472 according to designs by Leon Battista Alberti on a site occupied by a Benedictine monastery, of which the bell tower (1414) remains. The building, however, was only finished 328 years later. Though later changes and expansions altered Alberti's design, the church is still considered to be one of Alberti's most complete works. It looms over the Piazza Mantegna.

The façade, built abutting a pre-existing bell tower (1414), is based on the scheme of the ancient Arch of Titus. It is largely a brick structure with hardened stucco used for the surface. It is defined by a large central arch, flanked by Corinthian pilasters. There are smaller openings to the right and left of the arch. A novel aspect of the design was the integration of a lower order, comprising the fluted Corinthian columns, with a giant order, comprising the taller, unfluted pilasters. The whole is surmounted by a pediment and above that a vaulted structure, the purpose of which is not exactly known, but presumably to shade the window opening into the church behind it.

An important aspect of Alberti’s design was the correspondence between the façade and the interior elevations, both elaborations of the triumphal arch motif, the arcades, like the facade, having alternating high arches and much lower square topped openings.

The nave is roofed by a barrel vault, one of the first times such a form was used in such a monumental scale since antiquity, and probably modeled on the Basilica of Maxentius in Rome. Alberti possibly planned for the vault to be coffered, much like the shorter barrel vault of the entrance, but lack of funds led to the vault being constructed as a simple barrel vault with the coffers then being painted on. Originally, the building was planned without a transept, and possibly even without a dome. This phase of construction more or less ended in 1494.


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