San Pietro in Selci is a Roman Catholic church located on Via Don Giovanni Minzoni #49 in Volterra, province of Pisa, region of Tuscany, Italy.

San Pietro in Selci
Religion
AffiliationRoman Catholic
ProvincePisa
Location
LocationVolterra, Italy
San Pietro in Selci is located in Tuscany
San Pietro in Selci
Shown within Tuscany
San Pietro in Selci is located in Italy
San Pietro in Selci
San Pietro in Selci (Italy)
Geographic coordinates43°24′02″N 10°51′55″E / 43.4006°N 10.8654°E / 43.4006; 10.8654
Architecture
TypeChurch
StyleBaroque facade

History and description edit

A church was initially established by Guiscard, Marquis of Tuscany in 1005, and part of the building we see today dates to the 12th century. In 1507, Bishop consecrated a reconstruction,[1] but the church sports today a later Baroque facade with statues in tufa of Santi Lino and Giusto by Leonardo Ricciarelli.

The interior has a single nave with a plain white stucco ceiling. The main altar is populated with candlabra. On each side there are two side altars. The first altarpiece on the right depicts an Annunciation with four saints and a donor by Niccolò Circignani. The two saints in the center are St Thomas Aquinas with the sun symbol on his chest and to his right is likely San Giusto (Justin), first bishop and patron saint of Volterra with a model of the city at his feet. The second altarpiece on the right, also by Circignani depicts Coronation of the Virgin with four saints. The first altarpiece on the left, depicts an Allegory of the Immaculate Conception by Francesco Brini. The Virgin is crowned above two apostles: St Peter with the key and St Paul with the sword. In the center, she frees the bindings that tie Adam and Eve with original sin to a leafless tree around which a chimeric snake-figure from the Garden of Eden is coiled. Finally the second altarpiece on the left depicts a Madonna and four saints by Cosimo Daddi.[2]

Sources edit

  • Italian Wikipedia entry
  1. ^ Guida di Volterra, Benedetto Sborgi, Tipografia Sborgi, 1903, page 106.
  2. ^ Guida di Volterra, Benedetto Sborgi, Tipografia Sborgi, 1903, page 107.