San Giacomo, Caltagirone

37°14′16″N 14°30′32″E / 37.23768°N 14.50901°E / 37.23768; 14.50901

Bell-tower of San Giacomo

San Giacomo is a Baroque architecture, Roman Catholic parish church located in Caltagirone in the region of Sicily, Italy.

History and description

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The construction of this church was said to have followed a nearby military victory by Count Roger I of Sicily over the Saracens on July 25, 1090 (the feast day of St James the Great).[1]

It was nearly razed by the 1693 Sicily earthquake. Apparently, much of the town was in the church at prayer when the earthquake toppled the roof, killing some 700 persons.[2] The church was also rebuilt after World War II due to bombardment in 1943.


The bell-tower, located behind the flank of the apse, with four terracotta evangelists, was added in the 19th century. The facade has volutes connecting the center to the aisles; the window frames and cornices are highly decorated. The bronze doors are modern. The interior houses a relic, putatively the arm of St James, inside a silver box engraved with reliefs depicting the life of the saint by Nibilio and Giuseppe Gagini; the statue of St James (1517) was made by Vincenzo Archifel; There is a reliquary containing relics of the Blessed Lucia. The church also has a 14th-century reliquary containing the skull of the Polish knights templar, the blessed Gerlando. On 25 July, a procession carries the statue of St James through the town.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Sicilia da "Le Cento citta d'Italia", supplement to Il Secolo, Milan, 25 March 1895; page 48.
  2. ^ "Le Cento citta d'Italia, page 48.
  3. ^ Diocese of Caltagirone website, entry on church.