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Chapel of St. Croix à Poggio-d'Oletta en Haute-corse

Haute-corse

Chapel of St. Croix

    2 Stradella di U Prisbitèriu
    20232 Poggio-d'Oletta
Chapelle Sainte-Croix
Chapelle Sainte-Croix
Chapelle Sainte-Croix
Crédit photo : Pierre Bona - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1666 (?)
Presumed construction
1730
Chestnut benches
1749
Paintings of the altar
2016
Registration MH
2019
MH classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The chapel, according to the plan annexed to the decree (Box B 787): inscription by decree of 12 October 2016; The chapel of confraternity Sainte-Croix, in full, as delimited and hashed in red on the plan annexed to the decree (Box B 787): classification by order of 15 November 2019

Key figures

Raffali (peintres) - Suspected artists Possible authors of 1749 paintings.

Origin and history

The Sainte-Croix chapel, also called Santa Croce, is located under the hamlet of Olivacce, close to the parish church of San Cerbone in Poggio-d'Oletta. It would have been built at the end of the seventeenth century, around 1666, according to a Latin cross plan. Its nave is vaulted in ridges, and its interior is richly decorated with stucco depicting angels, as well as paintings on the altar's steps, dating from 1749 and attributed perhaps to Raffali painters.

The chestnut benches, dating from 1730, and the canvas of the major altar representing Notre-Dame des Sept-Douleurs complete his remarkable furniture. The chapel, listed as a Historic Monument, was registered in 2016 and then ranked in 2019. Today it belongs to the municipality of Poggio-d'Oletta.

Its location, a few meters from the parish church, suggests a central role in the religious and community life of the village. The interior decorations, combining stucco and paintings, illustrate the artistic and spiritual importance of the brotherhoods in Corsica at that time. The date of 1749, visible on the paintings, marks a late beautification phase, while the benches of 1730 show continued use in the eighteenth century.

External links