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Keywords

fresco
Doctors of the Church
Trinité et de San Giovanni
Église de la Trinité et de San Giovanni
Trinita e San Giovanni Battista
Trintity and St. John
Pisan style
Saint Gregory
Saint Jerome
Saint Augustine
Aregno
Haute-Corse
Corse
Corsica
Korsika
France
2b
St. Ambrose


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Aregno - Trinita e San Giovanni Battista

Aregno - Trinita e San Giovanni Battista
The island of Corsica is one of the 18 regions of France. It was colonized the Carthaginians, the Greeks, the Etruscans and the Romans. After the Roman empire collapsed, Corsica got invaded by the Vandals and the Ostrogoths. For a short while the island belonged to the Byzantine Empire, then the Franks granted the island to the Pope, in the early 11th century Pisa and Genoa together freed the island from the threat of Arab invasion. The island came under the influence of the Republic of Pisa, later it belonged to Genua for centuries. In 1755 after a long fight for independence from Genoa the independent Corsican Republic was proclaimed, but in 1769, when the island was conquered by France. As the areas near the coast over centuries have been threatened by attacks and raids of pirates many old hamlets and dwellings are wide inland, high in the mountains. So most of the old churches are in the mountains and some of them are hard to find.

Archeologists proved, that Aregno was occupied already in Roman times and was a regional center of the surrounding hamlets in medieval times. It is known for this church. "Trinita e San Giovanni Battista", located in the center of the graveyard, is a former "pieve" (parish church) erected in the first half of the 12th century. This is a "Pisan style" single nave church 16.60 mx 6.30 m, with a semicircular apse circular and a spectacular facade with extraordenary carvings.

Younger than all the carvings around is this fresco donated May, 17, 1458 (see text below). It depicts four "Doctors of the Church". Fltr Saint Augustine (miter and carmine mantle), Saint Gregory (tiara), Saint Jerome (flat hat) and St. Ambrose (miter and green coat).

Nicole Merdrignac, Alexander Prolygin have particularly liked this photo


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