Saint Ambrose, Brugherio

{{Short description|Church in Brugherio, Italy}}

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{{Infobox religious building

| building_name = Saint Ambrose
(Chiesetta di Sant'Ambrogio)

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| image = 01BrugherioSAmbrogio.JPG

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| caption = Exterior view of the church

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| municipality = Brugherio

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| religious_affiliation = Roman Catholic

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| region = Lombardy

| state = Italy

| province = Monza and Brianza

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| functional_status = Church

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| leadership =

| patron = Saint Ambrose

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| architecture_type = Church

| architecture_style = Neoromanesque, Gothic

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Saint Ambrose ({{langx|it|Chiesetta di Sant'Ambrogio}}) is a small church which is an annex to the farmhouse that takes its name from it, in Brugherio, Italy.

History

= Saint Ambrose and Saint Marcellina =

== The ''coenobium ''and the relics ==

According to oral{{cite book |last= Movimento Terza Età|title= Brugherio. La nostra gente|language= it|location= Brugherio}} and literary sources, in the fourth century, where the church and its farm are now located, there was a villa"Villa" as Roman word means a land where people rest away from the city belonging to the Bishop of Milan, Ambrose. His sister, Marcellina, was consecrated as chaste along with other noble virgins, and Ambrose gave her this land for contemplation and prayer. Ambrose used to retire here to meditate and write. In addition, together with his sister he spread the Christian faith in country villages (pagus in Latin).{{cite book|last= Biraghi|first= Luigi|title= Vita di Santa Marcellina|language= it|date= 1867|quote= In this solitude Marcellina and her companions added to prayer, meditation and penitential life, the apostolate of example. In the middle of those fields and in the woods, she fulfilled in an apostolic mission; she preached the same examples of his angelic life and her companions. Call our mind to the fourth century and we think that faith was well-made large purchases in the city and among civilized people, but stubborn and blind idolatry reigned in many parts of the country and in the pages, whence came the name of "pagan" idolaters. Ambrose speaks often of gentle and idol worshipers in Milan and especially in the countryside, like in Rome, and the imperial laws against idolatry, which were not observed. Now as of this darkness will be rained enlivens the light and grace of the holy virgins!}}

Ambrose gave his sister a part of the relics of the three Magi who had been brought to Milan as a gift from the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I to Bishop Eustorgio. The relics were preserved for centuries{{Cite book|last = Movimento Terza Età|title = Brugherio. La nostra gente|language= it|location= Brugherio|page = 11}} and then "found" by Cardinal Federico Borromeo, who moved them to the parish church.{{Cite web|url = http://www.romanicobrianza.it/home/brugherio.html|title = Brugherio, Chiesa di Sant'Ambrogio e Oratorio di Santa Marcellina|language= it|access-date = 3 March 2015}}{{Cite book|last= Petrarca|first = Francesco|title = De vita solitaria|date = 1955|publisher = Riccardo Ricciardi Editore|location = Milano – Napoli |series= Francesco Petrarca – Prose |language= it |contribution= Guido Martellotti – Pier Giorgio Ricci - Enrico Carrara et alii |volume= II |page= 4; 430–433}}

= 16th - 17th century =

File:La chiesa di Sant'Ambrogio.JPG

The religious complex was home to various religious orders: the Benedictines, the Augustinians and the Humiliati.{{Cite book|title = Velatio di Santa Marcellina|language= it|page = 72|quote = The nuns, probably Benedictines, in 1450 merged with the Augustinian and the Humiliati.}} On the site of the present church there was another built during the twelfth century.{{Cite book|last1= Tribuzio Zotti|first1= Luciana|last2= Magni|first2= Giuseppe|title = Una città nel segno dei Magi|language= it|page = 68}} The Humiliati in 1539 moved to the monastery of Saint Catherine Chiusa of Milano, while maintaining ownership of the monastery.{{Cite book|last1= Tribuzio Zotti|first1= Luciana|last2= Mgni|first2= Giuseppe|title = Una città nel segno dei Magi|language= it|page = 57}} Among the assets of the monastic complex there was a chapel used for prayer mentioned by Cardinal Federico in the report of the pastoral visit of 1596. In it, he describes the precarious architectural state (which prompted a series of restorations undertaken until 1621),{{Cite book|last1= Tribuzio Zotti|first1= Luciana|last2= Mgni|first2= Giuseppe|title = Una città nel segno dei Magi|language= it|page = 67}} and the wealth of the church utensils.{{Cite book|last1= Tribuzio Zotti|first1= Luciana|last2= Mgni|first2= Giuseppe|title = Una città nel segno dei Magi|language= it|pages = 66–67}} The church appears in the maps of the Teresian Cadastre of 1763,{{Cite book|last1= Tribuzio Zotti|first1= Luciana|last2= Mgni|first2= Giuseppe|title = Una città nel segno dei Magi|language= it|pages = 67–68}}In this year Cardinal Giuseppe Pozzobonelli visited the church, too. including a building located along the road to Carugate.{{Cite book|title = Velatio di Santa Marcellina|language= it|date = 2013|publisher = Edizioni Marcelline|location = Milano|quote = Ambrose's property, under Carugate's parish before Saint Charles built Brugherio's parish in 1578...|page = 71|edition = 2nd}}

= 19th century =

After the suppression of the monastic orders by Napoleon Bonaparte, the farmhouse and church were sold to various landowners. In 1886 the church was restored and some frescoes of the fourteenth century were found. They depict Saint Ambrose among his brothers Satyr and Marcellina with the holy martyrs Sebastian and Pope Fabian.

= 20th century =

On the occasion of the 1600th anniversary of the velatio"Velatio" stands for the consecration of Marcellina that took place in Rome in 353 by Pope Liberio. of Marcellina, in 1953 the owners of the farm, lords Cavajoni-Bologona, decided to renovate the frescoes and build the lunette on the building's facade. On October 31,{{Cite book|last = Sibilla|first= Anna Maria|title = Cascina Sant'Ambrogio di Brugherio|language= it|page = 22}} Monsignor Ennio Bernasconi, mitred abbot of St. Ambrose of Milan, praised not only Marcellina and his brothers but also the owners responsible for the restoration.{{Cite book|last= Bernasconi|first= Ennio|title = Nella villa di campagna di S. Marcellina. Discorsi di Mons. Ennio Bernasconi Abbate Mitrato di S. Ambrogio nell'Oratorio di Sant'Ambrio a Brugherio|year = 1959|page = 13}} Minor restorations were also executed in 1959.{{Cite book|title = Velatio di Santa Marcellina|language= it|page = 72}} Since 2009,{{Cite web|url = http://www.provincia.mb.it/cultura/valorizzazione_ville/circuito_ville/eventi/siti_visitabili.html|title = Ville Aperte 2009|language= it|access-date = 3 March 2015}} the church and the homonymous farmhouse were included in the project "Ville Aperte", a Monza and Brianza province project promote the arts.

Architecture and art

= The facade after 1886 =

The current appearance of the facade dates back to an 1886 restructuring commissioned by the owner, Ercole Gnecchi.{{Cite book|last = Sibilla|first= Anna Maria|title = Cascina Sant'Ambrogio|language= it|page = 20}} It was rebuilt in brick{{Cite book|last1 =Ghezzi|first1= Luigi|last2= Bagnoli|first2= Raffaele|title = La Cascina Sant'Ambrogio di Brugherio|language= it}} in the style of Lombardy,{{Cite web|last = Porfidio|first= Vicky|url = http://www.monzaebrianzainrete.it/itemById.do?id=2407|title = Chiesetta di S. Ambrogio|language= it|access-date = 2 March 2015}} in reference to the Basilica of Saint Ambrose in Milan, and is divided by a cornice. The top has a central lunette depicting the blessing of Saint Ambrose, surrounded by a round arch, and next to it there are two arched windows.{{Cite book|last= Porfidio|first= Vicky|title = Brugherio: i suoi luoghi, la sua storia|language= it|date = 2009|publisher = Comune di Brugherio|location = Brugherio|page = 39}} This section is surmounted by a pediment, and above it there is a small tower.{{Cite book|last = Bernasconi|first= Ennio|title = Nella villa di campagna di S. Marcellina. Discorsi di Mons. Ennio Bernasconi Abbate Mitrato di S. Ambrogio nell'Oratorio di Sant'Ambrio a Brugherio|language= it|page = 32}} The bottom presents a splayed portal. The lintel is the original one, and depicts an early Christian greek cross with the symbols of the evangelists, Mark and John.File:07BrugherioSAmbrogio.JPG

= Interior =

The church is characterized by a small nave with apse, covered by a gable in turn supported by wooden trusses with decorated warping. The flooring is made of terracotta brick, while the walls are painted in a light colored parchment, itself decorated with polychrome socket boxes. Preceding the altar there are a round arch and a tympanum above it, which depicts two angels in prayer. In the tympanum there is an oval inside which is enclosed a radial cross termed Salus Mundi. The vault of the presbytery is decorated with a blue sky with gold stars. The presbytery contains an altar made of stone, which is separated from the rest of the church by a balustrade in gothic style and in the same material.

= Frescoes and paintings =

== 1953 restoration ==

During the restoration in 1953, the team led by Professor Franco Milani found some frescoes dating to the fifteenth century. On the left wall there are depictions of Pope Fabian and Saint Sebastian, while on the right side there are depictions of Saint Ambrose, Marcellina and Satyr.{{Cite book|last1=Ghezzi|first1=Luigi|last2=Bagnoli|first2=Raffaele|title = La Cascina Sant'Ambrogio di Brugherio|language= it}} These frescoes were damaged by moisture and covered with layers of lime. The damage was also observed to undermine the pilaster. After restoration the frescoes were partly preserved. Classic iconographic representations of Saint Ambrose are of an old man, but in this church's frescoes both the bishop and Saint Sebastian are represented as young people. The frescoes have a gothic style that also characterizes the altarpiece.{{Cite book|title = Brugherio: geografia, storia ed economia|language= it|publisher = Comune di Brugherio|location = Brugherio|page = 255}} The author was probably influenced by artistic trends of northern Europe as well as by Giotto.{{Cite book|last= Porfidio|first= Vicky |title = Brugherio: i suoi luoghi, la sua storia|language= it|page = 39}}

See also

References

{{reflist}}

Bibliography

  • {{cite book |last= Bernasconi|first= Ennio|date= 1959|title= Nella villa di campagna di S. Marcellina. Discorsi di Mons. Ennio Bernasconi Abbate Mitrato di S. Ambrogio nell'Oratorio di Sant'Ambrio a Brugherio|language= it}}
  • {{cite book |last= Biraghi|first= Luigi|date= 1867|title= Vita di Santa Marcellina|language= it}}
  • {{cite book |title= Brugherio: geografia, storia ed economia|language= it}}
  • {{cite book |last1= Ghezzi|first1= Luigi|last2= Bagnoli|first2= Raffaele|date= 1942|title= La Cascina Sant'Ambrogio di Brugherio|language= it|location= Milano|publisher= Tipografia delle Mission}}
  • {{cite book |last= Movimento Terza Età|date= 1992|title= Brugherio. La nostra gente|language= it|location= Brugherio}}
  • {{cite book |last= Petrarca|first= Francesco|title= De vita solitaria|language= it|volume= II| pages= 430–433}} in {{cite book |last1= Martellotti|first1= Guido|last2= Ricci|first2= Pier Giorgio|last3= Carrara|first3= Enrico|date= 1995|title= Francesco Petrarca - Prose|language= it|location= Milano - Napoli|publisher= Riccardo Ricciardi Editore}}
  • {{cite book |last= Tribuzio|first= Zotti|date= 1989|title= Brugherio. Luoghi memorabili|language= it|location= Brugherio|publisher= Edizioni Parole Nuove}}
  • {{cite book |last1= Tribuzio Zotti|first1= Luciana|last2= Magni|first2=Giuseppe|date= 2012|title= Una città nel segno dei Magi: Brugherio 1613-2013|language= it|location= Brugherio|publisher= Associazione Kairòs}}
  • {{cite book |last= Sibilla|first= Anna Maria|title= La Cascina Sant'Ambrogio|language= it}}
  • {{cite book |last= Suore Marcelline|date= 2013|title= Velatio di Santa Marcellina|language=it |location= Milano|publisher= Edizioni Marcelline}}