Chapel of the Santissimo Sacramento

The manifesto of the stratification of political and religious powers in Gerace

The initial construction of the chapel, probably founded in the 1420s, can be traced to the commission of the Countess of Gerace, Caterina Concublet de Arena, who undertook a profound transformation of the presbytery of the cathedral, with the support of her husband, Count Giovanni Caracciolo. The new plan favored not only the construction of a larger choir, but also the construction of a noble chapel for the counts to its right, below which, in correspondence with the crypt, another chapel dedicated to St. Joseph was erected. In 1431, after the death of his brother Giovanni, the new count, Battista Caracciolo, obtained the patronage of the chapel, dedicating it to Saint John the Baptist, and completed the work, as demonstrated by the stone coat of arms placed on the keystone. After the foundation of the confraternity of the Santissimo Sacramento on the initiative of bishop Tiberio Muti, his successor, Andrea Candida, promoted the completion of a rich pictorial and sculptural decoration of the chapel, of which however no trace remains, apart, perhaps, for some fragments in the apse. In the first decades of the seventeenth century, the room saw the creation of a more sumptuous covering with polychrome marble by stonecutters from Gerace, including members of the Lucifero family. The chapel was undoubtedly damaged by numerous earthquakes, which led to the loss of a large part of its rich ornamentation.

 

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