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San Luigi dei Francesi
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Church of St. Louis of the French |
| native_name | |
| image | Église San Luigi Francesi - Rome (IT62) - 2021-08-28 - 2.jpg |
| caption | Façade of San Luigi dei Francesi, National Church in Rome of France. |
| mapframe | yes |
| mapframe-caption | Click on the map to see marker |
| mapframe-zoom | 12 |
| mapframe-marker | religious-christian |
| coordinates | |
| location | Piazza di S. Luigi de Francesi, Rome |
| country | Italy |
| denomination | Catholic Church |
| tradition | Latin Church |
| cardinal protector | Sede vacante |
| website | |
| dedication | Saint Louis IX of France |
| status | Titular church, |
| national church | |
| architect | Giacomo della Porta |
| Domenico Fontana | |
| architectural type | Church |
| style | Baroque |
| year completed | 1589 |
| length | 51 m |
| width | 35 m |
| width nave | 14 m |
|mapframe-caption=Click on the map to see marker |mapframe-zoom=12 |mapframe-marker=religious-christian national church Domenico Fontana The Church of St. Louis of the French (, , ) is a Catholic church near Piazza Navona in Rome. The church is dedicated to the patron saints of France: Virgin Mary, Denis of Paris, and King Louis IX of France.
The church was designed by Giacomo della Porta and built by Domenico Fontana between 1518 and 1589, and completed through the personal intervention of Catherine de' Medici, who donated to it some property in the area. It is the national church in Rome of France. It is also a titular church.
History
When the Saracens burned the Abbey of Farfa in 898, a group of refugees settled in Rome. Some monks remained in Rome even after their abbot Ratfredus (934–936) rebuilt the abbey. By the end of the tenth century, the Abbey of Farfa owned in Rome churches, houses, windmills and vineyards. A bull of Holy Roman Emperor Otto III in 998 confirms the property of three churches: Santa Maria, San Benedetto and the oratorio of San Salvatore. When they ceded their property to the Medici family in 1480, the church of Santa Maria became the church of St. Louis of the French. Cardinal Giulio di Giuliano de' Medici commissioned Jean de Chenevières to build a church for the French community in 1518. Chenevières' design was for an octagonal, centrally planned edifice. Building was halted when Rome was sacked in 1527, and the church was finally completed in 1589 by Domenico Fontana and Giacomo della Porta, who designed the façade, according to an entirely different design. The church was consecrated by the Cardinal François de Joyeuse, Protector of France before the Holy See, on 8 October 1589. The interior was restored by Antoine Dérizet between 1749 and 1756.
The foundation Pieux Etablissements de la France à Rome et à Lorette is responsible for the five French churches in Rome and apartment buildings in Rome and in Loreto. The foundation is governed by an "administrative deputy" named by the French Ambassador to the Holy See.
Exterior
Giacomo della Porta made the façade as a piece of decorative work entirely independent of the body of the structure, a method much copied later. The French character is evident from the façade itself, which has several statues recalling national history: these include Charlemagne, Saint Louis, Saint Clothilde and Saint Jeanne of Valois. The interior also has frescoes by Charles-Joseph Natoire recounting stories of Saint Louis IX, Saint Denis and Clovis.
_-_Ceiling_HDR.jpg)
Interior
Contarelli (St. Matthew) Chapel
The Contarelli Chapel contains a cycle of paintings by the Baroque master Caravaggio in 1599–1600 about the life of Saint Matthew. This includes the three world-renowned canvases of The Calling of Saint Matthew (on the left wall), The Inspiration of Saint Matthew (above the altar), and The Martyrdom of Saint Matthew (on the right wall).
Polet Chapel
The Polet Chapel contains frescoes by Domenichino portraying the Histories of Saint Cecilia.
Other works
Other works in the church include pieces by Cavalier D'Arpino, Francesco Bassano il Giovane, Muziano, Giovanni Baglione, Siciolante da Sermoneta, Jacopino del Conte, Tibaldi and Antoine Derizet.
File:Caravaggio — The Calling of Saint Matthew.jpg|The Calling of Saint Matthew File:The Inspiration of Saint Matthew by Caravaggio.jpg|The Inspiration of Saint Matthew File:Caravaggio — The Martyrdom of Saint Matthew.jpg|The Martyrdom of Saint Matthew File:San Luigi dei Francesi (Rome) - Interior.jpg|Interior File:Lazio Roma SLuigiFrancesi2 tango7174.jpg|Merklin organ File:Cappella Polet inside the Chiesa di San Luigi dei Francesi (Rome, Italy) P001.jpg|Polet Chapel

Burials
The church was chosen as the burial place for a number of higher prelates and members of the French community of Rome: these include the classic liberal economist Frédéric Bastiat, Cardinal François-Joachim de Pierre de Bernis, ambassador in Rome for Louis XV and Louis XVI, and Henri Cleutin, the French Lieutenant in 16th-century Scotland. There is also the tomb of Pauline de Beaumont, who died of consumption in Rome in 1805, erected by her lover Chateaubriand. The sculptor Pierre Le Gros the Younger is buried here in an unmarked grave. The painter Antoniazzo Romano is buried here as well.
The inscriptions found in San Luigi dei Francesi, a valuable source illustrating the history of the church, have been collected and published by Vincenzo Forcella.
Ospizio San Luigi dei Francesi
Adjacent to the church is the late-Baroque Ospizio San Luigi dei Francesi. It was built in 1709–1716 as a place to stay for the French religious community and pilgrims without resources. Its porch has a bust of Christ whose face is traditionally identified as Cesare Borgia's. The interior houses a gallery with portraits of the French kings and a notable Music Hall.
Cardinal-Priests of San Luigi dei Francesi
The Church of St. Louis was designated as a cardinalatial titulus on 7 June 1967, by Pope Paul VI. Its titulars have to date all been archbishops of Paris:
- Pierre Veuillot (29 June 196714 February 1968)
- François Marty (30 April 196916 February 1994)
- Jean-Marie Lustiger (26 November 19945 August 2007)
- André Armand Vingt-Trois (24 November 200718 July 2025)
Organists
- Giovanni Marciani, organist from 1649-1653
Notes
Sources
- Patrizia Tosini, Natalia Gozzano (editors), La Cappella Contarelli in San Luigi dei Francesi (Roma: Gangemi Editore, 2012).
- Calogero Bellanca, Oliva Muratore, O. Muratore, Una didattica per il restauro II: esperienze a San Luigi dei Francesi e San Nicola dei Lorenesi (Firenze: Alinea, 2009).
- Sebastiano Roberto, San Luigi dei Francesi: la fabbrica di una chiesa nazionale nella Roma del '500 (Roma: Gangemi, 2005).
- Claudio Rendina, Enciclopedia di Roma. Newton Compton, Rome, 1999.
- Francesco Quinterio, Franco Borsi, Luciano Tubello, Il palazzo dei senatori a San Luigi de' Francesi (Roma: Editalia, 1990).
- Albert Armailhacq, L' église nationale de Saint Louis des Français a Rome: notes historiques et descriptives (Rome: Philip Cuggiani 1894).
- Jean Arnaud, Mémoire historique sur les Institutions de la France à Rome, 2nd edition (Rome: Editrice Romana 1892).
References
- [http://www.france-vatican.org/patrimoinepieux.php Les pieux établissements de la France à Rome et à Lorette (in French)] {{webarchive. link. (26 July 2011)
- [https://www.romapop.it/chiesa-san-luigi-dei-francesi-roma/ La Chiesa di San Luigi dei Francesi: un tesoro artistico nel cuore di Roma] ''RomaPop.it''
- [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/05785d.htm Goyau, Georges. "Abbey of Farfa." The Catholic Encyclopedia] Vol. 5. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1909 {{PD-notice
- Stroll, Mary. (1997). "The medieval Abbey of Farfa: target of papal and imperial ambitions".
- Lesellier, J. (1931), ''Jean de Chenevières, sculpteur et architecte de l'église Saint-Louis-des-Français à Rome'', Mélanges d'archéologie et d'histoire, '''48''' (48), pp. 233–67.
- Stefan Grundmann, Ulrich Fürst, ''The Architecture of Rome: An Architectural History in 400 Individual Presentations'' (Stuttgart: Edition Axel Menges, 1998), p. 180.
- Armailhacq, p. 183.
- [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12283b.htm Gietmann, Gerhard. "Giacomo della Porta." The Catholic Encyclopedia] Vol. 12. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911 {{PD-notice
- Arnaud (1892), pp. 59–61, listed twenty-seven burials.
- He died in 1794. Only his heart is buried at San Luigi. His remains were transferred to France: Armailhacq, p. 216.
- (1997). "Pierre le Gros, 1666–1719".
- [https://doi.org/10.2307/497087 Everett, Herbert E. "Antoniazzo Romano", ''American Journal of Archaeology'', vol. 11, no. 3, 1907, pp. 279–306. JSTOR]
- V. Forcella, ''Inscrizioni delle chese e d' altre edifici di Roma, dal secolo XI fino al secolo XVI'' Volume III (Roma: Fratelli Bencini, 1873), pp. 1–103.
- Arnaud, pp. 44–48, gives the early history of the Hospice, which began through the action of Jacques Bugnet, Archdeacon of Chartres and ''Doctor in utroque iure'', in 1480.
- David M. Cheney, Catholic-Hierarchy:[http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/d1l09.html San Luigi dei Francesi]. Retrieved 3 November 2016.
- Gloria Rose. (2001). "Marciani, Giovanni". [[Oxford University Press]].
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