mail: Bill Thayer |
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The Umbrian hamlet of Limigiano, a frazione of Bevagna, was once the seat of a fairly important abbey, recorded in the mid‑11c as belonging to the monastery of S. Pietro in Perugia, and in the 14c to the powerful abbey of Sassovivo near Foligno. The church has survived, but not much of the conventual buildings. Church and abbey were dedicated to the same saint — the archangel Michael — but are often referred to by different names: S. Michele for the church, S. Angelo for the abbey; and in central Italy buildings honoring the archangel quite commonly run by either name.
The church itself, then, shows several phases of construction and repair, and is as good an illustration as any of Thayer's Axiom: the larger the stones, the older the stonework. Here you see the largest stones — for the most part not sandstone like the rest of the building, but assorted limestones — in the foreground,
at the base of the façade: if these stones are not all the remains of an actual predecessor building from classical Antiquity on this spot, at least
some of them
almost certainly are Roman. (Scale: that blue pen is exactly 14 cm long).
High up on the façade, similarly salvaged — no point in throwing away good stone — a very old fragment of carving, probably from the first church on this spot:
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Baptism of Jesus?? Probably 11c.
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Walking thru the archway and around the corner,
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The S flank of the church: notice that the nave of the church seems to have been felt worthy of more sustained maintenance, in which the soft erodable sandstone blocks have been protected by mortar, making also for a smoother wall. |
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Today as in the Middle Ages,
the conventual buildings on the N side of the church are more utilitarian. |
Images with borders lead to more information.
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CHURCHES: |
![]() Churches of Bevagna |
![]() Churches of Umbria |
![]() Churches of Italy |
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![]() S. Michele di Limigiano |
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Page updated: 28 Jul 04