The Marinesi, men and women of faith, "read" the spring in the middle of the peperino bench as a sign of God's benevolence to their City, granted through Mary's intercession, and believed it to be a source of miraculous and holy water. [...]
The image of the Madonna was probably made between the fourth and ninth centuries, according to popular tradition around the sixth century, as suggested by the way it was made as found during the last restoration of the painting and the fact that its measurements can be easily calculated in Roman feet.[7] Later, the image was repainted between the twelfth and fourteenth centuries,[7] and partially remodeled around the sixteenth century,[8] and finally in the eighteenth century, when the orientation of the image was adapted to the orientation of the altar.[8]
When the veneration of the image first began, it must have been located in an open-air roadside aedicula along the then public road leading to Castel Gandolfo and Albano Laziale, corresponding to today's Via Antonio Fratti.[9] The image was connected to the built-up area by a staircase of thirty-four steps carved into the peperino stone, which allowed the visitor to avoid the steep bend in the road and which is still visible today at the back of the sanctuary.[9] The veneration of the image is also linked to a miraculous event reported by popular tradition: it is said that a man, while riding his horse on the Via Maremmana Inferiore in the direction of Castel Gandolfo and Albano Laziale, lost control of the animal in the hairpin bends of the road and was in danger of falling into the precipice had not Our Lady intervened to save him.[10] In the following centuries, other miracles were attributed to the Virgin of Acquasanta: in August 1883, the high prelatePietro Rota,[11]archbishop of Carthage and canon regular of the St. Peter's Basilica in Rome, made an ex voto to Mary to thank her for saving him from a ruinous fall from a horse in the precipitous paths on Lake Albano;[12] and so many other episodes,[12] even quite serious ones.
Probably in the 16th century the roadside aedicula was incorporated into the first nucleus of the sanctuary, since in the 1566 cadastre of the Colonna family's properties of Marino an "ecclesia"[9] dedicated to Our Lady "loco divotissimo" is mentioned.[13] During the seventeenth century, the rectory located above the church was also built, as three hermits were reported to be residing there in 1682.[9] The final appearance inside the sanctuary was determined by the work carried out between 1693 and 1720:[9] the entire single-nave building is carved out of peperino stone and has remnants of plaster and ogives.[9]
The Rococoaltar had already been built in 1759,[16] while two Calabrian priests Giovanni Andrea and Nicola Fico financed in 1788 the construction of the side altar of the Most Holy Crucifix,[16] which was later used by the Secular Franciscan Order, as evidenced by the coat of arms affixed to the altar itself.[16] In 1792 the two Calabrian priests financed the shrine again, completing the rectory tower with two more floors and building a small bell gable above it.[16]
The current appearance of the sanctuary's facade is due to the interventions financed in 1819 by Francesco Fumasoni Biondi and commissioned to architect Matteo Lovatti,[17] who created here one of his most celebrated and best-performed works.[18][19] Between 1823 and 1824 Massimo d'Azeglio, who was staying in Marino at the time, executed a pictorial decoration in the church on commission from Fumasoni Biondi, which is now lost.[20][21]
In 1926 the nobleman Riccardo Tuccimei, emphyteuta of the sanctuary then owned by the chapter of the collegiate basilica of St. Barnabas, decided to demolish the church's bell tower,[22] a decision that, although contested by the municipality and the "Acqua Santa Society", was nevertheless implemented.[22]
In the 1980s a restoration was carried out on the sacred image by architect Vincenzo Antonelli, which led to important results from a historical and artistic point of view.[23]
Description
The facade and the narthex
The facade and narthex of the sanctuary were made in 1819 by architect Matteo Lovatti,[17][18][19] also active in the same period in Velletri and Albano Laziale and awarded for his artistic merits the Order of St. Sylvester Pope,[17] with funding from the canon regular of the basilica of St. Barnabas Francesco Fumasoni Biondi.[17][19]
The facade elevation, neoclassical in style,[19] is made entirely of peperino, with an entrance "in antis" (i.e., punctuated by two Tuscancolumns)[19] holding a moldedarchitrave supported by a corbel that runs along the entire facade elevation.[17][24] The wrought-iron gate that closes the narthex outside was placed in 1865, and is now replaced with a stained glass window.[19] On the entablature of the facade the following inscription reads:
DEIPARAE SACELLO SCISSA RUPE LAXATO ADITU PRONAUM AUXIT FRANCISCUS CAN FUMASONI A MDCCCXIX
In the sanctuary of the Virgin Deipara leveled the cliff left space erected a pronaos Francesco Fumasoni Biondi canon year 1819
The interior of the narthex is bare, raised three steps above street level (a difference in height reduced to one step after the sanctuary square was paved in sanpietrini in the early 20th century).[19] The inner doorway of the church, originally located directly outside, was made in the 18th century and features moldedimposts[24] and an archedtympanum in the center of which a coat of arms was probably placed, as depicted by some prints and drawings.[22]
The interior of the sanctuary
The interior of the sanctuary has a single nave, with the right side carved entirely out of peperino, so that the only window is located on the left wall, above the altar of the Most Holy Crucifix, the church's only side altar. The presence of ogives would suggest that originally the walls and vault were plastered,[9] however in its present state the rock is left exposed, with patches of moisture evident in places. The perimeter of the hall is traversed by a sturdy cornice.[9]
In the right wall there is a cut in the peperino, probably an ancient aqueduct that served the cave near the sanctuary, which some have speculated to be a Roman or pre-Roman sanctuary, located near the Ferentano Woods consecrated to the indigenous Latin deityFerentina.
On the left wall, there is a marble plaque affixed by Calabrian priests Giovanni Andrea and Nicola Fico in 1788 in celebration of their funding for the construction of the side altar of the Holy Crucifix.[16] The plaque reads as follows:
ARAM HANC IESU CHRISTO CRUCIFIXO CUIUS NOBILE SIGNUM EXIBET SACRAM IOHANNES ANDREAS FICO ET NICOLAUS FRATRIS FILIUS PRESBYTERI MESSURGAGENSES SYBERITANAE DIOCESIS IN BRUTIIS ULTERIORIBUS AERE SUO CONSTRUI ET EXORNARI CURARUNT ANNO A VIRGINIS PARTU MDCCLXXXVIII
This altar of Jesus Christ Crucified whose noble symbol it exhibits sacred Giovanni Andrea Fico and Nicola son of his brother priests of Mesoraca[25] in the diocese of Santa Severina[25] in Calabria Ulterior at their own expense they built and adorned they cured in the year since the birth of the Virgin 1788
The same altar of the Crucifix was thus built at the end of the eighteenth century out of devotion to these two Calabrian priests, and it does not present any notable details of attention, also because it was remodeled at various times: the Secular Franciscan Order, for example, had its own coat of arms in white marble on a blue field affixed in the oval of the tympanum.[16] Between 1823 and 1824 the same canon Fumasoni Biondi who had financed the construction of the facade donated a life-size wooden crucifix to the altar and asked Massimo d'Azeglio, who was vacationing in Marino at the time, to make a pictorial frame for the sacred image.[20] Moreover, the painter, a future president of the Council of Ministers of the Kingdom of Italy, was helped in the work by two brigands who had taken refuge in the sanctuary to escape arrest,[20] a sign that it was possible for common criminals to have the right of asylum in the sanctuary. Currently, both the crucifix, which was probably moved before World War II to the basilica of St. Barnabas and replaced with a 19th-century polychrome wooden crucifix of medium size,[21] and the fresco have been lost. Marinese historian Girolamo Torquati believes that the Most Holy Crucifix of Marino was originally displayed in the sanctuary, an image that began to work miracles in June 1635,[26] and was moved to the church of the Holy Trinity, where it is still kept, by the religious congregation of the Clerics Regular Minor in June 1637.[27]
The high altar, carved from a large block of isolated peperino stone probably in the eighteenth century,[16][24] houses the Marian image framed by festoons and stuccovolutes,[16] and surmounted by two broken tympanums in the center of which reads the inscription in Latin: "apud Te est fons vitae - Psal XXXV" ("at you is the source of life," "Psalm 35").[16] On the two tympanums, two small statues depicting curly-haired children are placed:[24] in the center, a small roundel depicting God and the Holy Spirit stands to represent, in connection with the Child Jesus below, the Trinity.[16]
The sacristy
Access to the sacristy is provided by a bronze door, a recent work by Marinese painter and sculptor Stefano Piali (2005[28]), depicting the miracle of Our Lady of Aquasanta. The peperino imposts of the door are ancient.[9]
The sacristy room is a rectangular room with a pavilion-vaulted ceiling covered with eighteenth-century stuccoes now largely ruined.[9] Outside the sacristy is a small garden, which scholar Vincenzo Antonelli speculates was the "kitchen garden" that gave the place of worship its first name:[9] Here is located the staircase carved into the peperino stone that was the original access to the Marian image before the church was built.
The rectory tower
Above the church rises a two-story tower, which already existed in the second half of the 16th century and was raised in the late 18th century. At the top of the tower stood a small bell gable, demolished in the 1920s: of the two bells placed there, one has been lost, while the other is still used inside the sanctuary. Both were cast on the same date the bell tower was built, 1792, thanks to funding from the aforementioned Calabrian priests Giovanni Andrea and Nicola Fico.[16]
An epigraph celebrating the work done in the church on this occasion is placed on the wall of the tower facing Antonio Fratti Street:
NOLAS ET TURRIM SACRAM IN HONOREM DEIPARAE VIRGINIS QUAM SINGULARI AMORI ET CULTU PROSECUTI IOHANNES ANDREAS ET NICOLAUS FICO PRESBYTERI MESSUGAGENSES SYBERITANA DIOCESIS IN BRUTTIS ULTERIORIBUS S.R.E. COSTRUI ET EXORNANT CURARUNT AN AB EIUSDEM VIRGINIS PARTUM CICICCCXLII
The bells and the bell tower in honor of the Virgin Deipara driven by such singular love and devotion priests Giovanni Andrea and Nicola Fico of Mesoraca in the archdiocese of Santa Severina[25] in Calabria Ulterior for the church they cared to build and adorn in the year since the birth of the Virgin 1792
^ abcVincenzo Antonelli, in his publication on the sanctuary, was able to identify the Calabrian town of Mesoraca, now in the province of Crotone, as the place of origin of the two priests. Accordingly, the "Syberitana diocesis," which as such never seems to have existed, could be the Archdiocese of Santa Severina, which until the 1950s boasted of being the metropolitan See of a vast area between Calabria and Apulia, including the ancient city of Sibari.