Rome, Italy: Basilica of Saint Praxedes: Cosmatesque Floor

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Sheppard, Beth M.

Issue Date

19-May-17

Type

Image

Language

Keywords

Italy , Rome , Basilica di Santa Prassede all Esquilino , Basilica of Saint Praxedes , Mosaic Floors , Opus Sectile , Cosmatesque Floors , Cosmati Floors

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

Description

The Basilica of Saint Praxedes (in Italian: Basilica di Santa Prassede, commonly known as Santa Prassede) is a Catholic basilica located in the Rione Esquilino (or district of Esquiline). Esquiline is the name of a Roman hill, one of seven on which the ancient city was built. The church was rebuilt by Pope Pasquale I in 822 CE and was restored multiple times since then. It was built principally as a resting place for the relics of Roman martyrs and was dedicated to the second-century Saint Praxedes, who was the daughter of a Roman senator. Along with her sister, Praxedes provided comfort and care to Christians persecuted in the Roman Empire. The sisters were murdered for burying early Christian martyrs, which defied Roman law. The church is known for being the most important example of early Christian Byzantine art in Rome because of the mosaics decorating its apse and side chapels. The photograph shows the mosaics of the marble floor, according to the opus sectile style, in which the mosaic pieces are cut in shapes to fit the component parts of the design; in this case, as part of a Cosmatesque or Cosmati floor. This style of floor was named for the Cosmati family, who led the craftsmen of Rome in creating geometrical marble decorations.

Citation

Publisher

License

CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

Journal

Volume

Issue

PubMed ID

DOI

ISSN

EISSN