Marsico Nuovo Cathedral

The Marsico Nuovo Cathedral or San Giorgio Cathedral, is a Roman Catholic temple in a hilltop in the center of the town of Marsico Nuovo, province of Potenza, region of Basilicata, Italy. It rises on a hill above the town. It is also known as the co-cathedral of Santissima Assunta e San Giorgio within the Archdiocese of Potenza-Muro Lucano-Marsico Nuovo.

History

The structure was erected in 1131 under the patronage of the bishop Enrico and count Goffredo. This Romanesque-style church was destroyed by a fire in 1807. A new church was commissioned by the bishop Ignazio Maroldo, and completed by 1829, but an earthquake razed the building in 1857. Finally a new cathedral was begun in 1875 and completed in 1899. The belltower dates from 1293, commissioned by Count Tommaso Sanseverino.

The main portal dates from the 16th century. and is surmounded by an 18th-century relief of the Virgin. The church now has a single nave. The interior contains a wooden Madonna and Child from the 13th-century, and a 17th-century pulpit and choir. It has some paintings by Nicola Peccheneda.[1]

References

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