I wanted to see some some Medieval monuments in Val Venosta. The one I was most looking forward to seeing was Cappella di Santo Stefano/Burgkapelle St. Stephan, near Mortar. This tiny little chapel below a ruined castle reached by a footpath. The chapel sits on an rocky outcrop above the valley.
The little church dates from the 14th or 15th century, but a small church probably stood here long before.
The chapel was a real surprise. The entire interior is decorated with magnificent frescoes paintings, which form one of the most extensive Gothic fresco cycles in Alto Adige. Some of them, such as the Adoration of the Kings and the Evangelists, were realised around 1430/40 by a Lombard painter's workshop. Others - including the Passion Cycle and the Last Judgement - were made by a Swabian workshop (2nd half of the 15th century).
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Santo Stefano/Burgkapelle St. Stephan, Mortar. |
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Santo Stefano/Burgkapelle St. Stephan, near Mortar. |
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Santo Stefano/Burgkapelle St. Stephan, near Mortar. |
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Santo Stefano/Burgkapelle St. Stephan, near Mortar. |
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Santo Stefano/Burgkapelle St. Stephan, near Mortar. |
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Santo Stefano/Burgkapelle St. Stephan, near Mortar. |
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Santo Stefano/Burgkapelle St. Stephan, near Mortar. |
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Santo Stefano/Burgkapelle St. Stephan, near Mortar. |
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Santo Stefano/Burgkapelle St. Stephan, near Mortar. |
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Santo Stefano/Burgkapelle St. Stephan, near Mortar. |
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Santo Stefano/Burgkapelle St. Stephan, near Mortar. |
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Santo Stefano/Burgkapelle St. Stephan, near Mortar. |
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Santo Stefano/Burgkapelle St. Stephan, near Mortar. |
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Santo Stefano/Burgkapelle St. Stephan, near Mortar. |
Kloster St. Johann, Müstair (Claustra Son Jon), just over the border in Switzerland is a UNESCO heritage site, but most of the frescoes, I wanted to see were being restored, and out of view.
The monastery was founded in 775 AD by Charles the Great, King of the Lombards, after he survived a blizzard whilst travelling along the valley. In the middle of the 12th century. In this Convent Church, the Swiss scientists Robert Durrer and Joseph Zemp discovered in 1894 the spectacular Carolingian frescoes from the first half of the 9th century, under several layers of other paintings.
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Kloster St. Johann, Müstair |
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Kloster St. Johann, Müstair |
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Kloster St. Johann, Müstair |
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Kloster St. Johann, Müstair |
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Kloster St. Johann, Müstair |
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Kloster St. Johann, Müstair |
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Kloster St. Johann, Müstair |
The bloodthirst deaths of several martyrs, in one of the frescoes, is particularly striking. I would like to go back and see these frescoes again when the restoration has been completed.
Just before the border with Switzerland, a small chapel on the outskirts of a village, has an interesting sequence of medieval frescoes.
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Chiesa di San Giovanni/St.-Johann-Kirche, Tubre |
The central building in the form of a Greek cross is very unusual in the Alpine region, and is reminiscent of the Byzantine cross-in-square style. In the 12th century, parts of the walls of the previous church from the 9th century were used for the construction of the present building. Later, the church was used by the Order of St. John as a hostel. The present entrance building is on two levels. The ground floor served as a refectory. The upper floor was used as a sleeping place for the pilgrims traveling down the valley from the Stelvio Pass.
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Chiesa di San Giovanni/St.-Johann-Kirche, Tubre |
Romanesque frescoes were normally made in cycles and stretched from the floor to the roof. At a time when only a few people could read and write, these paintings enabled everyone the possibility of learning about biblical events. On the façade and inside of S. Giovanni a Tubre, the well preserved Romanesque frescoes, date from about 1220.
Chiesa di San Giovanni/St.-Johann-Kirche, Tubre
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Chiesa di San Giovanni/St.-Johann-Kirche, Tubre |
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Chiesa di San Giovanni/St.-Johann-Kirche, Tubre |
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Chiesa di San Giovanni/St.-Johann-Kirche, Tubre |
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Chiesa di San Giovanni/St.-Johann-Kirche, Tubre |
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Chiesa di San Giovanni/St.-Johann-Kirche, Tubre |
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Chiesa di San Giovanni/St.-Johann-Kirche, Tubre |
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