Church of Sant'Orsola (Mantua) explained

Building Name:Church of Sant'Orsola
Location:Mantua, Italy
Religious Affiliation:Roman Catholic
Architecture:yes
Architecture Type:Church
Architecture Style:Baroque
Year Completed:17th century

The Church of Sant'Orsola (St Ursula) in Mantua, Italy, was designed and built in 1608 by Antonio Maria Viani, the architect of the ducal court of the House of Gonzaga. The church was commissioned by Margherita Gonzaga d'Este, the widow of Alfonso II d'Este. Margherita, while not a nun herself, as a widow came to live in an apartment in the Clarissan monastery that was once adjacent (destroyed in 1930).

The octagonal church was decorated by major regional artists including Domenico Fetti and his sister (and nun at the convent) Lucrina, Lodovico Carracci, Carlo Bonomi, and Antonio Maria Viani. After suppression of the convent in the 1780s, the convent had become a hospital.

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45.1577°N 10.7864°W