Sant'Antonio di Padova, Acireale explained

37.6102°N 15.1654°WSant'Antonio di Padova is a Gothic-style, Roman Catholic parish church located on via Vittorio Emanuele in central Acireale in the region of Sicily of Italy.

History and description

A church at the site was built after the plague of 1466, and dedicated to St Sebastian. There was likely an oratory at the site where the church was erected. When a new onslaught of the plague afflicted the town late in the next century, a new church was commissioned.

This church was consecrated in 1652 to Saint Anthony of Padua. The 1693 Sicily earthquake nearly razed the entire structure. The present church with a single nave houses frescoes started by Pietro Paolo Vasta. In 1755, while frescoing the central nave with the Glory of St. Anthony he was afflicted with a stroke. The wall frescoes were completed by his son Alessandro.[1]

Notes and References

  1. https://www.parcoecclesialetna.it/it/il-territorio/acireale/chiese/chiesa-s-antonio-di-padova/ Parco Culturale Ecclesia - Terre dell'Etna e dell'Alcantara