Building Name: | Santissima Trinità |
Native Name Lang: | it |
Map Size: | 220px |
Location: | Alcamo, Trapani, Italy |
Coordinates: | 37.9789°N 12.9661°W |
Religious Affiliation: | Catholic |
Rite: | Catholic |
Region: | Sicily |
State: | Italy |
Province: | Trapani |
Municipality: | Alcamo |
Consecration Year: | 1757 |
Patron: | Santissima Trinità |
Funded By: | Angelo di Poto |
Groundbreaking: | 1746 |
Santissima Trinità ("Holy Trinity") is a Catholic church in Alcamo, in the province of Trapani.
The church was founded in 1552 by Angelo di Poto, a clergyman, on a piece of land given by the municipality, and it was a Parish from 1615 to 1639. The present one was built between 1746 and 1757, in substitution of another Church which stood at the north-eastern corner of the crossing between via Santissimo Salvatore and via Trinità.[1]
In 1571 they founded the homonymous Confraternity, which was assigned the Church by the General Vicar; its brethren had to say the Liturgy of the Hours, three times a year, on Christmas, on Easter and Pentecost. It was existing until 1615, when the Church was elected a Parish and its brethren left it.
They associated some benefits and revenues (such as the Church of Saint Michael the Archangel, the Church of Saint Catherine and the Church of Our Lady of the Chain) to this Church in order to have a certain financial autonomy.[2]
On October 13, 1639, when there was the pastoral Visit of the new bishop of Mazara del Vallo (Don Giovanni Domenico Spinola), and he noticed that the new two parishes of Santissima Trinità and Saint Paul had financial difficulties, suppressed the parish of Santissima Trinità. This choice was due to the fact that the town was expanding along Corso 6 Aprile, towards the Saints Paul and Bartholomew's Church.
In the Church only the night Congregation remained, but its members, noticing that their Church was going to ruin as time was passing by, decided to leave it and build a new one on the plain in front of it in 1746.[2]
The new Church was consecrated in 1757 and in 1771 it was embellished with stuccoes.
The Church is with a nave, three altars and a small chapel.
Inside it there are the following works: