Santa Maria della Catena, Palermo
| Church of Saint Mary of the Chain | |
|---|---|
| Chiesa di Santa Maria della Catena (Italian) | |
|
The Catalan Gothic porch | |
| Basic information | |
| Location | Palermo, Italy |
| Geographic coordinates | 38°07′09.15″N 13°22′10.51″E / 38.1192083°N 13.3695861°ECoordinates: 38°07′09.15″N 13°22′10.51″E / 38.1192083°N 13.3695861°E |
| Affiliation | Roman Catholic |
| Rite | Roman Rite |
| Province | Archdiocese of Palermo |
| Architectural description | |
| Architectural style | Catalan Gothic |
| Groundbreaking | 1490 |
| Completed | 1520 |
Santa Maria della Catena is a church in Palermo, Sicily, Italy.
The church was built in 1490-1520, designed by Matteo Carnilivari. The name derives from the presence, on one of the walls, of a chain (Italian: catena) which closed the Cala port.
The work mixes late Renaissance style and Gothic-Catalan style, the latter especially visible in the three-part arcaded loggia located at the top of a staircase (added in 1845). The interior is also late-Gothic, and includes a cavanas of Nativity with Adoration of the Shephers (17th century) from an unknown master, 16th century bas-reliefs attributed to Vincenzo and Antonello Gagini, who also sculpted the capitals of the columns and the entrance portals.
Annexed to the church is a 1602 convent house, which, starting from 1844, has been the seat of the State Archive.
