A group of refugees from the Abbey …
Years: 1589 - 1589
A group of refugees from the Abbey of Farfa, after its burning by Saracen invaders in 898, had settled in Rome, remaining in the city even after their abbot Ratfredus (934-936) rebuilt the abbey.
By the end of the tenth century, the Abbey of Farfa owned Roman churches, houses, windmills and vineyards.
A bull of Holy Roman Emperor Otto III in 998 had confirmed the property of three churches: Santa Maria, San Benedetto and the oratorio of San Salvatore.
When they ceded their property to the Medici family in 1480, the church of Santa Maria, a Roman Catholic minor basilica and titular church in Rome, not far from Piazza Navona, entitled to the Virgin Mary, to St. Dionigi Areopagita and to St. Louis IX, king of France, had become the church of Saint Louis of the French.
Cardinal Giulio di Giuliano de' Medici commissioned Jean de Chenevière to build a church for the French community in 1518.
Building was halted when Rome was sacked in 1527.
Designed by Giacomo della Porta and built by Domenico Fontana between 1518 and 1589, the work on the Church of St. Louis of the French, or San Luigi dei Francesi, has been completed through the personal intervention of Catherine de' Medici, who had donated to it some possessions in the area.
Della Porta had made the façade as a piece of decorative work entirely independent of the body of the structure, a method that is to be much copied.
