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Memorials

S. Remigio 01a Cappella Maggiore de Bagnesi

Rosselli Number 1.0
Memorial Type chapel
Status extant
Current Repository in situ
Primary Installation na
Secondary Installation na
Tomb Form na
Liturgical Orientation E
Documented Types
  • cappella
Component Parts
  • mensa
Decorative Elements
Database ID 596

Dates

circa 1265 (date is approximate)
circa 1265 (date is approximate) to 1635 a
1717 b
renovation

Individuals (1 total)

Bagnesi, Giuliano (senatore) di Simone di Giuliano di Zanobi di Francesco
circa 1617 (date is approximate) to 1635
c

Groups (1 total)

Bagnesi
d

Related Memorials (5 total)

S. Remigio 01b Altar Maggiore:
circa 1267 (date is approximate) to 1717
S. Remigio 01c ciborio:
1584 to circa 1717 (date is approximate)
S. Remigio 02 Cappella degli'Aldighieri, poi Gaddi:
S. Remigio 03 tomb of Francesco Falconcini 1615:
September 6th, 1615 to circa 1821 (date is approximate)
S. Remigio 34 Cappella della famiglia da Ghiacceto:

Notes

  • [a] Stefano Rosselli indicates that the Bagnesi held patronage rights to S. Remigio since at least the thirteenth century based on a not in a family diary regarding the appointment of the parish priest in 1265. He also notes that the books events began in 1227, but it is not clear whether he meant this date to refer also to the patronage of the Bagnesi or only the start of the diary. The family would rebuild the altar as part of a new cappella maggiore completed by the middle of the fourteenth century.
  • [b] Anton Giuseppe Spinetti, prior of San Remigio, rebuilt the high altar.
  • [c] In his discussion of the main chapel's patronage, Stefano Rosselli noted that the family died out with Senator Giuliano Bagnesi, indicating his patronage rights up until his death in 1635.
  • [d] Stefano Rosselli noted that both the chapel and high altar of San Remigio were under the patronage of the Bagnesi family, which had only recently died out in the person of Senator Giuliano Bagnesi. The family's arms appeared in a number of places throughout the church, including the ends of the ciborium, discussed at memorial record 31763