San Regolo, Vagli Sotto

San Regolo is a Romanesque-style, Roman Catholic church, located in the center of the town of Vagli Sotto in the province of Lucca, Tuscany, Italy.

Facade and flanking bell-tower


History

Documents from 1154, cite a church of Santa Maria in Vagli Sotto, which may correspond to this church. The dedication to San Regolo was derived when a nearby church was dedicated to St Augustine. The building dates to the 12th to 13th centuries, with later enlargements and refurbishments. During a pastoral visit in 1568, the church was dedicated to Santa Maria e San Regolo. The construction is rustic, with incomplete lines of alternating white and dark stone in the facade and flanks. The portal with a rounded marble arch, is minimally decorated, and preceded by a circular staircase. The superior portion of the facade has a round oculus.

The interior houses a 15th-century holy water font. It also contains two wooden statues: a 13th-14th century Madonna and child and a 14th-century crucifix attributed to the Maestro del Crocifisso di Camaiore.[1]

gollark: I think this would be likely to cause you to do stuff you consider possibly-bad more than someone who does *not* think about it much and just relies on ethical instincts gained from whatever.
gollark: Let's say you're a professor of moral philosophy and spend vast amounts of time wondering about the rightness of every action.
gollark: A different issue I have with it is that if you consider ethical issues in more depth, you are probably more evil than someone who doesn't.
gollark: Or socially.
gollark: Humans can self-delude fine by accident.

References

  1. Terra di Lucca e di Versilia, tourism website by the Province of Lucca.

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