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The Cathedral of Saints Peter and Donato

Piazza Del Duomo, 1, 52100 Arezzo AR, Italia ★★★★☆ 155 views
Marika Leone
Arezzo
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The Cathedral of Saints Peter and Donato - Arezzo | Secret World Trip Planner

The Cathedral of Saints Peter and Donato, dating back to the thirteenth century, is worth a visit for the beauty kept inside: among the slender naves stand out the colorful stained glass windows of the '500 made by Guillaume de Marcillat, the beautiful fresco of Mary Magdalene by Piero Della Francesca and the Madonna del Conforto: About the latter it is said that in 1796 it was blackened but following the pleas of three believers to save the city from the earthquake in progress, the Virgin returned to shine and the earthquakes ceased. The Cathedral, now the Cathedral of Arezzo, is the main place of worship of the city and was built over an ancient early Christian church. Decisive for the birth of the Cathedral was the visit of Pope Gregory X in December 1275, returning from the Council of Lyon. The Pope in fact, seriously ill, died in Arezzo on January 10th leaving the sum of thirty gold florins destined to the construction of the new Cathedral. The works started in 1278 by Bishop Guglielmino degli Ubertini and ended only in 1511. The external façade, which had remained bare for centuries, was arranged as we see it today between 1900 and 1914. The interior has a nave and two aisles, with five bays marked by bundled pillars, and a polygonal apse. Inside the magnificent cathedral are kept many works of great artists linked to the city of Arezzo. Among these is the fresco of Mary Magdalene by Piero della Francesca, painted around 1460 in the left aisle. The complex of the high altar, documented since 1362, is monumental. The wooden choir was designed in 1554 by Giorgio Vasari. The illustrious Arezzo native was also responsible for the design of the base of the organ along the left aisle. Today it frames the Madonna with Child, a valuable wooden sculpture from the mid-13th century. Important transformations were made to the original layout of the Cathedral around 1810, with the intention of creating an "internal itinerary" capable of expressing the continuity of the history of Arezzo's church, culminating in the chapel of the Madonna del Conforto, whose sacred image, according to tradition, is linked to a miracle that took place in the 18th century. Inside the chapel were placed - after being taken from other city churches - the great altarpieces by Andrea Della Robbia. The Duomo is a very important place for the inhabitants of the city. In fact, during the Giostra del Saracino, the quarter that has won the competition parades with the Lancia d'oro through the streets of the city until reaching, as the last stage, the great Cathedral of the Duomo: here the quarter-goers invoke a song of thanks to the Madonna del Conforto or to San Donato before returning to the headquarters of their quarter.

The Cathedral of Saints Peter and Donato - Arezzo | Secret World Trip Planner
The Cathedral of Saints Peter and Donato - Arezzo | Secret World Trip Planner
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  1. 🌅
    Morning
    The Cathedral of Saints Peter and Donato
    📍 Arezzo
  2. ☀️
    Afternoon
    Marcillat and its beautiful stained glass windows
    📍 0 km da Arezzo
  3. 🌆
    Evening
    Arezzo | House of Francesco Petrarca
    📍 0.2 km da Arezzo

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Frequently Asked Questions

The cathedral houses several masterpieces including stained glass windows from the 1500s by Guillaume de Marcillat, a fresco of Mary Magdalene painted by Piero della Francesca around 1460, and the miraculous Madonna del Conforto, which legend says regained its shine in 1796 after prayers stopped an earthquake. Additionally, you can admire a 13th-century wooden Madonna with Child sculpture and a wooden choir designed by Giorgio Vasari in 1554.
Construction began in 1278 under Bishop Guglielmino degli Ubertini following a visit from Pope Gregory X in 1275, who died in Arezzo and left funds for the project. The cathedral took an exceptionally long time to complete, finishing only in 1511—over 230 years later. The external façade wasn't completed until between 1900 and 1914, centuries after the interior was finished.
According to local legend, the Madonna del Conforto painting was darkened or blackened in 1796, but when three believers prayed to it asking the Virgin to save the city from an ongoing earthquake, the painting miraculously regained its shine and the earthquakes ceased. This miracle made the artwork one of the most venerated and significant pieces within the cathedral.
Giorgio Vasari, the famous Renaissance artist and architect native to Arezzo, designed the wooden choir in 1554 and also created the design for the organ base along the left aisle. The cathedral also features the fresco of Mary Magdalene by the renowned Piero della Francesca, painted around 1460, making it a repository of works by Arezzo's most illustrious artists.
The cathedral features a traditional design with one central nave and two side aisles, divided into five bays marked by bundled pillars, and culminates in a polygonal apse. The interior was significantly redesigned around 1810 to create a continuous internal itinerary that better expresses the cathedral's historical development and artistic progression.