Santa Maria della Ferraria

Cistercian Abbey of Santa Maria della Ferraria
Location within Italy
Monastery information
Order Cistercian
Established 1179
Disestablished 1807
Mother house Fossanova Abbey
Diocese Teano–Calvi
Site
Location Vairano Patenora, Italy
Coordinates 41°21′06″N 14°09′26″E / 41.35177°N 14.15735°E / 41.35177; 14.15735Coordinates: 41°21′06″N 14°09′26″E / 41.35177°N 14.15735°E / 41.35177; 14.15735
Public access yes

The Abbey of Santa Maria della Ferraria was a Cistercian monastery located in Vairano Patenora, Province of Caserta, Italy. [1] Presently only ruins remain.

History

It was founded in 1179 by monks from the abbey of Fossanova in Lazio, which had been funded by monks under the guidance of the Abbey of Clairvaux.

The church was consecrated on October 24, 1179 and the abbey was ruled by Cistercians until the suppression of religious orders in the Kingdom of Naples by Joseph Bonaparte in 1807.

The following monasteries were subservient to the abbey: Santa Maria dell'Arco (Sicily), Santo Spirito della Valle (Apulia), Santa Maria Incoronata (Apulia) and Santi Vito e Salvo (Abruzzo).

Around 1228, the Chronica Romanorum pontificum et imperatorum ac de rebus in Apulia gestis was composed at the abbey. It is an important source on the abbey's early history.

See also

References

  1. "Ferraria" (in Italian). Monastero cistercense della Certosa di Firenze. Retrieved December 31, 2014.

Bibliography

  • Scandone, Francesco (1908). Santa Maria di Ferraria (in Italian). Napoli: Stabilimento tipografico M. D'Auria. p. 48.
  • Oldoni, Umberto; Caperna, Francesco (2008). Cronaca Santa Maria della Ferraria (in Italian). Cassino: Francesco Ciolfi editore. p. 301. ISBN 978-88-86810-35-7.
  • "L'Abbazia della Ferrara" (in Italian). Amici dei borghi. Retrieved December 31, 2014.
  • Janauschek, Leopold (1877). Originum Cisterciensium - in quo, praemissis congregationum domiciliis adjectisque tabulis chronologico-genealogicis, veterum abbatiarum a monachis habitatarum fundationes ad fidem antiquissimorum fontium primus descripsit (in Latin). I. Vienna: Puthod. p. 271. Retrieved December 30, 2014.
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