Cimitero Monumentale di Mortara Monumental Cemetery of Mortara | |
---|---|
Details | |
Established | 1802 |
Location | |
Country | Italy |
Coordinates | 45°15′36″N 8°45′18″E / 45.26000°N 8.75500°E |
Type | Historic Roman Catholic |
Style | Monumental Baroque |
Owned by | City of Mortara |
Size | 38,636 m2 (415,870 sq ft) |
The Monumental Cemetery of Mortara (Italian: Cimitero Monumentale di Mortara) is located in the north-eastern outskirts of the city of Mortara, an Italian comune in the province of Pavia, in the region of Lombardy in northern Italy. The Monumental Cemetery of Mortara is one of the biggest and most important cemeteries in the Lomellina area.
It is constructed in the traditional style of monumental cemeteries, with headstones and other monuments made of marble, granite and similar materials, and which rise vertically above the ground (typically around 50 cm (20 in) but some can be over 2 metres (6 ft 7 in) tall).[1] Like most monumental cemeteries, the Monumental Cemetery of Mortara was outside the city because of health considerations, and a 19th-century belief that "death must be removed from the gaze of the living".[1]
The original city Cemetery was located within the city next to the church of San Lorenzo. In 1802, in response to health and olfactory factors related to the existing Cemetery, a new Cemetery was constructed outside the city by the Municipality of Mortara, at that time belonging to the Cisalpine Republic. The new location was adjacent to the road to Vigevano, in the locality of San Rocco. Due to the Cemetery's new location, the name was changed to the Cemetery of San Rocco al Porto. Despite the relocation, the new Cemetery soon became insufficient due to the growth of the local population. By 1846 both the Bishop of Vigevano and the Canon Reverend Calvi were requesting an expansion because the space was not sufficient and they were having to bury the deceased outside of the Cemetery.[2]
The City Council discussed the expansion of the Cemetery in the Assembly of 26 May 1883, in the presence of the mayor Cotta Ramusino. The requests were: physical expansion, aesthetic improvement of the existing structure, and the creation of family graves.[3] The project appraisal was initially assigned to the architect Carlo Morosetti. His proposed project was unsuccessful and the Council decided to entrust it to someone else.[2]
On 23 May 1884, the architect Angelo Colla was entrusted to pursue the project and it was approved by the Prefect of the province.[4] Colla planned:
The City Council unanimously approved Colla's project, as it was considered to be a work that would honour the city and that would address the concerns with the existing site. Colla's expansion project was paid for by the Municipality but the arches and the crypts were at the expense of the concessionary families. The Construction ended in 1894 and the total amount spent was 101.667 lire, of which 25.000 came from the Municipality.[2]
In 1902, the lack of space made it necessary to further expand the Cemetery, with the construction of further chapels. On 29 November 1902, the Municipal Council discussed the measures regarding the building of new arches, in accord with those previously constructed by the architect Angelo Colla. On 26 September 1904, the Council decided to entrust the expansion project to the architect Ernesto Pirovano, who had previously collaborated with Colla. In June 1907 the project was presented and approved by the council.[5]
The works carried out as the basis of the new project were:
Pirovano's project was completed in 1911. The total amount spent was 72.150 lire, 19.700 of which came from private contributions.[2] After the second expansion, for many years the Monumental Cemetery of Mortara was not modified, except for periodic maintenance work.
In 2016, in response to the constant requests for more niches and tombs, the Comune of Mortara decided to invest 800,000 euros in the Cemetery's extension. This intervention was considered necessary due to the limited number of existing tombs available. The renovation took place in two different areas: the main Cemetery in Milanese Street where 200 new tombs and 6 chapels would be constructed and the Casoni di Sant'Albino's Cemetery with the addition of 20 niches.[7] The project for the Casoni di Sant'Albino cemetery was carried out accordingly to the planned schedule. The reconstruction of the main Cemetery in Milanese Street was repeatedly postponed by the junta of Mortara beyond the planned start date of early 2017.[8] In 2020 the project plan was accepted by the City Council. The maintenance and expansion of the Cemetery included the construction of the Garden of Remembrance, the common cinerary and the new common ossuary.[9]
Carlo Morosetti was an Italian engineer and civic expert of the city of Mortara in the years of the construction of the Cemetery.[10] He was responsible for the evaluation and the purchase of the land for the expansion.[11][12]
Angelo Colla (1827–1892) was an Italian decorator and a restorer. He was known as an architect that took inspiration from and was influenced by the artistic movement called eclecticism as well as the oriental style, in particular by the Moorish style.
He worked on multiple occasions for the Crespi family, wealthy industrial cotton producers, for whom he designed Villa Pia in Orta (now Hotel Villa Crespi) which is a typical example of the influence of the Moorish style, incorporating the presence of a minaret. He worked mainly in Milan, where he designed the restoration of San Giovanni's Church and the reconstruction of the facade of San Calimero's Church. Ernesto Pirovano, who designed the Cemeteries of Mantova and Bergamo, was one of his pupils.[13]
Ernesto Pirovano (1866–1934) was an Italian architect. His main works can be found in Lombardy. He is known to have had an eclectic approach to art after being a student of the architect Angelo Colla. The years of study with Colla influenced his style and allowed him to work on the restoration of the Basilica of San Calimero and the facade of the Church of Santa Maria al Paradiso. Through Colla, Pirovano came into contact with the Crespi family, for whom he completed a villa in Orta San Giulio (1892–1894), another villa in Crespi d'Adda (1894), a building in via Borgonuovo in Milan (1895–1896), and the urban and architectural design of the workers' village of Crespi d'Adda.[14] He also took part in the project for the facade of Palazzo Nuovo and Monumental Cemetery of Bergamo, providing an Assyrian-Babylonian style to the monuments. Pirovano contributed to the realization of Mantova's Cemetery and the Monumental Cemetery of Bergamo. One of his works that remains the most relevant is the design of the industrial village of Crespi d'Adda, which has become a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[2]
The floor plan of the Monumental Cemetery of Mortara is divided into five square-shaped areas, two of them are from the main original layout, and the rest are the result of the expansions. Each section is delimited by a concrete and brick wall and an intricate structure of porches and arcades at the entrances and by the chapels (dedicated sections for the family graves). The original section is inspired by the baroque architecture following the typical strict symmetrical plan, and the colonnades were designed to make the Cemetery appear spacious and monumental.
The vertical structures consist of elegant terracotta-brick columns that support carved and adorned concrete arches. The granite capitals are decorated with rosettes that differ on the columns. When in some sections the porch is composed of two archways delimited by three sets of arcades (creating a set of bohemian vaults), the capitals at the centre are more detailed and showcase carved acanthus leaves and small faces. The white impost blocks have a minimal black decor on the bottom, and the voussoirs, also called archivolts, are decorated with an intricate naturalistic motif. The ceiling of the porches is painted in blue, yellow, orange, and red with a design resembling the sky on the vaults, and a geometric pattern on the intrados.
The roof cover structure is made of larch and fir wood supported by iron brackets. The gable stones between the roof and the archivolts are made with textured terracotta bricks, set with concrete rosettes, that also, in this case, have various designs but are positioned in symmetrical order, and geometric terracotta fretwork outlines the shape of the top of the facade of the Cemetery. The roof tiles are also made of terracotta, and the edges of the roof are outlined by a set of small concrete chimney-looking cylindrical pinnacles with a conic top.[15]
The main entrance is further embellished by an octagonal shape turret, which is built in pink and white concrete. Each of the eight sides hosts a mullioned window, and from the centre of the tower rises a metal cross. The ceiling of the turret is painted in a similar style as the porches and represents a dove at the centre of a large sun on a blue background. The Cemetery also hosts a small church that is positioned at the far end of the expansion adjacent to the old section, located at the far end of the pathway from the main entrance. The church door is made of glass and wrought iron, representing some angels and Latin text.
The graves are positioned in order alongside the main path that crosses the entire length of the Cemetery. The more complex and elaborate ones are located underneath the porches by the chapels. The chapels are sections that are primarily dedicated to family graves and are located along the perimeter of the old area. They are divided into left and right porches and are often accompanied by paintings, sculptures, and commemorative texts in memory of the people that have died. The Cemetery also includes two underground areas (long corridors) that contain some of the eldest graves which have text written in Latin, with Roman numbers and that follow the Roman calendar. It also includes a section dedicated to the soldiers that died during World War I, a section dedicated to the people from the city that have been executed, and another area dedicated to missionary nuns.[2]
The brothers Felice and Ferdinando Bialetti created the main sculptures and paintings in the Cemetery.
Felice Bialetti (1869–1906) attended the Accademia Albertina in Turin, where he specialized in funerary works. He met and co-elaborated with several famous sculptors, including Odoardo Tabacchi and Enrico Butti. Some of his works are preserved in the Galleria d'Arte Moderna in Milan, including his most famous sculpture, entitled "Pensiero Dominate".[16] The sculptures he created for the Monumental Cemetery of Mortara are:
Ferdinando Bialetti (1864–1958) attended the Accademia Albertina and was an honorary member of the Brera Academy.[17] His frescoes can be found in the Teatro Olimpico in Vicenza, in the Palazzo San Giorgio in Genoa and in the Pinacoteca in Turin. The paintings he created for the Monumental Cemetery of Mortara are:
In the cemetery there are several detailed mosaics:[2]
A number of notable people are interred in the Cemetery, including:
In the Cemetery, there is a large number of graves of soldiers who died during World War I. The majority of these died in the hospital of Mortara but were not local residents. In the Cemetery, there are two niches in the central arch and a commemorative plaque of the soldiers interred there. The plaque bears the inscription: "Ai gloriosi soldati caduti nella Grande Guerra e sepolti in questo cimitero I mortaresi riconoscenti", which means: "To the glorious soldiers fallen in the Great War and buried in this cemetery The grateful mortars".[2] Soldiers buried in Cemetery include, in chronological order:[23]
Name | Birth | Death |
---|---|---|
Gatti Giovanni di Lorenzo | 26 March 1888 | 27 July 1915 |
Olivelli Luigi Giuseppe di Pietro Angelo e di Fugazza Ernesta | 7 February 1895 | 12 December 1915 |
Stangalino Carlo di Lorenzo (Stangalini Carlo) | 16 February 1895 | 9 June 1916 |
Brusati Rodolfo di Giuseppe (Adolfo) | 21 December 1890 | 1 June 1917 |
Barba Giuseppe di Luigi | 7 April 1891 | 17 June 1917 |
Ferraris Paolo | 29 June 1887 | 19 December 1917 |
Picillo Vitalino di Luigi | 12 January 1899 | 29 December 1917 |
Pesce Attilio di Giuseppe | 2 November 1897 | 15 April 1918 |
Viviani Carlo di Pietro | 4 April 1882 | 23 May 1918 |
Segna Francesco di Pietro | 14 February 1899 | 9 June 1918 |
Menghi Alfredo di Giovanni | 16 April 1883 | 13 June 1918 |
Bifolchi Luigi di Domenico | unknown | 11 July 1918 |
Piva Pietro Anacleto | 1 May 1897 | 13 July 1918 |
Ceron Giovanni di Adamo (Cerron Giovanni) | 27 September 1896 | 16 July 1918 |
Lionello Giuseppe di Michele | 28 July 1885 | 6 August 1918 |
Ferraris Luigi Francesco di Pietro | 6 November 1886 | 7 August 1918 |
Bartoli Abele di Pietro | 4 December 1885 | 14 August 1918 |
Dalla Torre Pietro di Antonio | 16 January 1899 | 31 August 1918 |
Ventura Pietro di Eliseo | 29 June 1900 | 5 September 1918 |
Giribaldi Pietro di Serafino | 21 June 1879 | 8 September 1918 |
Bertani Alfo di Giuseppe | 31 October 1900 | 10 September 1918 |
Quetti Matteo di Domenico | 16 August 1900 | 11 September 1918 |
Mingaro Adriano di Dario (Mincari Adriano) | 1900 | 12 September 1918 |
Serra Pasquale | 1900 | 17 September 1918 |
Lanzarini Pietro di Gaetano | 29 June 1900 | 18 September 1918 |
Stanghelini Cesarino di Ferdinando (Stangalini Cesare) | 18 September 1900 | 18 September 1918 |
Fugazza Luigi Giuseppe di Gaetano | 12 May 1880 | 1 October 1918 |
Tosolini Carini di Romeo (Tosolino Carino) | 1 May 1888 | 7 October 1918 |
Massari Arcangelo di Salvatore (Massaro Arcangelo) | 6 February 1888 | 9 October 1918 |
Toffaloni Giovanni di Giuseppe | 30 March 1887 | 14 October 1918 |
Tacchella Martino di Fiorentino | 14 March 1879 | 17 October 1918 |
Robuschi Mario di Adamo | 22 February 1893 | 21 October 1918 |
Boffardi Oreste di Dionigi (Ernesto) | 20 April 1887 | 21 October 1918 |
Gonella Carlo di Amedeo | 21 January 1889 | 25 October 1918 |
Omodeo Zorini Domenico (Omodeo Zorini Giuseppe) | 29 October 1885 | 27 October 1918 |
Enrico Pietro di Pietro (Enrico Pietro) | 11 September 1889 | 28 October 1918 |
Copelli Vincenzo di Giuseppe (Capelli Vincenzo) | 8 August 1891 | 29 October 1918 |
Iannilli Ugo di Luigi (Iancilli Ugo) | 25 March 1899 | 6 November 1918 |
Giordani Francesco di Mariano (Giordano Francesco) | 4 September 1896 | 14 November 1918 |
Monguzzi Silvestro di Giovanni (Manguzzi Silvestro) | 18 October 1884 | 14 November 1918 |
Rossi Giovanni di Pietro | 17 April 1891 | 21 November 1918 |
Gismondi Antonio di Cesidio | 3 January 1888 | 22 November 1918 |
Buzzoni Arnaldo di Giorgio (Bussone Armando) | 4 December 1891 | 25 November 1918 |
Costanzi Giocondo di Giuseppe | 29 April 1897 | 27 November 1918 |
Pistillo Vito di Giuseppe | 17 January 1893 | 28 November 1918 |
Saltamerenda Sogno di Eugenio | 14 July 1898 | 1 December 1918 |
Giannettoni Angelo di Luigi (Gianotti Angelo) | 5 April 1895 | 15 December 1918 |
Théodule Giovanni di Antonio (Teodulo Giovanni) | 7 September 1891 | 19 December 1918 |
Catenazzi Giulio di Pietro | 19 July 1887 | 26 December 1918 |
Mereta Pietro di Lorenzo (Moretta Pietro) | 19 January 1893 | 25 December 1918 |
Miliè Luigi di Luigi e Maria Iacometta | 1 October 1885 | 29 December 1918 |
Larotonda Giuseppe di Filippo | 8 May 1880 | 14 February 1918 |
Morabito Franco di Vincenzo (Marabito Francesco) | 5 April 1899 | 15 January 1918 |
Pizzochero Luigi di Carlo (Pizzoccaro Luigi) | 11 November 1887 | 18 January 1918 |
Pozzolo Valente di Giovanni Battista | 26 June 1897 | 20 January 1918 |
Palermo Salvatore di Antonio | 21 December 1893 | 9 January 1919 |
Nigro Rosario di Giacinto | 5 December 1891 | 13 January 1919 |
Orefici Giovanni di Vincenzo | 6 November 1887 | 15 January 1919 |
Piveri Luigi | 1888 | 18 January 1919 |
Scalambrini Domenico | 1900 | 26 January 1919 |
Sainaghi Cherubino di Enrico | 21 July 1892 | 11 February 1919 |
Favagrossa Riccardo di Baldassarre (Faragiona Riccardo) | 1 September 1886 | 24 February 1919 |
Scurati Angelo | unknown | unknown (buried 15 June 1923) |
The Monumental Cemetery of Mortara contains numerous family graves.[1] These include:[2]
Family | Type of grave | Artist | Characteristics |
---|---|---|---|
Bianchi | chapel | Ferdinando Bialetti | Contains a fresco representing an angelic figure in front of a cross |
Molina | chapel | Felice Bialetti (portraitist) | Contains two bronze busts |
Carpani-Bianchi | chapel | Alceste Cortellona | Contains two medallions with the portraits of the family members |
Scavia | chapel | (The artist's autograph is not decipherable) | Contains a base relief in white marble representing a woman kneeling in prayer |
Bossi | chapel | Felice Bialetti | Contains a bronze sculpture representing the allegory of the soul that rises to heaven |
Bozzani-Fornara | chapel | // | On a tombstone there is a funeral epigraphy for children |
Goia | crypt | Silvio Santagostino | Contains a round with a portrait |
Previdere-Pezza | crypt | Filippo Omegna | Has a white marble floor, a marble ceiling and contains a bronze sculptor of St. Francis |
Tessera | chapel | Gaudenzion Rossi | Contains six medaillons with portraits arranged around a marble cross |
Nai | chapel | Felice Bialetti | Contains a sculptural group |
Morelli-Carboni | chapel | Felice Bialetti | Contains a fresco representing a kneeling woman |
A part of the Cemetery is dedicated to the missionary nuns born in Mortara, particularly to the missionary nuns of the Institute of Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate Regina Pacis. This area is located on the western part of the main segment of the Cemetery. The Institute submitted an application in 1989 to grant to the religious order a single field reserved for the urban Cemetery for the burials of its members. These graves are all of the same modest style. They are made of black and white granite, and on each tombstone is represented a cross.[24]
Mortara is the location of the Institute of Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate Regina Pacis. This congregation was founded in 1919 by Father Francesco Pianzola, an oblate priest from the Diocese of Vigevano. The mission of the Institute focuses particular attention on young people and women.[25]
The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in the death of many people around the world, including Italy and the city of Mortara. The Cemetery and the town council have dedicated a special section immediately after the entrance on the left side of the main pathway in remembrance of all the people that have died from the virus. The main part is a square area filled with small white stones which are surrounded by a terracotta-brick pathway, on which a stone bench has been positioned, and by some bushes on the left side.[26] A tombstone has been placed on the right side with the Italian text "La comunità mortarese piange la dolorosa scomparsa dei suoi concittadini vittime della pandemia da coronavirus e affida al sacro cuore di Gesù le loro anime assunte nella gloria dei cieli", which means "The Mortarese community mourns the painful disappearance of its fellow citizens victims of the coronavirus pandemic and entrusts their souls to the sacred heart of Jesus into the glory of heaven".[27]
The Cemetery has been subject to several break-ins where thieves have in most cases stolen copper cornices and bronze sculptures (respectively a precious metal and an alloy). Many thefts took place during the months of May and June 2021 and surveillance cameras and alarm systems have been installed as security measures, in order to prevent this from happening again.[28][29]
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