← Back

Cathedral of St. Mary of the Assumption

75019 Tricarico MT, Italia ★★★★☆ 287 views
Sasha Bernie
Tricarico
🏆 AI Trip Planner 2026

Get the free app

Discover the best of Tricarico with Secret World — the AI trip planner with 1M+ destinations. Get personalized itineraries, hidden gems and local tips. Free on iOS & Android.

🧠 AI Itineraries 🎒 Trip Toolkit 🎮 KnowWhere Game 🎧 Audio Guides 📹 Videos
Scan to download iOS / Android
Scan for AppGallery Huawei users

About Cathedral of St. Mary of the Assumption

Cathedral of St. Mary of the Assumption - Tricarico | Secret World Trip Planner

Its primitive Romanesque structures, similar to those of Aderenza and Venosa, were obliterated by a series of Baroque renovations by bishops Settimio de Robertis (1609-1611), Pier Luigi Carafa senior in 1638 and his nephew Pier Luigi Carafa jr. after the plague of 1657. It took on its present architectural and decorative appearance with the work commissioned by Bishop Antonio del Plato and carried out between 1774 and 1777, by Neapolitan workers led by the royal engineer Carlo Brancolino and the architect Domenico Sannazzaro, who took care of the stucco work. In the 1st millennium of the diocese (1968), Bishop Bruno Maria Pelaia endowed it with a bronze door with a commemorative epigraph Convent of St. Anthony of Padua. It was Gerolamo Sanseverino, prince of Bisignano and count of Tricarico, who on September 27, 1479 obtained from Sixtus IV the faculty to erect outside the walls of the town, this convent of the Friars Minor of the Observance, one of the first five in Basilicata. Completed in 1491 with contributions from the Tricaricese community and from the prince himself, it was for centuries a center of the most genuine Franciscan spirituality and of apostolate in the missions, as attested by Father Michelangelo Pacelli of Tricarico, among the first missionaries to Ethiopia, about whom he wrote a work (1797). Endowed with a good library, he had important study for theology. Some of his friars, of more popular extraction, distinguished themselves in the field of crafts and art, with works still usable today in the convent. In its church existed the tomb of the Albanian nobles Giovanni Mattes, his wife Porfida Mosaccia Scanderberg and their son, captain of 300 Albanian stradiots, in the service of the Sanseverino family (1576). After abandonment in the late 1800s, it was entrusted by the municipal administration to Bishop Raphael delle Nocche and was formed into the Mother House of the Disciples of Eucharistic Jesus (1923) and the "Pia Opera di S. Antonio" home for the poor and elderly, founded in 1926 by priest Fr. Pancrazio Toscano.

🗺 L'app dei tesori italiani

Plan your visit to Tricarico

Suggested itinerary near Cathedral of St. Mary of the Assumption

MAJ+
500.000+ travelers worldwide
  1. 🌅
    Morning
    Cathedral of St. Mary of the Assumption
    📍 Tricarico
  2. ☀️
    Afternoon
    Grassano, the city of the crib
    📍 11.8 km · Tricarico
  3. 🌆
    Evening
    Castelmezzano, one of Basilicata's most beautiful treasures
    📍 13.1 km · Tricarico

Buy Unique Travel Experiences

Powered by Viator

See more on Viator.com

Explore nearby · Tricarico

Frequently Asked Questions

The cathedral features Baroque architecture from the 18th century, having been extensively renovated between 1774 and 1777 by Neapolitan architects Domenico Sannazzaro and royal engineer Carlo Brancolino. While it originally had primitive Romanesque structures similar to those in Aderenza and Venosa, these were completely obliterated by a series of Baroque renovations commissioned by various bishops, giving it the ornate stucco work and decorative appearance visible today.
The convent was erected in 1479 when Prince Gerolamo Sanseverino of Bisignano obtained permission from Pope Sixtus IV on September 27, 1479, and was completed in 1491 as one of the first five Franciscan convents in Basilicata. It was built outside the town walls with contributions from both the prince and the local Tricaricese community.
The convent housed notable figures including Father Michelangelo Pacelli of Tricarico, one of the first missionaries to Ethiopia, and contained the tombs of Albanian nobles including Giovanni Mattes and his family who served the Sanseverino family as stradiots. For centuries, it served as an important center of Franciscan spirituality and featured a good library with important theological studies, plus works of craftsmanship by its friars that remain usable today.
The cathedral underwent multiple Baroque renovations by bishops Settimio de Robertis (1609-1611), Pier Luigi Carafa senior (1638), and his nephew Pier Luigi Carafa Jr. following the plague of 1657, which completely transformed its primitive Romanesque structures. These renovations fundamentally changed its architectural character before the final major redesign in the late 18th century.
In 1968, during the first millennium of the diocese, Bishop Bruno Maria Pelaia commissioned a bronze door with a commemorative epigraph to mark the occasion. The cathedral and its attached convent were also repurposed in 1923 when the convent became the Mother House of the Disciples of Eucharistic Jesus and housed the 'Pia Opera di S. Antonio' home for charitable purposes.