November 14, 2019
The Church of Saint Catherine of Alexandria
St. Catherine’s of Alexandria has a bakery that is worth finding for one’s first stop in the morning. The church is a synthesis of Sicilian Baroque, Rococo, and Renaissance styles.
In 1310 the last will of the rich Benvenuta Mastrangelo created the foundation of a female monastery under the direction of the Dominican Order.
In Alexandria, Catherine was an erudite virgin of royal lineage who objected to Emperor Maxentius’ calling for a grand festival in honor of the pagan gods.
Maxentius summoned fifty pagan philosophers to debate Catherine, but she prayed for God’s assistance, and the philosophers lost the debate, converted to Christianity, and were martyred in what Catherine assured them was a Baptism by Fire.
Maxentius then promised that Catherine could be his co-ruler if she recanted, but she refused, saying she was a bride of Christ. So Maxentius had her whipped and imprisoned. After twelve days Maxentius once again offered Catherine her life if she recanted, but this time death if she persisted. She refused, so he had an engine with spiked wheels built to frighten her into submission. She prayed and an angel destroyed the engine, which is why she is often shown with the wheel as her icon. In the end, the emperor had her beheaded.
Some of the pastries that can be found at Saint Catherine’s of Alexandria:
Palazzo Chiaramonte -Steri
Built in 1307, the Chiaramonte Palace was the residence of the powerful Sicilian lord Manfredi II Chiaramonte. After his death, the palace went through many hands such as the Aragonese-Spanish viceroys followed by the Sicilian Royal, but today it is notorious mostly for the period when it was used by the tribunal of the Holy Inquisition from 1600-1782.
Today the University of Palermo owns the building and tours are given, primarily to view the graffiti left behind by prisoners of the inquisition.
In 1906 the famous anthropologist Giuseppe Pitrè discovered prisoners drawings in three cells. Restoration on these cells, removing whitewash from the graffiti walls, began in 2005.
A poem found on one of the walls described how the prisoners were faring:
Cavuru e fridu sintu ca mi piglia
La terzuru tremu li vudella
Lu cori e l’alma s’assuttiglia
(Standard Italian)
Sento freddi e caldo, mi ha preso
La febbre malarica,
Mi tremano le budella,
Il cuore e l’anima si rimpicciolicono
I feel hot and cold, I have
Malaria
My stomach trembles
My heart and soul are fading
The prison writings provide a unique insight into the inquisition in Sicily; many were signed and dated by their authors. Unfortunately, the prison archive was burned in 1783 on the orders of the Viceroy Caracciolo, who sought to conceal the inquisitors’ activities.
Santa Maria dello Sapsimo
The construction of Santa Maria dello Spasimo (or swoon of Santa Maria) and its accompanying monastery began in 1509 with monies from Julius II, on land bequeathed by Giacomo Basilicò, a lawyer and the widower of a rich noblewoman.
The church was never completed because of the rising Turkish threat in 1535, where resources meant for the church were diverted to fortifications of the city against any possible incursions.
Even in its unfinished states, Lo Spasimo shows the late Gothic style architecture that permeated building practices in Palermo at the time as well as the Spanish influence in the city.