San Valeriano, Robbio
| San Valeriano, Robbio | |
|---|---|
| San Valeriano | |
| Facade of Church | |
| 45°17′13″N 8°35′19″E / 45.28693°N 8.58875°E | |
| Location | Robbio | 
| Country | Italy | 
| Denomination | Catholic | 
| History | |
| Founded | 12th Century | 
| Architecture | |
| Style | Romanesque | 
| Administration | |
| Diocese | Vercelli | 
San Valeriano is a Romanesque-style Roman Catholic church located on Via Francigena 43-95 in the town of Robbio, province of Pavia, Italy.
History
A church at the site is documented since the 12th century, when it was part of a Benedictine order Cluniac monastery which stood along the pilgrimage route to Rome, known as the Via Francigena. The monastery suffered much over the centuries; one inscription notes the monastery was destroyed in 1216. Built with brick, the church has three naves and the three apses ends in a typical Romanesque hemicycles. The monastery buildings are no longer extant. There are no remains of a former belltower, which was still present in the 16th century. The church is dedicated to St Valerian, a bishop martyred in Tunisia by Genseric in 460. The relics of this Pre-Schism western saint were putatively brought to Pavia, and then to Robbio. The church was deconsecrated centuries ago, and for a time used as a warehouse or barracks. There is no internal decoration.[1]
References
- ^ Commune of Robbio, entry on church.