Santa Maria dell'Orazione e Morte, Rome — Visitor Guide & Things to Do Nearby
About Santa Maria dell'Orazione e Morte
Santa Maria dell'Orazione e Morte is one of Rome's most macabre churches, founded by a confraternity whose sole mission was to collect and bury abandoned dead bodies found in the Roman countryside and the Tiber River.
The Confraternity of Prayer and Death was established in 1538 and chartered by Pope Julius III in 1552. Over more than 300 years, the brotherhood collected and buried approximately 8,000 bodies that would otherwise have been left unburied, a genuine act of charity in an era when a proper burial was considered essential for salvation.
The current church was rebuilt in 1734 by architect Ferdinando Fuga using an elegant elliptical plan. The facade on Via Giulia features carved skulls and winged hourglasses, appropriate symbols for a church dedicated to death and prayer.
Beneath the church lies a crypt with burial chambers that once extended all the way to the Tiber. Only one crypt chamber survives, accessible through the left wall of the sanctuary. Inside, you'll find bone chandeliers, antique lamp holders fashioned from bone fragments, and the remains of the confraternity's centuries of work.
The church stands on Via Giulia, one of Rome's most elegant Renaissance streets, directly opposite Palazzo Farnese. It's a short walk from Campo de' Fiori.
If you're on a Questo quest through Rome, Santa Maria dell'Orazione e Morte is a stop where the city's relationship with death, faith, and charity takes a form you won't find anywhere else.
Plan Your Visit
- Address
- Via Giulia, 262, 00186 Roma RM, Italy
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