Church of the Holy Trinity
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Church of the Holy Trinity
The facade of the church today has a portal with a tympanum inserted in a large arch set on semi-columns. Next to it is the fourteenth-century bell tower to which, in 1938, during the Fascist era, the five cusps were added. The interior of the church, in Baroque style, has a single nave, with four altars on each side. To the right of the entrance is a pink marble stoup on a column that was originally probably a pagan altar. In the atrium on the left there is a fragment of Episcopal bench in Greek veined marble that traditionally belonged to San Mercuriale, probably from the 5th century and obtained from a Roman sarcophagus. In the first altar on the left, part of a valuable fresco from the early fifteenth century was found, depicting a triptych with Jesus Christ and figures of Saints. An altarpiece by Giacomo Zampa, representing the Beato Torello, hides the fresco. The recently restored canvas was mounted on a frame, which allows the view of the fresco. Among the first and second chapel on the left, the funeral monument to Domenico Manzoni, a wealthy owner of the nearby Palazzo Manzoni, executed in 1817 by Antonio Canova.

47121 Forlì (FC)
