The Church of St Nicholas at Pula (formerly St Mary)
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.15291/ars.438Keywords:
Pula, Istria, early Christian architecture, Byzantine architecture, altarAbstract
The church of St Mary at Pula was rededicated to St Nicholas in 1583 when it was handed over for the use of the Greek Orthodox community of refugees from Crete and the Peloponnese. During the seventeenth and eighteenth century, various structures (the bell-tower, the narthex, the sacristy) were added along the eastern and northern sides of the church, several door and window openings were walled in, and the lintel and jambs of the main portal were replaced; however, the main architectural core has remained well-preserved. It has a single-cell structure of square ground plan with an eastern apse, which is semicircular in shape in the inside but polygonal on the outside. The dimensions of the church are based on a module of ten Byzantine feet (c. 31.25 cm); the church is 20 feet wide and 30 feet long, while a 10 foot square can fit into the apse. In the interior is a well-preserved triumphal arch. It is composed of a pair of marble columns with capitals which carry a large, central arch. The composite capitals possess an interesting detail: the centres of the capitals on opposing sides were left undecorated and so it can be concluded that these capitals were intended for insertion in a multi-apertured structure which was screened off with a transenna. Such capitals can be seen on large early Byzantine structures, and two similar capitals are placed in the atrium of the Basilica of Euphrasius at Poreč (mid-sixth century). This detail provides evidence about a technique used in the church’s construction, which made extensive use of prefabricated, often even imported elements of architectural decoration. The same type of marble used for the columns of the triumphal arch was used for the parts of the small trifore window set on the façade. In the scholarly literature to date, this trifore has been considered late medieval, but the carving details are identical to those on the parts of the triumphal arch and altar posts at the church of St Nicholas. The masonry of the wall also points to the fact that it had not been inserted in the sixth-century façade at a later date. In the centre of the apse is a marble block which belonged to an altar base, having four holes which still bear the lower parts of the small posts which originally carried the altar table. The remains of the altar can be seen on the photographs which document the restoration works in 1962. The altar remains were subsequently covered with a new altar structure which was removed during the works in 2000. In 1962, when the filling of the window in the south wall was removed, B. Marušić discovered a part of a marble post with a simple capital which he recognized as belonging to the aforementioned altar. Based on this data, a reconstruction of the altar has been proposed in a drawing. B. Marušić also discovered two stone transennae in the walled in-windows of the south wall, which were smaller than the original structure of the window opening and for this reason he suggested that they belonged to a later intervention. The transennae were removed and transported to the Archaeological Museum of Istria for safekeeping. During the 2000 works, fragments of identical transennae were also found in two apse windows, while a complete transenna was discovered in the walled-in window on the north face which was obscured by the addition of the bell-tower. Similar and identical transennae are found on the nearby chapel of Santa Maria Formosa, the remainder of a large basilica which was built in the mid-sixth century by the archbishop of Ravenna Maximian. In the vicinity of Pula, at least three more examples of similar transennae were found, all of which can be compared to the shape of a wooden window frame from the church of Sant’Apollinare in Classe at Ravenna. A number of arguments suggest that the aforementioned transennae belong to the first phase of the church of St Nicholas.Downloads
References
BARBALIĆ, F., 1993. - Fran Barbalić, Peroj. Srpsko selo u
Istri, Zagreb.
BEAUDRY, N., 2005. - Nicolas Beaudry, Un autel et son
reliquiare á Ras el Bassit (Syrie du Nord), Hortus Artium
Medievalium, 11, Zagreb-Motovun, 111-122.
BERTOŠA, M., 1995. - Miroslav Bertoša, Istra: doba
Venecije, Pula.
BOVINI, G., 1974. - Giuseppe Bovini, Le antichità
cristiane della fascia costiera istriana da Parenzo a Pola,
Bologna.
BULIĆ, F., 1907. - Frane Bulić, Sterro di una chiesa antica
cristiana del VI. sec. nella localita detta Crkvina a Klapavica
nel commune censuaria di Klis (Clissa), Bullettino di
archeologia e storia dalmata, 30, Split, 101 -122.
CHAVALIER, P., MATEJČIĆ, I., 2009. - Pascale Chevalier,
Ivan Matejčić, L’architecture, Vela Gospa près de Bale
(Istrie), II, (ur.) M. Jurković i J.-P. Caillet, University of
Zagreb - International Reserch Center for late Antiquity
and the Midle Ages, Zagreb-Motovun, 2009.
CHEVALIER, P., 1995. - Pascale Chevalier, Salona II,
Ecclesiae Dalmatiae. L’architecture paléochrétienne de la
province Romaine de la Dalmatie, Vol. 2, École française
de Rome - Musée archéologique de Split, Rome - Split.
CHEVALIER, P., 2005. - Pascale Chevalier, Les autels
paléochcrétiens des provinces d’Epirus Vetus, Epirus
Nova et de Praevalis, Hortus Artium Medievalium, 11,
Zagreb-Motovun, 65-80.
CHEVALIER, P., 1999. - Pascale Chevalier, Les
installations liturgiques des églises d’Istrie du Ve au VIIe
siècle, Hortus artium medievalium, 5, Zagreb-Motovun,
-111.
DELL’AQUA, F., 2003. - Francesca Dell’Acqua, „Illuminando
colorat”. La vetrata tra l’età tardo imperiale e l’alto
medioevo: le fonti, l’archeologia, Spoleto 2003.
DUVAL, N., 2005. - Noel Duval, L’autel paléochrétien: les
progrès depuis le livre de Braun (1924) et les questions
à résoudre, Hortus Artium Medievalium, 11, Zagreb-
Motovun, 7-18.
FIOCCHI, L., MARIĆ, I., ČAUŠEVIĆ-BULLY, M.,
BULLY, S., JURKOVIĆ, M., 2010. - Laurent Fiocchi,
Iva Marić, Morana Čaušević-Bully, Sébastien Bully,
Miljenko Jurković, L’église Saint-Maur de Galižana
(Istrie-Croatie); chantier-école aux méthodes de
l’archéologie du bâti, Bulletin du Centre d’études
médiévales d’Auxerre, 14, Auxerre.
FUČIĆ, B., 1966. - Branko Fučić, Sv. Agata kod
Kanfanara, Bulletin zavoda za likovne umjetnosti JAZU,
XIV/1-3, Zagreb, 10-18.
GNIRS, A., 1908. - Anton Gnirs, La basilica ed il
reliquiario d’avorio di Samagher presso Pola, Atti e
memorie della Società Istriana di archeologia e storia
patria, vol, XXIV, Parenzo, 5-48.
GNIRS, A., 1911. - Anton Gnirs, Frühe christliche
Kultanlagen im südlichen Istrien, Jahrbuch des Kunsthist.
Institutes der k.k. Zentral-Kommission für Denkmalpflege,
Wien JK, sv. 5, Wien, 1-48.
GNIRS, A., 2009. - Anton Gnirs, Ranokršćanski kultni
kompleksi u južnoj Istri, u: Anton Gnirs, Arheološki
tekstovi, Pula, 195-223.
GUIDOBALDI, A. G. - BARSANTI, C., 2004. - Allesandra
Guiglia Guidobaldi - Claudia Barsanti, Santa Sofia
di Constantinopoli: l’arredo marmoreo della grande chiesa
Giustinianea, Città del Vaticano.
JELIČIĆ-RADONIĆ, J., 2005. - Jasna Jeličić-Radonić,
Altar Types in Early Christian Churches in the Province
of Dalmatia, Hortus Artium Medievalium, 11, Zagreb-
Motovun, 19-29.
KANDLER, P., 1845. - Pietro Kandler, Cenni al forestiero
che visita Pola, Trieste.
MARUŠIĆ, B., 1967. - Branko Marušić, Kasnoantička i
bizantska Pula, Arheološki muzej Istre, Pula.
MARUŠIĆ, B., 1987. - Branko Marušić, Starohrvatska
nekropola u Žminju, Arheološki muzej Istre, Pula.
MARUŠIĆ, B., 1994. - Branko Marušić, Varia Archaeologica
secunda, Histria Archaeologica, 13-14/1982-1983, Pula, 33-
, T. 1-14.
MATEJČIĆ, I., 1997. - Ivan Matejčić, Dvije crkve, Rijeka-
Rovinj.
MIRABELLA ROBERTI, M., 1949. - Mario Mirabella
Roberti, Notiziario archeologico Istriano (1940-1948),
Atti e memorie della Società Istriana di archeologia e
storia patria, NS, vol. I, Venezia, 230-275.
MORASSI, A., 1924.-1925. - Antonio Morassi, La chiesa
di Santa Maria Formosa o del Canneto in Pola, Bolletino
d’arte del Ministero della publica istruzione, IV,
Roma, 11-25.
RUSSO, E., 1991. - Eugenio Russo, Sculture del complesso
Eufrasiano di Parenzo, Edizioni Scientifiche Italiane,
Napoli.
RUSSO, E., 2003. - Eugenio Russo, L’architettura di
Ravenna paleocristiana, Istituto Veneto di Sienze, Lettere
ed Arti, Venezia.
SALONA I, 1994. - , Salona I. Catalogue de la sculpture
architecturale paléochrétienne de Salone (ur.) N. Duval,
E, Marin i C. Metzger, École française de Rome - Musée
archéologique de Split, Rome - Split.
STARAC, A., 1992. - Alka Starac, Antički nalazi iz
sondažnog iskopa kod crkve sv. Nikole u Puli godine
, Opuscula archealogica, 16, Zagreb, 183-205.
ŠONJE, A., 1982. - Ante Šonje, Crkvena arhitektura
zapadne Istre, Zagreb-Pazin.
ŠONJE, A., 1987. - Ante Šonje, Starohrvatska crkva sv.
Foške kod Žminja u Istri, Peristil, 30, Zagreb, 5-14.
ŠTOKOVIĆ, A., 2005. - Alojz Štoković, Crnogorska
pravoslavna zajednica u Peroju, Istarska enciklopedija,
(ur.) M. Bertoša i R. Matijašić, Leksikografski zavod
„Miroslav Krleža”, Zagreb.
TERRIER, J., JURKOVIĆ, M., MATEJČIĆ, I., 2008. -
Jean Terrier, Miljenko Jurković, Ivan Matejčić, Les sites
de l’église Saint-Simon, de l’ancienne agglomération
de Guran et de l’église Sainte-Cécile en Istrie (Croatie).
Sixième campagne de fouilles archéologiques, Hortus
Artium Medievalium, 14, Motovun-Zagreb, 231-248.
TERRY, A., 1988. - Ann Terry, The sculpture at the
cathedral of Eufrasius in Poreč, Dumbarton Oaks Papers,
, Washington DC, 147-164.
UJČIĆ, Ž., 1998. - Željko Ujčić, Pola paleocristiana alla
luce del catasto austriaco, Radovi XIII. međunarodnog
kongresa za starokršćansku arheologiju, III, Split - Poreč
, Cittá del Vaticano - Split, 743-758.
UJČIĆ, Ž., 2005. - Željko Ujčić, Ranokršćanska bazilika
sv. Marije Formoze u Puli, Arheološki muzej Istre, Katalog
, Pula.
VIDULLI TOROLO, M., 1983. - Marzia Vidulli Torlo,
Valori spaziali nella basilica Eufrasiana di Parenzo, Atti
e memorie della Società istriana di archeologia e storia
patria, 31, Trieste, 129-135.
VIDULLI TOROLO, M., 1984. - Marzia Vidulli Torlo,
Considerazioni sull’unità di misura utilizzata nella
basilica Eufrasiana di Parenzo, Aquileia Nostra, Aquileia,
-188.


