BETA VERSION
Official Tourist Information Site
of Ravenna

Church of Sant’Eufemia

Via Barbiani, 7 - Ravenna

Nestled amidst buildings in Via Barbieri and preceded by a small garden stands the CHURCH OF SANTA EUFEMIA, a modest building hiding a rich and fascinating history.

A bit of history

According to the tradition, this church was the first one to be build in Ravenna and in the whole Po valley area. Here, St. Apollinaris would have administered the sacraments and brought from Aquileia the spoils of Saint Euphemia from Calcedonia.

Sources report at least three different religious buildings linked to Saint Euphemia in Ravenna, and it is thus difficult to identify them. In the sacristy there is a small well with an 18th-century inscription confirming it: “coepit hic fides ravennatium”, or “Here began the faith of the people of Ravenna”.

The present building was built between 1742 and 1747 in late Baroque style, on a design by the architect Giovanfrancesco Buonamici from Rimini and on the foundations of a former three-nave church about which there is no realiable information.

The church also has a small bell tower housing one of the oldest bells in the city, used continuously since its forging in 1358.

Since October 2002, the building has been the entrance to the archaeological site of the Domus of the Stone Carpets, discovered by chance 3 metres below street level, during works for the construction of an underground car park.

The interiors

The actual round-shape church has three different altars – a main one, and two side ones. One of these ones covers a well from which, according to legend, St. Apollinaris drew water to baptise the first converts in Ravenna.

Behind the main altar, it is possible to admire a painting by Antonio Burrini commissioned in 1686 on the occasion of the discovery of Saint Euphemia’s and Saint Agata’s spoils. The painting depicts the death of the saint to whom the church is dedicated, and the so-called sacristy of the “Hundred Priests” named after the congregation that used to meet there.

18th-century canvases by Andrea Barbiani and Giovanni Capaci embellish the side chapels and the sacristy. The former painted St. Apollinaris baptising the tribune, while the latter is the author of the Annunciation (1747) and the Visitation.

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A house with stone carpets

In the basement of the Church of Santa Eufemia there is one of the most important underground archaeological sites found in Italy in the last decades.

It is the Domus of the Stone Carpets, a complex of building dating back between the Roman and the Byzantine periods, richly decorated with marble and mosaic floors.

Particularly fascinating is a Byzantine palace made up of various rooms and courts, including a big banquet hall with a mosaic depicting The Dance of the Seasons.

Further information

Opening times

From March 1st 2022
Every day: 10am – 6.30pm

It is advisable to call +39 0544 32512 for more information on the opening hours.

Closing time

The church is closed on December 25th.

Entrance fee

Free admission

Accessibility

The church is accessible to people with physical disabilities.

How to get there

The church is located within a controlled traffic area of the city centre.

On foot / by bike: the church is in the city centre of Ravenna and is easy to reach by bike

By bus: route no. 1 (stops in Piazza Baracca)

By car: car parkings in Piazza Baracca (paid); Largo Giustiniano (secure parking next to the entrance of the domus); Piazza della Resistenza (less than 1 km on foot). For more information about parking areas click HERE.

A cura della Redazione Locale
E-mail: turismo@comune.ravenna.it

Last edit:13 July 2023

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