Sanctuary of Our Lady of Sorrows - Rho

Chapel of the Sacred Heart

Chapel of St. John

Chapel of St. George

Visit Gesiolo

Return inside the Sanctuary

The fresco

The Seven Sorrows of the Virgin

The Chapel of St. Joseph

The Chapel of St. George

Altar, Lectern and Seat

The central nave

The Gesiolo

Sacred Heart of Jesus - Oil on canvas

San Carlo Borromeo - Andrea Lanzani (1684) - Oil on canvas

Chapel of San Carlo

Introduction to Gesiolo

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Frescoed ceiling at the entrance

Jesus falls carrying the cross

Jesus in the temple

Jesus on the cross

The Deposition from the Cross

The Flight into Egypt

The prophecy of Simeon

Photography of the Nativity Scene

Saint George and the Dragon - Oil on canvas by Giovanni Ambrogio Figino (1586)

“Rest on the Flight into Egypt” - Camillo Procaccini (~1603) - Oil on canvas

Heraldic Coat of Arms of the Simonetta Family

Heraldic Coat of Arms of the Simonetta Family

REFUGIUM PECCATORUM CONSOLATRIX AFFLICTORUM

The Cross

Virgin and Child - Artist and era unknown - Oil on canvas

The Organs of the Sanctuary

The allegory of the Church

Chapel of the Immaculate Conception

Chapel of Sant'Ambrogio

Chapel of St. Anne

The Sanctuary-Basilica

The Missionary Oblate Fathers

The fresco of Our Lady of Sorrows - DeepZoom

Aerial View - Drone

The Nativity Scene of the Sanctuary of Rho

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New! Interactive guide to the work

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The fresco

The fresco depicts one of the most recurring themes in Christian sacred art: the Pietà. Christ, taken down from the cross, lies in the arms of the Virgin, who contemplates her son's body with tears.

The work was part of a gesiolo, a small country oratory, dating back to 1522. This must have faced the road leading to Lainate, along one of the ancient stretches of the Simplon Pass, now Corso Europa. Following the "Miracle of the Tears of Blood," which occurred on April 24, 1583, construction of the sanctuary began, gradually incorporating the small chapel. By 1589, five years after the cornerstone was laid by Charles Borromeo, the sanctuary's apse was nearly completed, and it was possible to move the fresco to the upper altar, allowing it to be venerated by the ever-increasing number of pilgrims. To expedite the completion of the project, Saint Charles's successor, Gaspare Visconti, assisted by Bishop Federico Borromeo, decided to remove the fresco using the "stacco a massello" technique. This process requires much less time than the "strappo" technique but is much more invasive. Indeed, observing the fresco, one can see figures on the sides, only partially visible. These were figures participating in Christ's Lamentation, but they have been lost because, with the "stacco a massello" technique, only the affected portion of the wall is removed.

Restoration work in the 1990s revealed that the background, covered in black in the 17th century, recreates the countryside surrounding Gesiolo at the time of the miracle. Today, although it requires further restoration, the "miraculous fresco" attracts thousands of pilgrims who come every year to admire, and especially to venerate, this work of the Italian Renaissance.
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The Chapel of St. George

The left portion of the transept houses, at its end, the chapel of San Giorgio, the second oldest.
The decoration of the altar was entrusted, around 1614, to Pier Francesco Mazzucchelli, known as Morazzone, a Lombard painter of the Counter-Reformation period. He created the cycle of frescoes depicting the hagiography of Saint George, with a distinctive Baroque style, influenced by his training in Rome. Of particular note is the presence of a trompe-l'oeil on the left side of the chapel: in the scene depicting the episode "Saint George Forced to Pray to the Pagan Gods," a soldier, frightened by the earthquake caused by the saint, appears to be falling from the fresco frame.
At the centre of the chapel there is an altarpiece depicting “Saint George and the Dragon” by Ambrogio Figino, a Mannerist painter of the Lombard scene.
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Sacred Heart of Jesus - Oil on canvas

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Jesus falls carrying the cross

Jesus in the temple

Jesus on the cross

The Flight into Egypt

The prophecy of Simeon

Photography of the Nativity Scene

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Heraldic Coat of Arms of the Simonetta Family

Heraldic Coat of Arms of the Simonetta Family

REFUGIUM PECCATORUM CONSOLATRIX AFFLICTORUM

The Cross

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The Jubilee Year of the Rho Sanctuary It all began around a small chapel, the "gesiolo," built on the Simplon Pass in 1522, 500 years ago. Here, the painting of the Madonna wept tears of blood on April 24, 1583. Saint Charles had a thorough investigation conducted and ultimately recognized the miraculous event, exclaiming, "Here is the finger of God!" Since then, a large sanctuary has been built right above the "gesiolo," which today celebrates this Jubilee Year with many events: Pope Francis has granted plenary indulgence to pilgrims. As we recount in this video and in Milano7 Avvenire.

➨ Direct link to the article: https://www.chiesadimilano.it/

Credit to: Luca Frigerio and www.chiesadimilano.it

New! Interactive guide to the work