Basilica of Santa Maria dei Servi in Siena

Romanesque-Gothic basilica · 13th–15th century · Siena, Tuscany

Basilica of Santa Maria dei Servi, Siena

The Basilica of Santa Maria dei Servi is a Romanesque-Gothic church in the Terzo of San Martino in Siena, Tuscany. Founded in the thirteenth century by the Servite order and completed over the following two centuries, it contains one of the finest collections of Sienese Gothic and early-Renaissance painting outside the Pinacoteca Nazionale, including Coppo di Marcovaldo’s celebrated Madonna del Bordone (1261) and Lippo Memmi’s Madonna dei Magi (1317).

At a glance

Type
Catholic basilica (Servite order)
Period
Founded mid-13th century; construction continued through 15th century
Style
Romanesque-Gothic; interior with Sienese Gothic and Renaissance altarpieces
Location
Piazza Alessandro Manzoni, Siena, Tuscany, Italy
Coordinates
43.3150° N, 11.3361° E

Overview

Santa Maria dei Servi stands at the southern edge of Siena’s historic centre, just outside the main medieval ring yet firmly within the UNESCO-protected zone. The Servite friars built it on a prominent hilltop position that commands views over the Sienese countryside. Though less visited than the Duomo, it rewards those who seek out its extraordinary concentration of medieval painting.

History

The Servites established their Sienese community around 1253 and began constructing the church shortly after. Building proceeded in phases through the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, producing the broad nave and brick campanile visible today. The interior was enriched by commissions from prominent Sienese families, who endowed chapels and altarpieces as acts of piety and civic display. The church survived the suppressions of the Napoleonic era and remains an active place of worship.

What you see

The wide nave is lined with lateral chapels containing a remarkable sequence of Sienese masterworks. Coppo di Marcovaldo’s Madonna del Bordone (1261) is among the earliest signed and dated panel paintings in Tuscan art. Nearby, Pietro Lorenzetti’s Massacre of the Innocents (c. 1330) occupies a full altar face with dramatic narrative intensity. The apse preserves frescoes and the Romanesque bell tower anchors the exterior silhouette visible from many parts of Siena.

Cultural significance

The basilica functions as an informal survey of Sienese painting from the Byzantine-influenced Duecento through the refined Gothic of the Trecento, documenting how Sienese artists developed a distinctive vocabulary independent of the Florentine tradition. For art historians, its altarpieces provide primary evidence for dating and attribution of key Sienese masters.

Practical information

Address
Piazza Alessandro Manzoni, 53100 Siena SI, Italy
Opening hours
Generally open daily; check official sources for current times
Admission
Free entry (donations welcome)

Getting there

From Piazza del Campo, follow Via Roma southward for approximately 10 minutes on foot; the basilica’s brick façade and campanile become visible as you descend toward the Porta Romana quarter. Siena is connected to Florence by Sita Nord bus (approx. 75 minutes) and by train with a change at Empoli. Within Siena, city buses serve the southern districts from Piazza Gramsci.

Sources & resources

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