
Santa Maria delle Stelle
The mother church of Comiso, this minor basilica rose from the rubble of the catastrophic 1693 earthquake to become a testament to the city’s resilience and artistic renewal.
At a glance
Santa Maria delle Stelle stands as the principal church of Comiso, in the province of Ragusa. Built between the late fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries, it replaced an earlier medieval structure. The basilica holds the ecclesiastical rank of minor basilica.
History
Construction began on an embankment overlooking the Fonte Diana, on ground that once held a twelfth-century church dedicated to Santa Maria del Mulino, a Chiaramonte structure named for its proximity to an ancient mill.
In the early sixteenth century, one of the first mechanical clocks in the region was mounted on the exterior transept wall. The devastating earthquake of 1693 severely damaged the basilica, but reconstruction commenced with urgency. Count Baldassarre IV Naselli provided crucial financial support, while local artisans—among them sculptor Emanuele Lucenti—labored to restore and carve the moldings. Under the direction of archpriest Francesco Maria Porcelli, work progressed so swiftly that Bishop Asdrubale Termini of Syracuse reconsecrated the temple on 13 December 1699. A commemorative plaque inside the cathedral marks this ceremony. In 1881, the original sixteenth-century clock was replaced by a modern mechanism and moved to the Church of the Madonna delle Grazie.
What you see
The basilica exhibits architectural features spanning its long formation. Original fourteenth and fifteenth-century elements survive beneath the eighteenth-century reconstruction that followed the earthquake. The transept wall once bore a distinctive early mechanical clock, now removed. The interior preserves carved stone moldings by Lucenti and other local craftsmen, reflecting the post-1699 restoration aesthetic.
Cultural significance
Santa Maria delle Stelle embodies the recovery and renewal of southeastern Sicily after the 1693 seismic disaster. The basilica demonstrates the collaboration between aristocratic patronage, ecclesiastical authority, and local artistic talent in rebuilding civic and spiritual infrastructure. Its layered history—from medieval foundations through Renaissance additions to Baroque restoration—traces the city’s cultural identity across five centuries.
Key facts
- Address: Via S. Biagio 16, 97013 Comiso
- Coordinates: 36.946439, 14.6042994
- Phone: 0932 961558
- Official website: https://www.diocesidiragusa.it
Practical information
Opening hours and admission details are not listed; contact the church directly or visit the diocesan website for current information.
Getting there
The basilica is located in central Comiso on Via S. Biagio. For detailed directions and public transport options, consult local travel resources or contact the church directly.
Sources & resources
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