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The inscription on the Church of St. John Evangelist states that its was built at the start of the 1700s, on the site of an ancient, probably Romanic, church.
The original structure has been preserved intact: the only later elements added are those resulting from the remodelling undertaken by Brother Michelangelo Cianti who began embellishing the church with his work at the end of the 19th, century, starting with the presbitery.
The facade is divided in two, each half is further divided into three by groups of two central and two corner Doric and Corinthian capitals.
Inside, the vast rectangular space has three chapels on each side and a deep, semicircular apse. The ceiling of the central nave is cross arched, while the chapels are crowned with cupolas on a square base. The architectural structure is linear and simple.
There are two windows for each bay, in the lunettes formed by the downthrust of the vaults, so that each chapel is lit by a window on the altar wall.































