| History
and Contents of the Shrine.
St Ignatius was born in 1491, died in 1556, was beatified
in 1609 and canonized in 1622. But only 59 years after his
canonization, in 1681, did the Jesuits receive possession
of the Tower-House of his birth and conversion. The transfer
of the property was made by the Marquises of Alcañizas
and Oropesa de Indias, who were the Lords of Loyola and
the legal holders and proprietors of the ancestral house.
And it was made through Doña
Mariana de Austria, the Queen Mother of Charles
II, the last Austria king, who thus became the Royal
Founders of the Shrine. A beautiful tablet
recalls this transfer in the central courtyard.
In accord with the sensibility of the times, the same that
had enclosed in large churches the tombs of the Apostles,
the Portiuncola of Assisi and the House of Loreto, so too
it was decided to encase the relic
of the Tower-House of Loyola in a fitting architectonic
reliquary. Jesuit General Giovanni
Paolo Oliva (1664-1681) entrusted the plan to Carlo
Fontana (1634-1714), who was Bernini’s disciple.
On Oliva’s death in 1681, his successor Fr Charles
de Noyelle (1682-1686) forwarded the plan to Loyola with
orders that it be executed to the letter.
Fontana’s building envisages a 150-meter long façade
with a circular church at the center, preceded by a portico
and topped by a dome that rests of a drum and is crowned
by a lantern. Two large wings spread on either side a central
body protrudes at the back like a tail. It has three floors
and four attics, two for each wing. The aesthetics of this
massive structure depended on the balance of volumes, the
distribution of gaps, and the hues of the marbles, some
gray and others rose. Five large courtyards made the building
lighter inside.
This plan was carried out with some modifications and resembles
a gigantic eagle of stone under which the Tower-House, the
essential element of the Shrine of Loyola, is sheltered
between the circular church and the southern wing. We have
devoted an ample space to its exterior and four floors.
On the other side of the church, a space symmetrical to
the Tower-House is reserved to the heirs of the Loyola family.
|