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Santo Stefano Rotondo is the oldest example of a centrally planned church in Rome. The church was embellished by Pope John I and Pope Felix IV in the 6th century with mosaics and colored marble. It was restored in 1139–1143 by Pope Innocent II, who abandoned the outer ambulatory and three of the four side chapels.
Santo Stefano Rotondo, Rome, late 5th century Basilica of San Lorenzo, Milan , perhaps 4th century, although the oldest part of the church now evident is an adjoining Imperial mausoleum of the 4th century (compare Santa Costanza in Rome)
Ss Primo e Feliciano S Stefano Rotondo, Roma They appear to be the first martyrs of whom it is recorded that their bodies were subsequently reburied within the walls of Rome. In 648 Pope Theodore I translated the bones of the two saints (together with the remains of his father) to the Church of Santo Stefano Rotondo , under an altar erected in ...
The hospital currently consists of a huge block of hospital services that extends between Piazza di San Giovanni in Laterano and Via di Santo Stefano Rotondo up to the eponymous basilica on one side, and along Via dell'Amba Aradam up to Via di Villa Fonseca on the other.
Rome – Santo Stefano Rotondo, a church built under the commission of Constantine I on the ruins of the Caelian Hill of Rome. Built in the 5th century, it is the first church in Rome to have a circular floor plan, instead of the traditional Greek or Latin cross designs [51]
Santo Stefano del Cacco (also Santo Stefano de Pinea), a church in Rome; Santo Stefano di Venezia, a church in Venice; Santo Stefano Maggiore, a basilica in Milan; Santo Stefano in Manciano, a medieval abbey, long abandoned, at Manciano (frazione of Trevi)) in Umbria, Italy; Santo Stefano Rotondo (also Santo Stefano al Monte Celio), an ancient ...
Santi Andrea e Bartolomeo is a Catholic church in Rome (Italy), in the Rione Monti, on Via Santo Stefano Rotondo. History ... Rome. p. 115. C. Hulsen (1927).
Casa di Santo Stefano was visited by the exiled leader of the Catholic Church, József Mindszenty on 2 October 1971. The house is a popular place of accommodation for Hungarian travelers and pilgrims in Rome from Hungary, Romania, Slovakia and other countries.