Symbolic monument of the city, the cathedral, dedicated to the holy bishop of the city and patron, Saint Berardo of the counts of Pagliara, was built starting from 1158 after the destruction of the ancient Santa Maria Aprutiensis in 1155 by the troops of Robert, count of Loretello. The exterior, isolated from the surrounding buildings by heavy interventions in the Thirties, features a facade crowned with battlements and where the Romanesque portal of 1332 by Diodato Romano opens, with fifteenth-century additions such as the Annunciation group by Nicola da Guardiagrele. The bell tower dates from the 12th century, to which in 1493 Antonio da Lodi added the tall octagonal spire with colorful ceramic inserts that would be reproduced in other Abruzzese locations, such as Atri, Penne, Città Sant’Angelo, and Loreto Aprutino. The interior, heavily redesigned by the works of 1932-35 that deprived it of the important ornamental and architectural layout of 1739 by the Ascoli Lazzaro Giosaffatti, is today in bare stone as it perhaps appeared in the 12th century, with three naves and a central tiburium. The terminal part of the choir, made in late medieval forms with large pointed arches on tall pillars, is attributed to the initiative of Bishop Niccolò degli Arcioni as an extension of the church. At the main altar is the magnificent altar frontal, with evangelical scenes and saints in silver, made by Nicola da Guardiagrele from 1433 to 1448. In the still Baroque chapel of San Berardo, on the altar is the altar frontal by Venetian Jacobello del Fiore, once in Sant’Agostino, with the Coronation of the Virgin and the representation of the city of Teramo as it appeared at the beginning of the 15th century.
Information about the Cathedral of San Berardo
Piazza Martiri Della Libertà,
17024 Teramo (Teramo)
861.250301 – 0861.240547 – 0861.244962 (Episcopal Curia)
Upon request
free
Source: MIBACT

