The Sacro Monte di Crea (literally ‘Sacred Mountain of Crea’, although it is built on a hill rather than a mountain) is a Roman Catholic sanctuary in the comune of Serralunga di Crea, Piedmont, northern Italy. It is reached via a steeply ascending route which winds through a wooded natural park, whose flora where catalogued by the Casalese photographer and polymath Francesco Negri.
Construction began in 1589, around an existing sanctuary dedicated to the Virgin Mary whose creation is traditionally attributed to Saint Eusebius of Vercelli, around 350 AD. Eusebius is also said to have installed the statue of the Madonna which is still venerated in the sanctuary.
The chapels dedicated to the Mysteries of the Rosary were positioned around the one thousand year old Marian sanctuary on the highest of the hills of Basso Monferrato . As time passed the initial scheme of the monumental layout was altered on a number of occasions and in 1820 significant restoration work began after its partial destruction.
Gallery
View of the "Paradise Chapel"
Guglielmo Caccia, called "il Moncalvo", Fresco on the ceiling of chapel XVII, scene of a banquet told by the Old Testament
Antonio Brilla, The finding of the empty tomb of Christ, 1889
View of a chapel
View of a chapel
View of the park during wintertime
Antonio Brilla, The finding of the empty tomb of Christ, 1889
Sacro Monte di Crea
Clay statues of the "Paradise Chapel", detail of The Crowning of the Virgin