It appears as a chapel “sine cura” (1503), then a curacy (late 16th century), and finally became a parish in 1600. The new parish was named after the martyr Saint Cecilia, likely in response to the excitement caused by the discovery of the saint's body in her basilica in Rome in 1599.
It appears as a chapel “sine cura” (1503), then a curacy (late 16th century), and finally became a parish in 1600. The new parish was named after the martyr Saint Cecilia, likely in response to the excitement caused by the discovery of the saint's body in her basilica in Rome in 1599.