As captured by photographer Roman Robroek:

Whether cloaked in thick moss and debris or almost entirely preserved, the abandoned churches photographed by Roman Robroek document the effects of a changing landscape. At least 1,000 of the religious spaces are left unoccupied in both small towns and cities throughout Italy and stand in varying degrees of disrepair. In visiting approximately 100 chapels for his series CHIESA, Robroek witnessed how the once-sacred structures have been left behind. “If a church, once the most important haven in the community, can become a pile of ruins, what does that say about what we hold certain today?” he asks in an essay.

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[All images © Roman Robroek]

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One response to “Abandoned Italian churches”

  1. Peter MacFarlane Avatar
    Peter MacFarlane

    Sad, but it always amazes me quite how many churches there are in Italy. Even quite modest towns seem to have literally dozens, and decent size places hundreds.
    They really can’t all be needed, or ever can have been.
    I guess quite a lot are private foundations – “pray for my soul, for ever, and here’s an endowment to do it with” – and stuff like that.

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