Charitable institutions attached to churches in Rome were founded right through the medieval period and included hospitals, hostels, and others providing assistance to pilgrims to Rome from a certain "nation", which thus became these nations' national churches in Rome (). These institutions were generally organized as confraternities and funded through charity and legacies from rich benefactors belonging to that "nation". Often, they were also connected to national (ancestors of Rome's seminaries), where the clergymen of that nation were trained. The churches and their riches were a sign of the importance of their nation and of the prelates that supported them. Up to 1870 and Italian unification, these national churches also included churches of the Italian states (now called "regional churches").
Many of these organizations, lacking a purpose by the 19th century, were expropriated through the 1873 legislation on the suppression of religious corporations. In the following decades, nevertheless, various accords â ending up in the Lateran Pacts â saw the national churches' assets returned to the Catholic Church.
Italian regional churches
* Sant'Ignazio di Loyola in Campo Marzio
* Santa Maria in Ara Coeli (Rome)
* Santissimo Nome di Gesù all'Argentina
* Santi Ambrogio e Carlo al Corso
* Santi Bartolomeo e Alessandro a Piazza Colonna (Bergamo)
* Basilica di San Giovanni Battista dei Fiorentini (Florence)
* San Giovanni Battista Decollato
* Santa Croce e San Bonaventura alla Pilotta (Lucca)
* Santa Caterina da Siena a Via Giulia (Siena)
* Santi Benedetto e Scholastica (Norcia)
* Santa Rita da Cascia alle Vergini
National churches
Africa
* San Tommaso in Parione
* Santo Stefano degli Abissini
* San Tommaso in Parione
Americas
*San Patrizio a Villa Ludovisi
*Santa Susanna alle Terme di Diocleziano (former)
Asia
* Santa Maria Egiziaca (deconsecrated)
* San Biagio della Pagnotta
* San Nicola da Tolentino agli Orti Sallustiani
Europe
* San Giovanni della Malva in Trastevere
* Sant'Atanasio a Via del Babuino (Græco-Byzantine rite)
* Santa Maria dell'Anima
* Santa Maria della PietÃÂ in Camposanto dei Teutonici
* San Girolamo dei Croati
* San Marco Evangelista in Agro Laurentino (Dalmatia and Istria)
* San Silvestro in Capite
* San Tommaso di Canterbury
* San Giorgio e Martiri Inglesi
* Santissima TrinitÃÂ dei Monti
* San Luigi dei Francesi
* Sant'Ivo dei Bretoni (Brittany)
* Santi Claudio e Andrea dei Borgognoni (Burgundy)
* San Nicola dei Lorenesi (Lorraine)
* San Crisogono (Corsica)
* Santa Maria dell'Anima
* Santa Maria della PietÃÂ in Camposanto dei Teutonici
* Santo Spirito in Sassia
* San Basilio agli Orti Sallustiani (Græco-Byzantine rite)
* Santa Maria in Cosmedin (Græco-Melkite rite)
* San Teodoro al Palatino (Eastern Orthodox)
* Santo Stefano Rotondo al Celio
*Santo Stefano degli Ungheresi (demolished)
* Santo Stefano in Piscinula (demolished)
* Sant'Isidoro a Capo le Case
* San Clemente al Laterano
* San Patrizio a Villa Ludovisi (former)
* Santa Maria in Posterula (demolished)
* Santa Maria del Priorato
* San Giovanni Battista dei Cavalieri di Rodi
* Santa Maria della PietÃÂ in Camposanto dei Teutonici
* Santa Maria dell'Anima
* Santi Michele e Magno
* Santo Stanislao dei Polacchi
* Resurrezione di Nostro Signore Gesù Cristo
* Sant'Andrea degli Scozzesi (deconsecrated)
* Il Pontificio Collegio Scozzese
* Nostra Signora del Sacro Cuore
* Santa Maria in Monserrato degli Spagnoli
* Santissima TrinitÃÂ a Via Condotti
* San Carlino alle Quattro Fontane
* Santi Martino e Sebastiano degli Svizzeri
* San Pellegrino in Vaticano
* Santi Sergio e Bacco
* San Giosafat al Gianicolo
* Santa Sofia a Via Boccea (Byzantine-Ukrainian rite)
Note
References
Bibliography
External links