The Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore and the icon of Salus Populi Romani
The elaborate copper architectural frontispiece which opens the imposing monograph Abbot Paolo De Angeli wrote in the 1600s on St Mary Major presents key moments from the basilica’s history and the relics it houses through vignettes. Told in images, the account commences with the Salus Populi Romani icon, traditionally considered to have been painted by Saint Luke; it continues with the Madonna’s appearance to Pope Liberius in a dream, followed by the establishment of the church after Patrician John provided funding; it also illustrates a number of miracles. The story of Saint Gregory the Great holds pride of place in the centre of the frontispiece. It was he who, in 590, carried the icon in a procession to pray for the city’s liberation from the plague. On this procession, beneath Castel Sant’Angelo, the Madonna interceded to perform the miracle of Archangel Michael appearing to sheath his sword, indicating the end of the wrath of God and, in consequence, of the contagion. In the middle of the lower edge, we see the silver urn donated by Margaret of Austria in 1606 to house the wooden fragments of the manger on which Baby Jesus lay.
Paolo de Angeli, Basilicae S. Mariae Maioris de Urbe a Liberio papa I usque ad Paulum V pont. max. descriptio et delineatio..., Roma 1621