Rich in history and art: the Collegiate Church of Santa Maria Assunta and San Gregorio in Montone
The Collegiate Church in its current form dates back to the second half of the 1600s, although it was built upon an older structure dating at least to the 14th century, originally lower and without the apse and side chapels: the Church of Santa Maria Assunta. Until 1317, the ancient ‘Pieve Vecchia’, dedicated to Saint Gregory, was the parish church of Montone. From that year onward, Bishop Ugolino Gualterotti granted the title of Saint Gregory to the Church of the Assunta, which then became the parish church, equipped with a bishop’s chair and a college of canons.
Between 1661 and 1668, the building underwent a profound renovation carried out by the canon Giovanni Pazzaglia. From that moment on, the church adopted a Latin cross plan, with a single nave and an extraordinary wooden coffered ceiling.
The exterior features a simple gable façade, with a short staircase leading to the entrance portal, surrounded by a moulded stonework and surmounted by a small oculus.