Like the Frari, the massive Gothic brick edifice of Santi Giovanni e Paolo- slurred by the Venetian dialect into San Zanipolo – was built for one of the mendicant orders which burgeoned in the fourteenth century. Supporting themselves from the proceeds of begging, the mendicants were less inward-looking than the older orders, basing themselves in large urban settlements and working to relieve the sick and the poor. Reflecting this social mission, mendicant churches contain a vast area for the public congregation, and this requirement for space meant that the mendicants typically built on the edges of city centres. In Venice the various mendicant orders are scattered outside the San Marco sestiere: the Dominicans here, the Franciscans at the Frari and San Francesco della Vigna, the Carmelites at the Carmini and the Servites at Santa Maria dei Servi. (The dedicatees of the church, by the way, are not the apostles John and Paul, but instead a pair of probably fictional saints whose story seems to be derived from that of saints Juventinus and Maximinius, who were martyred during the reign of Julian the Apostate, in the fourth century.)
Santi Giovanni e Paolo is open Mon-Sat 7.30am-12.30pm & 3.30-7pm, Sun 3-6pm.
The first church built on this site was begun in 1246 after
Doge Giacomo Tiepolo was inspired by a dream to donate the land to the Dominicans – he dreamed that a flock of white doves, apiece marked on its forehead with the sign of the Cross, had flown over the swampland where the church now stands, as a celestial voice intoned “I have chosen this place for my ministry” (the scene is depicted in the sacristy). That initial version was soon demolished to make way for this larger building, begun in 1333, though not consecrated until 1430. Tiepolo’s simple sarcophagus is outside, on the left of the door, next to that of his son
Doge Lorenzo Tiepolo (d.1275); both tombs were altered after the Bajamonte Tiepolo revolt of 1310, when the family was no longer allowed to display its old crest and had to devise a replacement. The
doorway , flanked by Byzantine reliefs, is thought to be by
Bartolomeo Bon , and is one of the major transitional Gothic-Renaissance works in the city; apart from that, the most arresting architectural feature of the exterior is the complex brickwork of the
apse . The
Cappella di Sant’Orsola (closed), between the door to the right transept and the apse, is where the two
Bellini brothers are buried; it used to house the Scuola di Sant’Orsola, the confraternity which commissioned from Carpaccio the
St Ursula cycle now installed in the Accademia.
The simplicity of the cavernous interior – approximately 90 metres long, 38 metres wide at the transepts, 33 metres high in the centre – is offset by Zanipolo’s profusion of tombs and monuments, including those of some twenty-five doges.