Pieve di Sorano

The parish church of Santo Stefano di Sorano in Filattiera is one of the most important Romanesque parishes in the province of Massa Carrara. It rises in a strategic area, frequented since prehistoric times (seven stele statues have been found in the area) and still preserves the plant of the XII century, a Romanesque architectural masterpiece, with an imposing apsidal system entirely made of rough-hewn sandstone pebbles. Inside the entirely restored parish church, numerous medieval elements are preserved as well as two original stele statues (Sorano I and Sorano V).

The area where the church stands is frequented since prehistoric times, as evidenced by the 7 stele statues found in the surrounding area and the numerous finds from the Iron Age. After the Roman phase, testified by the presence of a “mansio” recently investigated archaeologically, Filattiera was an important Byzantine military settlement. Before the current parish church there must have been another early medieval church (VIII-IX century) from which the Epigraph of Leodegar (752 AD) today in the church of San Giorgio inside the village.
The Romanesque parish church was built between the 11th and 12th centuries as part of the ecclesiasitic reorganization of the Diocese of Luni, of which this church is perhaps the most important dependence in Lunigiana. The Pieve di S. Stefano di Sorano has been mentioned since the 11th century in all the main documents related to the Diocese of Luni and experiences its heyday until the 14th century, when it begins to be abandoned and is gradually transformed into a cemetery chapel .

The current appearance is the result of a large restoration completed in 2000, which has restored the original appearance. The whole building is made with a very particular technique, with river pebbles not squared and put in place with abundant mortar.
The plan is a basilica with three naves, without a transept, with the central nave larger than the other two and the slightly raised presbytery. On the facade you can see the polylobed rose window and some buffered openings in the masonry. In the left internal counter-facade, in the corner, the stele statues Sorano I and Sorano V, found in the area of ​​the church: Sorano V was reused as an architrave of a small entrance open on the facade and then buffered.

The interior is sober, severe, not very bright, with large double-ring arches resting on round pillars with very short engraved capitals. On the left side there are some eighteenth-century masonry arches inserted between the Romanesque ones.
The decoration and symbols are reduced to a minimum, however there are some interesting images, in particular the monstrous figure present in the upper part of the central nave, on the left side.
The most interesting architectural part of the church from the point are certainly the three apses, built with an architectural decoration on different levels of depth. In the upper part of the main apse you can see traces of some small figured half-capitals.
The bell tower, perhaps born as a defensive structure, is connected to the church but represents an element in its own right.

A few meters from the parish church, heading north, there is the Sorano Didactic Center, home to an area equipped for excavation exercises, didactic archeology lessons, conferences and conventions.

[Source: turismoinlunigiana.it]