San Salvatore dei Fieschi, also known as the Basilica dei Fieschi is a Romanesque-Gothic style church, now converted into a parish church and minor basilica, located on Piazza Innocenzo IV in a hamlet of San Salvatore, a neighborhood of the commune of Cogorno in the Metropolitan City of Genoa, region of Liguria, Italy.
Construction of this church started circa 1244, commissioned by the prominent aristocratic Fieschi family, which included the then Pope Innocent IV (al secolo Sinibaldo Fieschi).
It is said the stimulus for its construction was the devastation on the region perpetrated by the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II, who had attempted to interdict Pope Innocent IV's travel to the First Council of Lyon in 1244.
The layout, the echoing flanking pilasters of the portal, the merlionated roofline, and central nave demarcated by robust columns follows a Romanesque pattern, while that altitude of the nave, the ogival arches, and the Rose window with a flat apse herald the Gothic tradition.
The massive square belltower at the apse is a peculiar addition with mullioned windows.