In 1217 Pope Honorius III granted several privileges to the monastery and, in 1384, Gian Galeazzo Visconti had the church restored and embellished.
[1] In 1421 the bishop of Pavia Pietro Grassi donated the monastery to the Order of Friars Minor, who in 1458 had the church rebuilt, making it frescoed by Vincenzo Foppa.
[5] In 1808 the church, the bell tower and the cloister were demolished, while in 1838 the south façade of the neoclassical building was built to a design by Giuseppe Marchesi.
[6] In 1859, with the passage of Lombardy from the Austrian Empire to the Kingdom of Italy, the Faculty of Agriculture was closed, and the complex became home to the geophysical observatory of the University of Pavia, so much so that a geodynamic pavilion was built.
Of the ancient monastery are preserved, in addition to the cell of Blessed Bernardine of Feltre and the surrounding wall, also a chapel with a porch of the 16th century, in which remains of frescoes persist.