The Santuario di San Pellegrino in Alpe or Santi Pellegrino e Bianco is a Roman Catholic church and adjacent hostel-hospital complex on a hilltop within the town limits of Castiglione di Garfagnana, province of Lucca, region of Tuscany, Italy.
The site is documented in a papal bull of Pope Alexander III in 1168, noting the hostel was led not by monks, but by lay workers.
By 1400, the church was refurbished and in 1473, a small sepulchral monument, in form of a tempietto, was constructed by Matteo Civitali.
[1] The legend of San Pellegrino, a patron of those travelling to Rome along the pilgrimage routes, led to local veneration.
Stories make him out to be the prince of a Scottish King during the late Roman Empire, who sought a hermit existence in a cave in this mountain, and died there until his relics were miraculously discovered.