Santi Primo e Feliciano, Pavia

Santi Primo e Feliciano is a Romanesque-style Roman Catholic church in the town center of Pavia, Italy.

[1] It belonged to a college of canons regular who in 1354, became members of the Congregation of Servants of Mary, and so remained till the 18th century.

The facade it is enriched in the terminal part by a blind loggia with intertwined hanging arches that crown the top.

The first chapel on the right has a Virgin and child with Blessed Bertoni and St John the Baptist (1498) by Agostino da Vaprio.

In the counterface of the Gothic nave annexed to the church there is a large fresco representing Christ with the Apostles in the upper part and, in the lower part, the Virgin surrounded by two angels who take souls from Purgatory, while other paintings on the vaults represent Sforza coats of arms and Galeati lions, a company of Galeazzo Maria Sforza, these works were carried out between 1460 and 1491.

One of the surviving medieval naves frescoed with the Visconti coats of arms.