Exterior Ajaccio Cathedral is built in the style of the
Counter-Reformation with an
ocher Baroque
façade.
Interior The present cathedral is smaller than its predecessor. The interior's
Latin cross is delineated by the shallow and modestly-sized
transept, which is covered by a
dome. The central nave is very high and wide itself, but is short in length compared to the rest of the building. It is covered with
barrel vault arches reminiscent of the
Renaissance era. The building also has two aisles that depart from the front door and go up to the transept, separated in the middle by the seven chapels beside two rows of three
columns. Entering on the right is the
marble baptismal font. It is a simple bowl engraved with Giustiniani's coat of arms, surmounted by a Tuscan bronze crown, below which there is a gold inscription,
Heic baptisatus Magnus Imperator (
Latin for
Here is baptised the Great Emperor). The
altar is in
polychrome marble, and it was originally located at the
Church of the Suffragio in
Lucca but was given to the cathedral by
Elisa Bonaparte, Napoleon's sister in 1809. It has an altarpiece composed of four twisted columns of black marble from
Porto Venere. The
Corinthian orders have a double pedestal with a collection of marble. The
tabernacle dates from the time of the construction of the cathedral and originally stood at the baptismal font. It was then placed at the high altar and stands out for its unorthodox style. Ajaccio Cathedral has seven side
chapels, but the following three are the most prominent: • The
Chapel of Our Lady of Mercy (French:
Chapelle de la Vierge de la Miséricorde) is a 1752 chapel in honor of the Virgin of Mercy is dedicated to the patron saint of Ajaccio, the Virgin Mary. It has a marble altar designed by
Geonese sculptors decorated with spiral Brocatello marble from
Spain. • The
Chapel of Our Lady of the Rosary (French:
Chapelle de Notre-Dame du Rosaire) is a 1765 chapel that houses a stucco altar and series of boxes representing the
Glorious, Joyful, Luminous and Sorrowful Mysteries of the Rosary of the Virgin, a central
niche with the statue of the Virgin Mary and two side niches containing statues of
Saint Dominic and
Saint Catherine of Siena. • The
Chapel of the Madonna of Pianto (French:
Chapelle de la Madonna de Pianto) is a small 18th-century chapel that contains many murals by
Domenico Tintoretto and
Eugène Delacroix's The Triumph of Religion. The cathedral also houses a large
pipe organ built in 1849 by
Aristide Cavaillé-Coll and later restored and electrified by Joël Pétrique. ==References==