A church at the site existed since the 11th century. Tradition holds that the church was then rebuilt with donations made by the German mercenaries fighting alongside the Sienese in the 1260
Battle of Montaperti, where it is said the militia had called on
Saint George for help in defeating the Guelf Florentine army. Of the medieval edifice only the Romanesque-Gothic bell tower remains today. The current appearance dates to the intervention of architect
Pietro Cremona, who finished its reconstruction in 1738. The façade is characterized by two giant columns and the coat of arms of Cardinal
Anton Felice Zondadari, patron of the restoration. The transept houses the tombs of two member of the Zondadari family with a painting by F. Janssens. In the interior, on the counterfaçade, is the polychrome funerary monument (1656) to the painter
Francesco Vanni, set up by his son
Michelangelo Vanni. The elder Vanni completed the canvas with the
Crucifixion with Father Matteo Guerra, while an
Encounter of the Lord with his Mother on the Calvary was painted by his son,
Raffaello Vanni. The main altarpiece depicts
St George and the Dragon, by
Sebastiano Conca. The tall
Romanesque-style brick belltower, located just east of the apse and not easily visible from the street in front of the facade, was erected after the battle of Montaperto, the thirty-six windows represent the different
Contrade. ==Sources==