Rome, Santa Cecilia in Trastevere, ceiling fresco "the Coronation of Santa Cecilia" by Sebastiano Conca and Carlo Maratta.
Santa Cecilia in Trastevere is a 5th-century church in Rome, Italy, in the Trastevere rione, devoted to the Roman martyr Saint Cecilia.
The first church on this site was founded probably in the 3rd century, by Pope Urban I; it was devoted to the young Roman woman Cecilia, martyred it is said under Marcus Aurelius Severus Alexander (A.D. 222-235). Tradition holds that the church was built over the house of the saint. The baptistery associated with this church, together with the remains of a Roman house of the early Empire, was found during some excavations under the Chapel of the Relics. By the late fifth century, at the Synod of 499 of Pope Symmachus, the church is mentioned as the Titulus Ceciliae. On 22 November 545, Pope Vigilius was celebrating the Feast of the saint in the church, when the emissary of Empress Theodora, Anthemius Scribo, captured him.
Pope Paschal I rebuilt the church in 822, and moved here the relics of St Cecilia from the Catacombs of St Calixtus. More restorations followed in the 18th century.
Sebastiano Conca (8 January 1680 – 1 September 1764) was an Italian painter.
He collaborated with Carlo Maratta in the Coronation of Santa Cecilia (1721–24) in the namesake's church of Santa Cecilia in Trastevere.
More on https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santa_Cecilia_in_Trastevere , https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sebastiano_Conca , https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlo_Maratta