Just north of the Piazza Castello and the Royal Palace sits the bland facade of the catehdral Far more interesting is the single chapel inside the cathedral’s pompous, 15th-century interior—the baroque Cappella della Santa Sindone, occasional home to the controversial Santissima Sindone (Shroud of Turin; see the box, below).
Even without the presence of one of Christendom's most precious relics—only rarely on view in a silver casket elevated on the altar in the center of the room—the chapel is still well worth a visit. Restored after a 1997 fire (one of many the shroud has miraculously survived, with occasional singeing, over the centuries), the chapel is somberly clad in black marble. But, as if to suggest that better things await us in the heavens, it ascends to an airy, light-flooded, six-tiered dome, one of the masterpieces of Italian baroque architecture. In front of the cathedral stand two landmarks of ancient Turin—the remains of a Roman theater and the Roman-era city gate Porta Palatina, flanked by twin 16-sided towers.
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Piazza San Giovanni
tel. +39-011-5661540 or 011-4361540
www.sindone.org
www.duomoditorino.it
daily 8am–12:30pm and 3–7pm
€5.50
Bus: 4r, 11, 27, 51, 57, 92
Trolly: 4, 6, 7
Hop-on/hop-off: Capolinea (A, B, C)