Pompei is an Italian city with 25,196 inhabitants (December 31, 2016) in the province of Naples. It is located south of Mount Vesuvius, on the right bank of the Sarno River, about 3 km before it flows into the Gulf of Naples are : Torre Annunziata, Boscoreale, Castellammare di Stabia, Sant Antonio Abate, Santa Maria la Carità and Scafati.
Church of Pompei
The Shrine of Our Lady of the Rosary (Santuario della Beata Vergine del Rosario) is a Roman Catholic Marian pilgrimage church in Pompei, in the Italian metropolitan city of Naples. The neo-baroque domed basilica was built in 1878-1891 on the initiative of Blessed Bartolo Longo in honor of the Queen of the Rosary and was significantly expanded in 1934-1939. It holds 6000 believers. The Marian Sanctuary is the cathedral of the Territorial Prelature of Pompeii and has the rank of a papal basilica.
Bartolo Longo (1841-1926), a lawyer and heir to a large fortune, after his religious conversion, made it his goal to promote the rosary. For his Rosary Church planned in the valley of Pompeii, he was given a picture of the Mother of God with the Child giving the rosary to two saints. The unsightly and neglected image, which did not please Longo, was soon credited with a first miraculous healing, followed by others, and became a pilgrimage destination. Longo and the Neapolitan noblewoman Mariana di Fusco, whom he married in 1885, made the construction of the pilgrimage church possible with their endowments in addition to important works of Caritas. The single-nave church on a cruciform plan was completed in 1891 and, due to the large number of worshipers, was expanded in 1934 to include two aisles with chapels and an ambulatory.[1] Pope John Paul II visited the shrine in 1979 and 2003, Pope Benedict XVI. 2008