Cappella dei Caduti
At the end of the fifteenth century was built the Lazaretto of San Rocco wanted by the Magnificent Motherland Riviera relegarvi for the sick and strangers. Its construction, which still exists today, includes a two-story building, a courtyard and a church: in 1514 it was built the chapel, where the altar is a well-preserved canvas representing St. Roch, which is dedicated.
With the decree of Napoleon of 186 which forbade burial in churches and churchyards, it became necessary to the establishment of a cemetery. It was thus entrusted with the work of expansion and beautification of San Rocco to the famous Rudolph Valentini, which gives the cemetery a neoclassical style and builds a chapel dedicated to the fallen. Under the white church is the crypt where the remains of the war dead.
The altarpiece altar are representative of the Crucifixion with Mary Magdalene at the foot of the frescos and Ottorino Benedini.