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Santi Michele e Magno, Rome : ウィキペディア英語版
Santi Michele e Magno, Rome

| image=Borgo - SS. Michele e Magno.JPG
| caption=
| location= Rome, Italy
| geo =
| religious_affiliation=Roman Catholic
| rite=
| province=
| district=
| consecration_year=
| status= National Church in Rome of the Netherlands
| leadership= P. Tiemen J. S. Brouwer〔(Official website of the vicariate of Rome )〕
| architect=François Desjardins
| architecture_type= Church
| architecture_style= Baroque
| facade_direction=
| groundbreaking= 1141
| year started=
| year_completed=
| construction_cost=
| specifications=yes
| capacity=
| length=
| width=
| width_nave=
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| website=
}}
The Church of Saints Michael and Magnus ((イタリア語:Santi Michele e Magno), (オランダ語:Friezenkerk)) is a Roman Catholic church in Rome, Italy, dedicated to Saint Michael the Archangel and the Bishop Saint Magnus of Anagni. It lies in Rione Borgo, and is the national church dedicated to the Netherlands. It is also known as the "Church of the Frisians" ((オランダ語:Kerk van de Friezen)). In 1989, the church was granted to the Dutch community in Rome.
==History==
The Frisians were converted to Christianity in the 8th century by Saint Willibrord, known as the "Apostle to the Frisians" in the modern Netherlands. The Northumbrian missionary crossed the North Sea with eleven companions to bring the Gospel. From that time on, Frisian pilgrims regularly visited Rome. The old name for the people from the Low Countries who came to Rome has remained in use ever since.
A colony of Frisians was living in Rome as early as the 8th century. The ''Schola'' of the Frisians is mentioned at the time of Pope Leo III's return to Rome in 799, at Charlemagne's visit in 800 and by Louis II of Italy in 844. In 845, the Frisians and the inhabitants of the other scholae defended Old St. Peter's Basilica and its neighborhood against a Saracen invasion. The ''schola'' was plundered nonetheless. Shortly after, the neighborhood was surrounded by a wall, remains of which can still be seen. Any pilgrim from the Frisian territory who came to Rome would stay in the Frisian hospice, the closest to the St Peter's.
No remains of the small settlement's original church survive. Its patron saint was St Michael the Archangel, who liberated Rome from the plague. Later, a second patron saint was added to the church; Saint Magnus of Anagni, whose remains ended up in the church five hundred years after his death. Enthusiastic Frisians tried to bring the relics back to Frisia, but that initiative was stopped by Pope Leo IV, and since then, the relics remained in Rome. In 1446, Pope Eugene IV deprived the Frisians of the perpetual right to the church.

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