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About Orkney

Kirkwall

West Mainland

East Mainland

Over the Barriers
Churchill Barriers
The Italian Chapel
South Ronaldsay and Burray
Scapa Flow

South Isles

North Isles

World Heritage Site

A good map is a great help to visitors to Orkney. VisitOrkney produces a useful one, which also includes Shetland.

The Ordnance Survey 1:50,000 series covers Orkney in three sheets, and is recommended for all serious explorers.

The Italian Chapel

Orkney Tourism Group - Italian ChapelThe Italian Chapel, "the Miracle of Camp 60", built by Italian Prisoners of War of Camp 60, who arrived in January 1942 to help build the Churchill Barriers, is an unusual memorial to the war.

To brighten up the cheerless camp of Nissen huts the Italians made paths and planted flowerbeds. Domenico Chiocchetti made the St George and the Dragon statue from barbed wire and cement, to preside over the camp square. The prisoners soon had a theatre and a recreational hut complete with a concrete billiard table, but they lacked a chapel.

In late 1943 two Nissen huts were joined end to end and Domenico Chiocchetti set to work, aided by a small number of other POWs. One end was to be the Chapel, the other a school.

The hut was lined with plasterboard and an altar with altar-rail cast in concrete. Chiocchetti painted the Madonna and Child behind the altar which is based on a 19th century painting by Nicolo Barabino inspired by a card his mother had given to him. He also frescoed a White Dove, the symbol of the Holy Spirit, at the centre of the vault and included the symbols of the four Evangelists around it, as well as two Cherubim and two Seraphim lower down.

Orkney Tourism Group - Italian ChapelThe upper parts of the interior appear like brick with vaulting, while the lower walls are painted to look like carved marble. The “vaults” in the ceiling are especially well executed, and the visual effect is quite stunning. Palumbo, a metalworker, made candelabra and the rood screen and gates. A façade was erected with the help of Bruttapasta, with an archway and pillars. A belfry was mounted on top and a moulded head of Christ in red clay was placed on the front of the arch. The whole exterior of the hut was then covered with a thick coat of cement, never in short supply during the building of the Barriers!

Chiocchetti returned to Orkney in 1960, when he did much to restore the internal paintwork of the chapel. In 1961 his hometown, Moena, near Bolzano in the Dolomites, gifted a wayside shrine, a carved figure of Christ erected outside the Chapel, to the people of Orkney. More recently much exterior work has been done to restore and preserve the Chapel and the memorial statue for the future.

Orkney Tourism Group - Italian ChapelThe Italian Chapel is now one of the most-visited monuments in Orkney and is a fitting memorial to those lost in wartime. Chiocchetti, in addressing the Orcadian people, said, "The chapel is yours - for you to love and preserve. I take with me to Italy the remembrance of your kindness and wonderful hospitality. I shall remember you always, and my children shall learn from me to love you. I thank (you)....for having given me the joy of seeing again the little chapel of Lambholm where I, in leaving, leave a part of my heart.".

It is somewhat ironic that most of the many visitors to Orkney cross the Churchill Barriers. They come not to remember the English war leader, or to marvel at military engineering, but to visit our little Italian shrine, which is a monument to hope and faith in exile.

 

  Orkney Tourism Group - Company Number: SC281692