CONTRADA OF THE PANTHER - FROM THE PAST

Scuola di Jacopo della Quercia - Madonna of the almond, polychrome wooden statue, 15th century - Contrada headquartersThis quarter of Siena is situated to the west of the city, and was the popular portion of a district represented by the military companies of Stalloreggi di Dentro and Stalloreggi di Fuori. It was here that Duccio di Buoninsegna kept his workshop, and between the years 1308 and 1311 painted his much-admired Maestà. The Contrada adopted the name of Panther perhaps in homage to the wealthy Lucca merchants who resided in their quarter.  When the contrada came into possession of the oratory of St.John the Baptist in 1684 it enlarged and improved it. The oratory had been erected in 1642 by the town Treasury to house the corpses of the executed and it passed under the jurisdiction of the Panther and remained so until the close of the following century. In the second decade of the 20th century, the Panther’s members founded the Società del Leone; its purpose was to organize trips, culinary outings, and friendly get-togethers. The association remained active until the eve of the World War II. In 1959, world-famous baritone Ettore Bastianini, a native of the Panther, was elected Captain. He gave a fresh impulse to the contrada but he died prematurely in 1967 and the city of Siena renamed the Via delle Scuole after him in 1974. In Via Stalloreggi, there is a noteworthy tabernacle with a fresco entitled Madonna of the Crow. It marks the point where, as legend has it, a crow fell stricken by the plague in 1348, the first sign of the terrible epidemic that according to sources of the time reduced the Sienese population by more than half.

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