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EN
The ship pulpit from the Church of SS Peter and Paul in Antakalnis in Vilnius is regarded in the literature on the subject as a woodcarving project executed in 1803 by Giovanni Boretti and Niccolo Piano, who were supposed to have been brought specially from Milan to renovate the church and furnish it. Meanwhile, they were both simple masons who arrived in Vilnius in the late 18th century, and Piano died in 1802. Formally, the pulpit features show that it was executed in the 1720s after the design of Pietro Perti, co-author of the excellent stucco décor of the Antakalnis church. The actual executors were local woodcarvers already after the death of the stuccoist in 1714. The initiator of the works was the Antakalnis Provost Piotr Procewicz, doctor of philosophy and an appreciated preacher, who in 1737 took over the congregation of the Corpus Christi. The fact that the pulpit is earlier is confirmed by the inventory of the Antakalnis Church of SS Peter and Paul from 1766. The shape of the pulpit of the navis Ecclesiae type stemming from ecclesiological content fits in with the ideological programme of the church dedicated to Saints Peter and Paul. It is also particularly connected with the Order of Canons Regular of the Lateran who, as was assumed, came from the community of Apostles called by Christ. The second ship pulpit in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, actually quite faithfully replicating the Vilnius one, was created for the Church of Canons Regular of Corpus Christi in Kazimierz (1740-1745). This one, too, was raised as commissioned by Piotr Procewicz. The pulpit from Vilnius was created at the time when the navis Ecclesiae type pulpits were built throughout Europe.
PL
Łodziowa ambona z kościoła pw. św. św. Piotra i Pawła na Antokolu w Wilnie uchodzi w literaturze przedmiotu za realizację snycerską wykonaną w 1803 r. przez Giovanniego Borettiego i Niccola Piano, którzy mieli być specjalnie sprowadzeni z Mediolanu do remontu świątyni i jej dekoracji. Tymczasem obaj byli zwykłymi muratorami przybyłymi do Wilna jeszcze u schyłku XVIII w., Piano zmarł w 1802 r. Formalne cechy ambony wskazują natomiast, że została ona wykonana w latach 20. XVIII w. najpewniej według projektu Pietra Pertiego, współtwórcy znakomitego wystroju sztukatorskiego kościoła na Antokolu. Stało się to już po jego śmierci w 1714 r., a inicjatorem prac był prepozyt antokolski Piotr Procewicz, doktor filozofii i uznany kaznodzieja, który w 1737 r. objął prepozyturę kongregacji Bożego Ciała. Do świątyni kanoników regularnych laterańskich na Kazimierzu w latach 1740–1745 sprawił ambonę łodziową, wzorując ją na tej wystawionej w Wilnie. 
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