The construction of the monumental complex of San Domenico of Aidone, in Sicily, was begun in 1419 by the will of the Beato Fra Vincenzo from Pistoia, on project of the architect aidonese Vincenzo Di Luca. In this church he venerated the relic of the plug of the Lord. The temple is notable for the white facade to diamond tip, which is very rare in religious buildings, but is found mainly in political buildings as the serious Pinto of Sciacca and the Palazzo dei Diamanti in Ferrara. At the sides of the facade there are two highs and cantonal enthusiastic in sandstone (coming from the contrada mountain), in which is located the style plateresco popularized from Catalonia in the second half of the Fifteenth Century. The valances culminate in an eardrum lowered, punctuated by metope and triglifi. Very nice and accurate and the portal, on whose sides there are two pilasters in which is located the style again plateresco. The pilasters culminate with a Corinthian capitals embellished by the faces of the angels. The church has a single nave, completed by an apse. The architects when they restored the church after the earthquake of 1693, left the right wall in stone and the other with eighteenth-century stuccoes. In the apse there are few traces of a fifteenth-century rose window. The sides of the apse there are two cantonal (always in sandstone) ending with a Corinthian capital.
The convent built near the church lived for 4 centuries an intense religious life, until disappearance of the Dominicans of Aidone. Subsequently it was used as a primary school male up to what was not abandoned and collapsed.