Spanish Romanesque: Difference between revisions

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File:Romanesque español.jpg
Provincial map which depicted the spread of Romanesque. Pink, areas of the Catalan Romanesque. Red, areas of the Aragonese Romanesque. In blue, areas of the Navarre Romanesque. Orange, areas of Romanesque Castilian and leonine. Between these two, in yellow, the current autonomous communities of La Rioja and the Basque Country, which at the time was both kingdoms (finally being incorporated into Castile) played. In various shades of green, Romanesque Asturian, Galician and Portuguese Romanesque Romanesque.
File:Route of the Camino de Santiago Frances.svg
The Pilgrim or "French way" enters Hispanic Christian kingdoms of the Iberian Peninsula for their Aragonese branches (Canfranc) and Navarre (Roncesvalles). From Logroño goes through the kingdoms of Castile and Leon, ending in Santiago de Compostela. The Cantabrian branch is diverted to pass through Oviedo route coined one of the first tourist slogans. "Who will not see Santiago and El Salvador, visits the servant and forgets the lord".

Spanish Romanesque to designate the spatial division of the Romanesque art corresponding to Hispanic-Christian kingdoms of the Iberian Peninsula in the 11th and 12th centuries. However, its stylistic features are essentially common to the European Romanesque, and in the particular differentiated between areas that usually subdivided. The southern half of the peninsula lacks of Romanesque art since remained under Muslim rule (Andalusi art). The Romanesque in the central area of ​​the peninsula is low and late, with virtually no presence at south of the Ebro and the Tagus; It is the northern third peninsular the area where are concentrated the Romanesque buildings. In view of the fact that the Romanesque is introduced into the peninsula from east to west, for the purposes of its study, the regional delimitation is done in the same direction: in "eastern kingdoms" (the kingdoms or Pyrenean areas: Catalan Romanesque , Aragonese Romanesque and Navarrese Romanesque), and "western kingdoms" (Castilian-Leonese Romanesque, Asturian Romanesque, Galician Romanesque and Portuguese Romanesque).

The First Romanesque or Lombard Romanesque has especially presence in Catalonia, while the full Romanesque spread from the foundations of the Order of Cluny along the axis of Camino de Santiago. The late-romanesque continues in the 13th century, especially in rural buildings.[1]

Architecture

Santa María de Eunate.
Lateral nave (with edge vaults) and central nave (barrel vault) of the church of San Isidoro de León (left, startup of lobed arch of transept).

From the 11th century the European artistic influence (especially Burgundian - Cluny - and Lombard monasteries - Lombard archs -) was superimposed on local artistic traditions ( called as "Pre-Romanesque - Visigothic art, Asturian art, Mozarabic art or Repoblación art) and Andalusi art or Hispanic muslim) and lived with the so-called [[Mudéjar Romanesque]] (or "Romanesque of brick", dominant in some areas, such as the center of the Northern Plateau -from Sahagún to Cuéllar-, Toledo or Teruel) giving rise to an art of strong personality.

The chronology in the penetration of architectural forms is visible in a display from east to west, being the first examples in Catalonia (Sant Pere de Rodes, 1022) and developed around Camino de Santiago those of Aragon (Cathedral of Jaca, from 1054), Navarre (Leire, 1057), Castile (San Martin de Frómista, 1066) and Leon (San Isidoro -portico of 1067), ending in Galicia, where it raised the most outstanding work: the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela (begun in 1075 with the plant of pilgrimage characteristic of most of the churches of the Way, from that of St. Sernin of Toulouse). The 12th century was the culmination of the style (Monastery of Ripoll, churches of Boí and Taüll -in Catalonia-, Castle of Lobarre, Monastery of Sant Chuan d'a Penya -in Aragon, Palace of the Kings of Navarre (Estella), Done Mikel eliza (Estella-Lizarra), Saint Mary of Eunate, Saint Peter of Olite -in Navarre-, Segovian arcaded churches, Santo Domingo (Soria), San Juan de Duero -in Castile-, Cathedral of Zamora, Old Cathedral of Salamanca -in Leon-). From the late 12th is identified the transition from Romanesque to Gothic (Cathedral of Tarragona, Cathedral of Lleida).[2]

Few, but notable are the churches of central plant, which are often associated with models of the Holy Land brought by the military orders (Eunate in Navarre, Vera Cruz in Segovia).[3]

<Gallery widths = "200" heights = "200"> File:Sta.Maria ripoll-planta.jpg|Santa Maria de Ripoll. File:Sant joan-abadesses-planta.jpg|Sant Joan de les Abadesses. File:San Martin de Fromista-Planta.jpg|San Martin (Frómista). File:Veracruz224.jpg | Vera Cruz (Segovia). File:Toro Collegiate Santa Maria planta.png|Santa Maria la Mayor (Toro). File:Plant of the Cathedral of Santiago. Archaeological and artistic-historical description of the Cathedral of Santiago. 1866.jpg | Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela. File:Lisbon cathedral annotated map.svg|Cathedral of Lisbon. </ Gallery> </ center>

References

  1. ^ Antonio Fernández, Emilio Barnechea and Juan Haro, History of Art, Barcelona: Vicens-Vives, 1992, ISBN 9788431625542, cp. 9, pg. 145-165.
  2. ^ Juan Haro, op. cit.
  3. ^ Raquel Gallego, Historia del Arte, Editex, 2009, pg. 188