Coordinates: 42°20′09.96″N 3°43′12.72″W / 42.3361000°N 3.7202000°W / 42.3361000; -3.7202000

Abbey of Santa María la Real de Las Huelgas: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
Line 113: Line 113:
File:Interior 1 of the chorus de Las Huelgas at Burgos 1842-1850 Villaamil Asselineau.jpg|Interior of the chorus of Las Huelgas by [[Jenaro Pérez Villaamil]] and [[Léon-Auguste Asselineau]] in 1850, published in the work ''España artística y monumental''
File:Interior 1 of the chorus de Las Huelgas at Burgos 1842-1850 Villaamil Asselineau.jpg|Interior of the chorus of Las Huelgas by [[Jenaro Pérez Villaamil]] and [[Léon-Auguste Asselineau]] in 1850, published in the work ''España artística y monumental''
File:Interior of the chorus of the Monastery of Santa María de las Huelgas Burgos 1854 Villaamil.jpg|Entrance of the chorus of Las Huelgas by [[Jenaro Pérez Villaamil]] and [[Philippe Benoist]] in 1850, published in the work ''España artística y monumental''
File:Interior of the chorus of the Monastery of Santa María de las Huelgas Burgos 1854 Villaamil.jpg|Entrance of the chorus of Las Huelgas by [[Jenaro Pérez Villaamil]] and [[Philippe Benoist]] in 1850, published in the work ''España artística y monumental''
File:Nuns in the cloister of San Fernando at the Monasterio el Real de Las Huelgas 1874.jpg|[[Nun]]s at Cloister of San Fernando in the Monastery of el Real de Las Huelgas. "La Ilustración Española e Iberoamericana"'s engraving in 1874.
File:Nuns in the cloister of San Fernando at the Monasterio el Real de Las Huelgas 1874.jpg|[[Nun]]s at Cloister of San Fernando in the Monastery of el Real de Las Huelgas. "La Ilustración Española e Iberoamericana"'s engraving in 1874.|
File:Monasterio de las Huelgas,Festividad del Curpillos 1 jpg.jpg|View of the monastery during celebration of Fiesta of El Curpillos. late-19th century.
</gallery>
</gallery>



Revision as of 19:45, 1 August 2016

Abbey of Santa María la Real de Las Huelgas
Native name
Spanish: Monasterio de Santa María la Real de Las Huelgas
Facade of the monastery
LocationBurgos, Castile and León, Spain
Founded1180
Built12th-13th centuries
Architectural style(s)Romanesque, Almohad, Gothic
Governing bodyCistercian nuns
Official nameMonasterio de Santa María la Real de las Huelgas
TypeNon-movable
CriteriaMonument
DesignatedJune 3, 1931[1]
Reference no.RI-51-0000453
Abbey of Santa María la Real de Las Huelgas is located in Spain
Abbey of Santa María la Real de Las Huelgas
Location of Abbey of Santa María la Real de Las Huelgas in Spain
Ambulatory and gardens of the monastery.
File:Las Claustrillas Las Huelgas.jpg
Las Claustrillas.

The Abbey of Santa María la Real de Las Huelgas is a monastery of Cistercian nuns located approximately 1.5 km west of the city of Burgos in Spain. The word huelgas, which usually refers to "labor strikes" in modern Spanish, refers in this case to land which had been left fallow. Historically, the monastery has been the site of many weddings of royal families, both foreign and Spanish, including that of Edward I of England to Eleanor of Castile in 1254, for example. The defensive tower of the Abbey is also the birthplace of King Peter I of Castile.

History

Tower of Alfonso XI, part of the former City Walls, and belongs to Las Huelgas.
File:Fountain in courtyard of Santa Maria la Real de las Huelgas.jpg
Details of a fountain.
File:Santa Maria la Real de las Huelgas.jpg
Detail of the Portería.

The abbey was founded in 1180 by Alfonso VIII of Castile "the Noble", at the behest of his wife, Eleanor of England, daughter of Henry II of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine. The foundation was probably Leonor's initiative: Stablish in the capital of Castile a monastery attended by noble ladies that be, like Fontevraud-l'Abbaye, residence of the monarchy and dynastic pantheon.

In 1187 already it know that the monastery was inhabited. This year the Kings make a substantial donation: "construimus ... monasterium in La Vega de Burgis quod vocatur Sancta Maria Regalis."

It was built on a recreation's place that had the monarch near the city of Burgos. The new construction includes a palace where kings could stay. Life in the monastery began with a group of nuns arrived from Monastery of Karitateko Santa Mariaren Errege of Tulebras, Navarre. With them came Doña María Sol, which was the first abbess of Las Huelgas. Doña María Sol belonged to the Royal House of Aragon. She received the sacred crosier in presence of many princes and bishops. She consegrated to Doña Constanza, Alfonso VIII of Castile's daughter. Gotta have in her convent a similar jurisdiction to the Cistercian abbot. She ruled for 16 years, from 1187 to 1203, the year she died. It is believed to be buried in the Chapter house.

The second abbess was Doña María Gutiérrez, who died in 1205. She was succeeded by the Infanta Doña Constanza, the founders kings's daughter.

Monastery of Las Huelgas welcomed distinguished ladies of the Castilian nobility and its abbess came to have great autonomy and power, depending directly on the Pope. She owned a quite heritage: 54 villas (towns), lands, mills and pontazgo, portazgo and montazgo tax exemptions, turnpike and montazgo and the possession of many of the royal families' valued personal items, most of them religious; the lordship had its own fuero, which the abbess applied. It is even claimed that, until the Council of Trent, the abbess was able to hear confession and give absolution, like a priest.[2]

Until the 16th century, it enjoyed many royal privileges granted to it by the king, including exemption from taxes, the lordship of many villages and territories (governed by the monastery's abbess), and the possession of many of the royal families' valued personal items, most of them religious. It is even claimed that, until the Council of Trent, the abbess was able to hear confession and give absolution, like a priest.[3]

One of the reasons that prompted the kings to found the monastery was to become in royal pantheon, and they themselves wanted to be buried there, as founders of a new dynasty. The Alfonso's grandfather and father lay in Toledo Cathedral. Alfonso VIII was building his own dynastic image. By first time he used the castle as heraldic emblem against the lion kept by his cousin and uncle, and his dead body was covered with a patterned blanket with castles.

Alfonso VIII, who was himself to be buried at Las Huelgas, along with his wife, Eleanor, created the affiliated Royal Hospital, with all its dependencies, subject to the Abbess.[4] The hospital was founded to feed and care for the poor pilgrims along the Camino de Santiago. Donations made to sustain the hospital noted the key role that Eleanor played in its founding and maintenance, and she made many donations in honor of her deceased son Ferdinand.[5]

In Oviedo Alfonso II of Asturias started the tradition of organizing a civitas regia with palace, chapel and cemetery. Later Ramiro II of León gave city of León a royal complex similar to the Oviedo -monastery and palace- and there his daughter Elvira built a first Leonese royal cemetery. Imitating Leonese pantheons, under patronage of Alfonso VI was built at foot of the monastery church of Sahagún a chapel-pantheon, royal funeral chapel. In Las Huelgas, like Oviedo or León, royal cemetery was located in a monastery adjoining the palace.

In 1199 Guido, Abbot of the Order, visited Las Huelgas to receive from Alfonso VIII the Burgalese foundation. In the Cister's mother house was building a funeral chapel for the founders. Similarly, Alfonso and Leonor express their desire to be buried in the monastery with all their descendants. In 1204 king makes a will and he expresses his wish that his remains stay a sepulcher (“ubi corpus meus tumuletur”).

In the same year[citation needed] the monastery was incorporated into the Cistercian Order and became the burial place of the royal family. Constance, the youngest daughter of Alfonso, joined the Cistercians there. She was the first known as the Lady of Las Huelgas. This position was held as well by other women from the royal family, including her niece Constance and her grand-niece Berengaria, and maintained the close connection between the community and their royal patrons.[6][7] Queen Eleanor and Queen Berengaria were both documented as supporting and being involved with the abbey.[8] While members of the royal family were secular leaders of the monastery, abbesses such as Sancha Garcia were spiritual authorities.[9]

Throughout the church there are sepulchers of the royal family, some tilled and other smooth. Las Huelgas became the main royal pantheon of Castile and preserved sepulchers of royal members until 16th century.

The chapter house, as was usual in the Cistercian abbeys, served as cemetery for the abbesses. There may come six sarcophagi preserved today in the Claustrillas.

Prior to the death of kings, were buried in Las Huelgas some of their prematurely died children: Sancho, second son after Berengaria, born in April 1181 and died in July of the same year, Sancha, Mafalda and Eleanor. Their sepulchers were perhaps initially in Las Claustrillas, where was the first royal cemetery, and now are in the church, in the nave of St. Catherine.

One of them is richly decorated and includes an epitaph dated 1194, QUIS QUIS ADES QUI MORTE CADES NostRA/ Per LEGE PLORA SUM QUOD ERIS QUOD ES TempoRE FUI PRO ME PRECOR ORA E/ MCCXXXII. "Whoever you are, you will fall in death, attends and cries the mine. I am what you will be and I was what you are now; I beg you to pray for me. 1194". Is ignored what infante belongs.

In 1189 Ferdinand was born, who for some years was the heir, but who died before their parents, in 1211. The kings gave the monastery a large sum of money to decorate his sepulcher ("ad ornandum sepulturam").

Rodrigo Jiménez de Rada reports that monarchs and infantes were buried together in the monastery. Rodrigo had visited the royal sephulcers and officiated several funerals. Indicates that Queen Eleanor was buried next her husband, King Henry I of Castile, who died in 1217, was buried next to his brother Ferdinand.

A community of lay brothers developed to help the nuns in their care of the hospital's patients, who became known as the Order of Brothers Hospitallers of Burgos. There were never more than a dozen of them, but they formed an independent Military order in 1474. The Brothers survived as an Order until 1587, when their Order was suppressed and they were again placed under the authority of the abbess.[10]

The Abbess of the monastery was, by the favor of the king, invested with almost royal prerogatives, and exercised an unlimited secular authority over more than fifty villages. Like secular lords, she held her own courts, in civil and criminal cases, and, like bishops, she granted Dimissorial Letters for ordination, and issued licenses authorizing priests within the territory of her abbatial jurisdiction to hear confessions, to preach, and to engage in pastoral care. She was privileged also to confirm the Abbesses of other monasteries, to impose censures, and to convoke synods. At a General Chapter of the Cistercians held in 1189, she was made Abbess General of the Order for the Kingdom of León and Castile, with the privilege of convoking annually a general chapter at Burgos.

Cloister of San Fernando.

The privileges of the abbess remained until the 19th century, when these were abolished by Pope Pius IX.

Currently, the monastic community, which at present numbers 36, is part of the Spanish Congregation of St. Bernard, a reform movement of Cistercian nuns, which arose during the 16th and 17th centuries. Due to this, they are also commonly referred to as "Bernadines". The nuns of this Congregation would follow a more exact observance of the Rule of St. Benedict than other Cistercian houses, with frequent and lengthy fasts, and celebrating the Divine Office about 2:00 A.M. The nuns support themselves through the decoration of porcelain items, making rosaries and providing laundry services for local hotels.

This abbey has founded a daughter house in Peru, the Monastery of the Most Holy Trinity, which is located in the agricultural Lurín District, on the outskirts of the Lima Metropolitan Area. The monastery has about ten professed nuns, and several candidates in various stages of formation. They support themselves by making cakes and jams, for which they use the produce of their own gardens.

Cultural heritage

The monastery is open to the public. Visits are administered not by the monastic community, but by the Spanish heritage organisation Patrimonio Nacional, which maintains the property as a Spanish royal site.

Las Huelgas preserves a 14th-century music manuscript, the Codex Las Huelgas. It contains monophonic and polyphonic music which is assumed to have been performed by the nuns. Some of the music is not found in any other source.

The monastery houses the Museo de Ricas Telas, a showcase of medieval textiles taken from the many royal tombs in the convent. Also on display is the tapestry that covered the tent of the Almohad caliph Al Nasir, known to the Christians as Miramamolin. This tapestry was seized by the victorious Christians at the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa on July 16, 1212. When Sancho VII of Navarre's men drove through an enchained circle of African slaves guarding Miramamolin's tent, the caliph fled with great haste, leaving this tapestry along with several other prizes of war behind for the exultant Spanish.

One of the many royal tombs at Las Huelgas

Burials

Historical images of Las Huelgas

See also

References

  • Baury, Ghislain (2012). Les religieuses de Castille. Patronage aristocratique et ordre cistercien, XIIe-XIIIe siècles. Presses Universitaires de Rennes.
  • Gayoso, Adnrea (2000). The Lady of Las Huelgas: A Royal Abbey and Its Patronage.
  • Shadis, Miriam (2010). Berenguela of Castile (1180–1246) and Political Women in the High Middle Ages. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-312-23473-7.
  1. ^ Template:Bien de Interés Cultural
  2. ^ Paradoxplace
  3. ^ Paradoxplace
  4. ^ Baury 2012.
  5. ^ Shadis 2010, p. 40-41.
  6. ^ Shadis 2010, p. 4-5.
  7. ^ Gayoso 2000, p. 91-116.
  8. ^ Shadis 2010, p. 35-41,63.
  9. ^ "Garcia, Sancha (fl. 1230)". Highbeam. Retrieved 15 December 2015.
  10. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia (1913) "Benedictine" p. 464

42°20′09.96″N 3°43′12.72″W / 42.3361000°N 3.7202000°W / 42.3361000; -3.7202000