Convento de Santa Clara la Real, Toledo: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Content deleted Content added
Created page with 'thumb|right|Entrance The '''Convento de Santa Clara la Real''' is a convent of the Po...'
(No difference)

Revision as of 02:28, 8 March 2017

Entrance

The Convento de Santa Clara la Real is a convent of the Poor Clares located in the city of Toledo (Castile-La Mancha, Spain). The present convent was founded in the middle of the 14th century by the Toledan lady María Meléndez, and is located near other monasteries like the monastery of Santo Domingo el Real And the one of the Convent of Capuchins of Toledo.

History

The primitive convent of Santa María and San Damián of Toledo

The first Clares who settled in Toledo, even in the life of St. Clare of Assisi herself, were known at that time, as in the rest of Europe, as Dianians, "in memory" or honor of the first place where the San Damiano convent of Assisi had been established, and settled in the outskirts of Toledo, in the districtTemplate:Harvnp or valley of Santa Susana,Template:Harvnp, where the Seismological Institute of Toledo and the Santa Casilda Asylum are located,Template:Harvnp since the Toledan jurisdiction ordered that no monastery or convent be established in the interior of the city, due to the scarcity of urban land and the massive agglomeration of its inhabitants. Template:Harvnp

The Danaanites were ruled in Toledo by the Rule of Saint Benedict and were spiritually directed by the Franciscans of the cityTemplate:Harvnp, although, as the historian María Luisa Pérez de Tudela pointed out, lived according to the way of life of Saint Clare.Template:Harvnp In addition, that primitive convent was placed under the invocation of Saint MaryTemplate:Harvnp and Saint Damian,Template:Harvnp and although some authors point out that it was founded around 1250 with the permission of the famous archbishop of Toledo, Rodrigo Jiménez de Rada,Template:Harvnp who was present in the Battle of Las Navas of Tolosa, published in 1212, the historian Pérez de Tudela pointed out that in case of having been founded during the mandate of this prelate it would have been in 1247, that was the year in which the archbishop died abroad.Template:Harvnp[a]

Saint Clare of Assisi. Fresco made by Simone Martini at the beginning of the 14th century. Basilica of Saint Francis of Assisi

The foundation of the convento de Santa María y San Damián of Toledo was confirmed in 1254 by a bull by Pope Innocent IV,Template:HarvnpTemplate:HarvnpTemplate:Harvnp and the historian Pérez de Tudela pointed out that the first document in which the convent is mentioned is at the time is in the testament granted in 1248 by the Archbishop Juan de Medina de Pomar, who succeeded Rodrigo Jiménez de Rada at the head of the archdiocese of Toledo, and where, along with some convents located in the interior of the city of Toledo, is referred to another of the minor friars located outside its walls: "et uni quos est extra muris, quod est Ordinis Minorum", which shows according to the historian that in 1248 the Poor Clares were already established in the Valley of Santa Susana,Template:Harvnp where they lived:Template:Harvnp

With a life in closure, poverty, prayer, chastity, abstinence and silence. Life that became extremely heroic, especially in the last decade of the period, during which, they were always threatened and in danger; Firstly because of the plague of 1348 and later by the disorders of the civil war (1351-1369), as a result of which, the alfoz of Toledo, was a witness and suffered from fences, galloping warriors and looting.

In 1345, during the last period of the reign of Alfonso XI of Castile,Template:Harvnp that died by the bubonic plague while beleaguring Gibraltar in 1350,{{Harvnp|Pérez de Tudela y Bueso|2002|p=111} a new Ordinances for the city of Toledo were drafted in which were forbidden for anyone to live outside its walls, but Pérez de Tudela stated that the Toledo claresses could not comply with this provision because of their extreme poverty and their lack of resources to move to the interior of the walled enclosure, and were forced to continue bearing the inconveniences derived from the fact of residing outside the walled.Template:Harvnp Nuns remained in that place for more than a hundred years.Template:Harvnp

The convent of Santa Clara of Toledo

Gran dobla o dobla de a diez of Peter of Castile, son and successor of Alfonso XI, minted in Seville in 1360. (National Archaeological Museum, Madrid).

In the middle of the 14th century a lady of the Toledan nobility, María Meléndez, who belonged to a Mozarabic family and was married to Suer Téllez de Meneses, Toledo's chief constable,Template:Harvnp began to take the first steps towards the foundation of a convent of Poor Clares in Toledo. This lady was the Alfonso Díaz and Teresa López's daughter and Diego Alfonso de Toledo's sister,Template:Harvnp and June 22 of 1340, year in which according to the historian Pérez de Tudela began to form the foundation of the convent,Template:Harvnp King Alfonso XI authorized the María Meléndez' brother to untie and exchange with her the "Big Houses" that she had in the collage of San Vicente of Toledo and that she had received from her grandfather Alfonso Díaz by means of majorat, by any other inheritance whose cost of maintenance was less elevated.Template:Harvnp[b]

In 1360, Suer Téllez de Meneses, the María Meléndez' husband, diedTemplate:Harvnp and the historian María Luisa Pérez de Tudela said that the first "legal act" of the foundation of the convent of Santa Clara the Real took place the August 31 of 1368, during the Castilian Civil War, when María Meléndez donated to the Damianites nuns of Toledo and to its abbess Sancha Alfonso the houses of the city of Toledo where the founder lived along with their "inheritances et with cubas and the wineries and tinajas" so that in them they could establish a new convent, and on January 20, 1370, almost two years later, María Meléndez acquired for the convent half of some houses that were next to it and that belonged to "Habibi mora".Template:Harvnp

In 1370 the existence of the convent of Santa Clara de Toledo in the collage of San Vicente already appears in a document, and that same year the founder, María Meléndez, took the habits and professed like religious in the same, happening to be, as it indicated Pérez de Tudela, "one more" of the nuns of the convent, as it is recorded in several documents issued between 1373 and 1375, the latter year in which the abbess ceased to be mentioned in the same ones.Template:Harvnpthumb|330px|General view of the city of Toledo.

On June 27, 1371, Pope Gregory XI issued in Avignon the Bull Piis devotorum in the name of Gómez Manrique, archbishop of Toledo, authorizing María Meléndez to found in the city of Toledo a convent of Clarean nuns who should provide everything necessary so that thirty nuns could live in it,Template:Harvnp although the bull was also demanded that the church of the new monastery had bell tower and bells and that the temple had everything necessary for the cult, and the abbess Sancha Alfonso committed herself before the archbishop of Toledo in her own name and in that of her successors to pay the tribute of the Subsidio and of the parochial tenths.Template:Harvnp

In 1373 the convent of Santa Clara was canonically established, solemnly, by the deed of foundation granted by María Meléndez on June 13, by which ceded to that convent the houses it owned inside the walled city of ToledoTemplate:HarvnpTemplate:Harvnp and all its possessions so that the Clarisses could build a convent in that city with the capacity to lodge thirty nuns and a sufficient dowry so that the monastery could be maintained with its own rents.Template:Harvnp And on August 3 of that same year María Meléndez granted a new deed In Toledo, by which she expanded the foundational dowry she had given to the convent of Santa Clara on June 13.Template:HarvnpTemplate:Harvnp

References


Cite error: There are <ref group=lower-alpha> tags or {{efn}} templates on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=lower-alpha}} template or {{notelist}} template (see the help page).