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The '''Cathedral of St Mary of the Assumption''' ({{lang-es|Catedral de Santa María de la Asunción}}) is a [[Roman Catholic]] [[church architecture|church]] located in the [[Spain|Spanish]] city of [[Ceuta]], in a small [[exclave]] on the northwest coast of [[Africa]].<ref name="Griffin2010">{{cite book|author=Hugh Griffin|title=Ceuta Mini Guide|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WZgaLegj_YAC&pg=PA14|accessdate=8 July 2013|date=1 February 2010|publisher=Horizon Scientific Press|isbn=978-0-9543335-3-9|pages=14–}}</ref>
The '''Cathedral of St Mary of the Assumption''' ({{lang-es|Catedral de Santa María de la Asunción}}) is a [[Roman Catholic]] [[church architecture|church]] located in the [[Spain|Spanish]] city of [[Ceuta]], in a small [[exclave]] on the northwest coast of [[Africa]].<ref name="Griffin2010">{{cite book|author=Hugh Griffin|title=Ceuta Mini Guide|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WZgaLegj_YAC&pg=PA14|accessdate=8 July 2013|date=1 February 2010|publisher=Horizon Scientific Press|isbn=978-0-9543335-3-9|pages=14–}}</ref>


On a primitive Christian church, which some researchers have identified with the one built in the 6th-century by Emperor [[Justinian I]], the old Great Mosque of Ceuta was built, an architectural work of enormous wealth according to the preserved descriptions, which underwent several enlargements and of which hardly anything is preserved.
The cathedral is a 15th-century structure, built on the site of a sixth-century Christian church. There have been considerable additions to it since its construction, and its most notable external feature today is its neoclassical entrance. Other notable features include a Renaissance black marble portal and a baroque altar in the chapel of Santísmo.


After the Portuguese conquest of 1415 this mosque was transformed into a Christian temple with the adaptations that were necessary and of which we barely have news. The passage of time and the damages suffered by the warlike incidents caused the ruin of the building and the need to build a new temple designed at the end of the 17th-century by the architect Juan de Ochoa. Its construction began in 1686 but was not consecrated until 1726 to the Assumption of Our Lady, due largely to the difficulties suffered as a result of the great siege to which Ceuta was subjected in those years.
The cathedral contains works of art dating from the 17th century to the present day.

Attached to the cathedral, there is a building with auxiliary departments that house the Vicariate, Secretariat, Diocesan Archive, Library and Cathedral Museum and other diocesan dependencies, in addition to the bishop's residence, around a small triangular courtyard.

It emphasize the Chapel del Santísimo with a Baroque altarpiece and the frescoes of Miguel Bernardini, besides three large canvases and the image of the Virgen Capitana of Portuguese origin (15th-century).


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 19:46, 12 April 2018

Ceuta Cathedral
Cathedral of St Mary of the Assumption
Map
LocationCeuta
DenominationRoman Catholic
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Architectural typeCathedral
StyleNeoclassical, Baroque, Renaissance
Specifications
Number of towers2
Administration
ProvinceSeville
DioceseDiocese of Cadiz y Ceuta

The Cathedral of St Mary of the Assumption (Spanish: Catedral de Santa María de la Asunción) is a Roman Catholic church located in the Spanish city of Ceuta, in a small exclave on the northwest coast of Africa.[1]

On a primitive Christian church, which some researchers have identified with the one built in the 6th-century by Emperor Justinian I, the old Great Mosque of Ceuta was built, an architectural work of enormous wealth according to the preserved descriptions, which underwent several enlargements and of which hardly anything is preserved.

After the Portuguese conquest of 1415 this mosque was transformed into a Christian temple with the adaptations that were necessary and of which we barely have news. The passage of time and the damages suffered by the warlike incidents caused the ruin of the building and the need to build a new temple designed at the end of the 17th-century by the architect Juan de Ochoa. Its construction began in 1686 but was not consecrated until 1726 to the Assumption of Our Lady, due largely to the difficulties suffered as a result of the great siege to which Ceuta was subjected in those years.

Attached to the cathedral, there is a building with auxiliary departments that house the Vicariate, Secretariat, Diocesan Archive, Library and Cathedral Museum and other diocesan dependencies, in addition to the bishop's residence, around a small triangular courtyard.

It emphasize the Chapel del Santísimo with a Baroque altarpiece and the frescoes of Miguel Bernardini, besides three large canvases and the image of the Virgen Capitana of Portuguese origin (15th-century).

References

  1. ^ Hugh Griffin (1 February 2010). Ceuta Mini Guide. Horizon Scientific Press. pp. 14–. ISBN 978-0-9543335-3-9. Retrieved 8 July 2013.

35°53′16″N 5°19′00″W / 35.88778°N 5.31667°W / 35.88778; -5.31667