Repoblación art and architecture

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File:Sta Cristina Burgos.jpg
Hermitage of Santa Cecilia at Barriosuso (Province of Burgos).
Monastery of Leyre, Navarre.
File:Lebeña1.jpg
Church of Santa María de Lebeña in Cillorigo de Liébana, Cantabria.

The designation Art and Architecture of the Repoblación has been applied in recent years to the works, predominantly architectural, carried out in the Christian kingdoms of northern Spain between the end of the 9th and beginning of the 11th centuries. This encompasses all the buildings which until recently were regarded (and labeled) as Mozarabic, and cataloged following the guidelines set out by Manuel Gómez Moreno. More recently, however, historians have tended to move away from that title because it has been proved that these buildings do not possess the origins that were originally attributed to them.

The religious influences were inevitable given the presence of the Islamic state of the Caliph of Córdoba, which was highly developed culturally, artistically and economically. However, it had long been suggested that the monumental buildings in northern Spain from this period were crafted by the modest groups of Mozarabic immigrants that settled in the areas of repopulation when the living conditions in Muslim al-Andalus became difficult to bear. As stated by professor Isidro Bango Torviso, suggesting that these immigrants were responsible for these buildings would be akin to suggesting that

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"when the Duero River Valley was repopulated under the auspices of the Asturian-Leonese kingdom, northerners settlers would have forsaken all their knowledge and experience and submitted themselves to the 'very rich and demonstrated creative capacity' of poor, rural southern immigrants."

The Art and Architecture of the Repoblación is identified as the third subset of the Hispanic Pre-Romanesque period, by the phases that correspond to the Visigothic art and Asturian art. Its architecture is a summary of elements of diverse extraction, irregularly distributed, in such a way that on occasion elements of paleo-Christian, Visigothic or Asturian origin come to predominate, while at other times Muslim characteristics come to the fore.

In any event, some of the identifying characterizations of this Repoblación ecclesiastic architectural style can be summarized as follows:

  • Basilica or centralized plan; sometimes with opposing apses.
  • Main chapel on a rectangular plan on the exterior and ultra-semicircular in the interior.
  • Use of the horseshoe arch of Muslim evocation, somewhat more closed and sloped than the Visigothic.
  • Generalized use of the alfiz (horseshoe arch doorway).
  • Use of the twin and triple windows of Asturian tradition.
  • Roofs composed of segmented vaults, including traditional barrel vaults.
  • Grouped columns forming composite pillars, with Corinthian capitals decorated with stylized elements and cinctures joined to it.
  • Walls re-enforced by exterior buttresses.
  • Evolution of rafter ornaments to great lobed offsets that support very pronounced eaves.
  • Decoration similar to the Visigothic based on volutes, swastikas, and vegetable and animal themes forming projecting borders.
  • A great command of the technique in construction, employing principally ashlar by length and width.
  • Absence or sobriety of exterior decoration.
  • Diversity in the floor plans, certainly the majority stand out by the small proportions and discontinuous spaces covered by cupolas (groined, segmented, ribbed of horseshoe transept, etc.).

Examples

The following comprise the most representative buildings of the period:

See also

References

  • Moreno, Manuel Gómez. Iglesias mozárabes (Mozarabic Churches. Madrid 1917.
  • Torviso, Isidro Bango. "Summa Artis," Volume VIII-II.