FORTRESSES AND CHURCHES
North Americans in Europe often define their travel as a lot of Churches and Museums. We didn’t take many museum pictures, so what does that leave? But since the Church was, for so many centuries, intimately connected with state and armed power, it makes sense to lump the fortresses in the same category as the church edifices. So, here’s a typical North American vacation scrapbook:
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CASTLES In days of old when knights were bold… In eastern Portugal many old towns are dominated by the hilltop fortress put there by a young and feudal country afraid of domination by Spain. |
Trancosa, Portugal |
Castello da Vide, Portugal |
Marvao.
That’s Castello da Vide on the next hill. |
Tomar, Portugal. This fortress was headquarters for the Knights Templar |
Tomar.
The Knights’ fortress included a grand church |
CLOISTERS Monastic life was not only common in the Middle Ages, it appears to have been well funded. Often we found ourselves in cloisters of ornate stonework, with Avi telling Ruth to stand over there for a picture. |
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Mosterio dos Jeronimos, Belem, Portugal. Built with $$ from the spice trade. |
Tomar |
CHURCHES Great books abound which give you a taste of the
magnificence and opulence of Europe’s great cathedrals. This is just a fraction of a
fraction. We struggled to learn
the characteristics of Romanesque, Gothic, etc, to read the stories of Jesus in the stained glass, to
appreciate the carvers’ art in the choir stalls and the
metallurgists’ art in the treasuries. And we never stopped asking what was the social and
financial cost of this beauty, and who ultimately paid. |
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Cathedral, Seville |
Girona |
Holy Toledo.
Find the hanging red cardinal’s hat. The Cathedral contains the
hats of all the former cardinals, left to dangle forever in the place of
their choosing |
Another part of the Cathedral in Toledo |
Cathedral, Cordoba |
The Great Mosque in Cordoba was converted by the
Christian rulers to a Cathedral.
Note the paintings and iconography on the unadorned Muslim
architecture. |
Tilework in a church in Tomar, Portugal |
Detail of tilework in Batalha, Portugal |
Often the religious tilework was outside, on street
walls. This one appealed to me
because we had been learning about virgin olive oil. |
Of course, stained glass windows were
everywhere. These, in
Tours, France, date from the 13th century |
Unfinished church in Batalha, Portugal. (The king decided to put his money into a different project). Examine the door detail. |
Another view of the Mosque-turned-Cathedral in
Cordoba |
Old stone church in a Basque village. Notice the keyhole-shaped grave
stones – a Basque tradition for thousands of years. |
Interior of a Basque church. Though there are floor seats, most
folks sit in the vertical balconies. |
Sagrada Familia in Barcelona. Antoni Gaudi’s “art
moderne” masterpiece. |
View of the interior of the Sagrada Familia,
Barcelona. This church has been under construction for 80 years, with an
estimated 50 more to go. |
A chapel of skulls and bones! The remains of 5000 people from the cemeteries of Evora, Portugal, put to reuse and recycle by some monks who wanted the living to be aware of what’s really ahead. |
Didn’t believe me about the chapel of
bones? Take a closer look. |
Thousand year-old Visgothic chapel (the tile is 16th century) built inside a paleolithic dolman several thousand years older. Pavia, Portugal |
Cordoba
Not really a church – probably a Temple to Diana. Roman. |