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Brigecio Revista De Estudios De Benavente Y Sus Tierras, 1997
El norte de Zamora fue y es tierra de peregrinos a Santiago: la vía de la Plata y el valle del Te... more El norte de Zamora fue y es tierra de peregrinos a Santiago: la vía de la Plata y el valle del Tera son las principales rutas jacobeas. Las advocaciones santiaguistas se multiplican por el territorio; de ahí la existencia de numerosas imágenes jacobeas, entre las que destaca el Santiago peregrino de Santa Marta de Tera. Tierra también de hospitales de peregrinos, entre ellos el de Nuestra Señora de la Piedad de Benavente y la labor asistencial de la cofradía de los Falifos de Rionegro del Puente. Se incluye aquí una selección de páginas: Texto de estudio y una breve selección de las piezas del catálogo. Para más información dirigirse a https://ledodelpozo.es/
Journal of Mosaic Research
About 400 mosaics are known in the Meseta Norte (today, Comunidad Autónoma of Castilla y León), w... more About 400 mosaics are known in the Meseta Norte (today, Comunidad Autónoma of Castilla y León), with chronological variants, most of them of the 4 th and 5 th centuries; with stylistic variants, geometrical topics in preference to figurative themes; with topographical variants, predominantly rural findings against urban findings; and with technical variants, exceptionally sectilia, only one case of signinum and the rest, tessellati. We know nothing about the mosaic workers, just the signature of one who worked in the Baths of La Olmeda (Palencia): Sil [o]. However, stylistic, morphological, or material concordances allow us to suspect the existence of workshops, which usually operated in regional areas. Surely the former ones were Italic workshops serving people of that origin (opus sectile and opus signinum, Asturica Augusta). Almost two centuries after another officina is documented, known as Clunia-Uxama-Asturica, because it worked in these three cities, and their consequences are still tracked in the late third century in certain domus of the above-mentioned cities. The great mutation of Roman mosaic in the Mesetas occurred in the fourth century with the spectacular display of villas, unparalleled in Hispania. Serving these new customers a large number of workshops was developed, for instance, the designated one as the NO peninsular workshop, which worked in the provinces of León and Zamora; the so-called one as Prado-Almenara workshop, because of its presence in these villas from Valladolid, and also in La Valmuza (Salamanca) where another workshop took part closely linked to some villas from La Mancha. Finally, the Cuevas-Valdanzo workshop, whose taste for the aniconism links these villas of Soria with other more western ones.
Brigecio Revista De Estudios De Benavente Y Sus Tierras, 1997
El norte de Zamora fue y es tierra de peregrinos a Santiago: la vía de la Plata y el valle del Te... more El norte de Zamora fue y es tierra de peregrinos a Santiago: la vía de la Plata y el valle del Tera son las principales rutas jacobeas. Las advocaciones santiaguistas se multiplican por el territorio; de ahí la existencia de numerosas imágenes jacobeas, entre las que destaca el Santiago peregrino de Santa Marta de Tera. Tierra también de hospitales de peregrinos, entre ellos el de Nuestra Señora de la Piedad de Benavente y la labor asistencial de la cofradía de los Falifos de Rionegro del Puente. Se incluye aquí una selección de páginas: Texto de estudio y una breve selección de las piezas del catálogo. Para más información dirigirse a https://ledodelpozo.es/
Journal of Mosaic Research
About 400 mosaics are known in the Meseta Norte (today, Comunidad Autónoma of Castilla y León), w... more About 400 mosaics are known in the Meseta Norte (today, Comunidad Autónoma of Castilla y León), with chronological variants, most of them of the 4 th and 5 th centuries; with stylistic variants, geometrical topics in preference to figurative themes; with topographical variants, predominantly rural findings against urban findings; and with technical variants, exceptionally sectilia, only one case of signinum and the rest, tessellati. We know nothing about the mosaic workers, just the signature of one who worked in the Baths of La Olmeda (Palencia): Sil [o]. However, stylistic, morphological, or material concordances allow us to suspect the existence of workshops, which usually operated in regional areas. Surely the former ones were Italic workshops serving people of that origin (opus sectile and opus signinum, Asturica Augusta). Almost two centuries after another officina is documented, known as Clunia-Uxama-Asturica, because it worked in these three cities, and their consequences are still tracked in the late third century in certain domus of the above-mentioned cities. The great mutation of Roman mosaic in the Mesetas occurred in the fourth century with the spectacular display of villas, unparalleled in Hispania. Serving these new customers a large number of workshops was developed, for instance, the designated one as the NO peninsular workshop, which worked in the provinces of León and Zamora; the so-called one as Prado-Almenara workshop, because of its presence in these villas from Valladolid, and also in La Valmuza (Salamanca) where another workshop took part closely linked to some villas from La Mancha. Finally, the Cuevas-Valdanzo workshop, whose taste for the aniconism links these villas of Soria with other more western ones.