Western architecture - Iberian, Gothic, Romanesque | Britannica (original) (raw)
The pre-Romanesque types of building in the peninsula were insufficient to satisfy the needs and ambitions of the Spaniards as the Christian states increased in population by immigration and expanded southward by the reconquest in Romanesque times. The architecture clearly testifies to the great influx of people and ideas, particularly from Burgundy, Poitou, and Languedoc (as at Santiago de Compostela Cathedral). Cistercian half-Gothic became important (e.g., Poblet, 1180–96). Catalonia long remained faithful to the Lombard style. Everywhere there are Muslim reminiscences, sometimes obvious, sometimes very subtle.
The walls of Ávila (1090 and later) are among the finest of Romanesque military constructions, and Loarre in Aragon, with its beautiful chapel, is perhaps the finest Romanesque castle.
Italy
Lombardy was an area in which the proto-Romanesque style was transformed into the true Romanesque, particularly because of the development of ribbed-groin vaulting. Decorative arcading, in enriched form, was used and brick was widely employed in later work. Romanesque forms continued in use long after the coming of Cistercian half-Gothic. The Lombard cities built tremendous cathedrals, simple in plan, during the 12th century; examples are Modena (1099–1184), Parma (1117–32), and Cremona (1129–1342). Parma and Cremona have large freestanding baptisteries, unusual at the time. A very handsome type of belfry tower was brought to perfection by the Lombards, and impressive town halls were built with Romanesque inspiration but at Gothic dates. Turbulence in the city streets caused the construction of private fortifications in the form of taller houses: Bologna, for example, had 180, and Lucca “rose like a forest.”
Tuscany retained strong early Christian traditions, exemplified in the octagonal Baptistery of Florence (restored in 1059) and the common use of basilican church forms. In the Romanesque period, marble was used extensively, often in panels and zebra work (for example, the cathedral group at Pisa; cathedral 1063–13th century, baptistery 1152–1278, and the Camposanto 1278).
Central Italy was still more conservative; the early Christian style survived there with little change except degeneration. The region about Monte Cassino was more inventive; the famous abbey built the typical church of the region, basilican in form (1066–71). A school of painters developed there, under Byzantine influence, which was drawn on by the Cluniacs in their work.
Norman Italy and Sicily
Buildings basically Lombard, Tuscan, Muslim, Byzantine, or early Christian were built as the realm became prosperous. Nuances of design and a strange mingling of influences give them strong local feeling. Examples are San Nicola, Bari (1087), where St. Nicholas is buried; the cathedral of Monreale (1174), with wonderful mosaics and a poetic, half-Asian-influenced cloister (1172–89); and San Cataldo at Palermo (1161), a former synagogue in the Muslim domed style. These Sicilian buildings are actually more exotic than the structures built by the Crusaders in Palestine (1099–1244).
Palestine
The Crusaders built extensively in the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem. The buildings are southern French or Burgundian Romanesque or Burgundian half-Gothic in style (for example, new constructions at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, 1099–1147, and the cathedral of Tortosa, or Tartūs, late 12th century). Many remarkable castles were built before and after 1200, incorporating Byzantine and Muslim innovations in military architecture, as at the Krak des Chevaliers or at Margat, “whose bastions seemed to sustain the sky; only eagles and vultures could approach its battlements”—striking witness, in so remote a place, to Romanesque faith and power.
Throughout this period, the central corridor of Europe running northwest from Lombardy to England, between Cologne and Paris, retains an exceptional importance. Much of the significant art—especially architecture—was produced within this geographic area, because it appears to have been an extraordinarily wealthy area, with enough funds to attract good artists and to pay for expensive materials and buildings. Paris—for much of this period the home of a powerful and artistically enlightened court—played an especially important role in the history of Gothic art.