Formerly used for the whole of the Iberian peninsula , the term is now usually restricted, at
least in architecture, to the south, with Repoblación art and architecture used
for the north.
Art
The Mozarabic communities maintained some
of the Visigothic churches that were older than the Arab occupation for the
practice of their religious rites and were rarely able to build new ones,
because, even though a certain religious tolerance existed, the authorizations
for building new churches were very limited. When permitted, new churches were
always in rural areas or in the cities' suburbs, and of modest size.
When Christian kingdoms of the north of the
peninsula initiated an expansion (which sometimes including the expulsion of
native Muslim population in the conquered lands), some Mozarabs opted to
emigrate towards these territories where they were offered land. Their
Hispano-Visigothic culture had been mixing with the Muslim and it is to be
supposed that this contributed to the emerging cultures of the new Christian
kingdoms in all fields. However it is unlikely that they were responsible for
all of the artistic innovations brought to maturity in the kingdoms of the
north during the 10th century.
Concluding the first phase of the artistic
process that is generally comprised in the ample concept of "Pre-Romanesque"
and corresponding with Hispano-Visigothic art; another stylistic current was
initiated in Iberia ,
inheriting many aspects of the earlier style and known as "Asturian
art". This has been identified with the artistic creations that were being
produced during the 9th century in the so-called "nucleus of
resistance", specifically in the territories that comprised the kingdom of Asturias . However the artistic activity,
in general (and architecture especially) was not limited to this area or this
century, it encompassed all the northern peninsula and had continuity during
the next century.
The displacement of the Christian-Muslim
border to the Douro basin allowed the
construction of new temples (works on which all the artistic capacity available
was concentrated) in demand of the necessities of re-settling. The now
prosperous Northern kingdoms were in a condition to undertake that task (as
they had already been doing), without depending on hypothetical contributions
of the incorporated Mozarabs, so it cannot be assumed that all the religious
buildings and all the artistic creations are owed to these mainly rural
immigrants who arrived with limitation of means and resources.
After the publication in 1897 of the
well-informed work in four volumes History of the Mozarabs of Spain (Historia
de los mozárabes de España) by Francisco Javier Simonet, the professor and
investigator Manuel Gómez Moreno published 20 years later (1917) a monograph
about The Mozarabic Churches. It is here where the Mozarabic character is applied
to the churches constructed in Christian territory from the end of the 9th
century until the beginning of the 11th, and where the term
"Mozarabic" is instituted to designate this architectural form and
all of the related art. The denomination had success in becoming one that has
been commonly used, although other scholars claimed the interpretation lacked
rigour.
The Mozarabic character of the temples that
Gómez Moreno referred to in his book has been questioned by modern
historiography, including by the not so modern. Already José Camón Aznar in his
Spanish Architecture of the 10th Century (Arquitectura española del siglo X)
considered himself against such an interpretation, after him Isidro Bango
Torviso and many others, to the point that the present tendency shows a trend
towards the abandoning of "Mozarabic Art" denomination altogether and
its substitution by "Repoblación art and architecture to refer to the
period, especially in the north of Spain.
Literature
The principal exponent is religious
literature: Mozarabic missals, antiphoneries and prayerbooks, created in the
scriptorium of the monasteries. Examples of quality and originality of the
miniatures and illuminated manuscripts are the Commentarium in Apocalypsin
(Commentary on the Apocalypse) from Beatus of Liébana, Beatus of Facundus or
Beatus of Tábara. Or antiphonaries like the Mozarabic Antiphonary of the
Cathedral of León (Antifonario mozárabe de la Catedral de León).
Architecture
The principal characteristics that define
the Mozarabic architecture are the following:
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.).
Use of the horseshoe arch, a very tight
arch with the slope being two-thirds of the radius.
Use of the alfiz.
Use of the column as support, crowned by a
Corinthian capital decorated with very stylized vegetable elements.
The eaves extend outwards and rest on top
of corbels of lobes.
The Mozarabic architecture interpreted
strictly in its definition, that is to say, that the Mozarabs in Muslim Iberia
brought to completion, would be reduced to two examples:
The Church of Bobastro :
rock temple located in the place known as Mesas de Villaverde, in Ardales
(Málaga), of which only some ruins remain.
The Church of Santa María de Melque:
located in proximity to La Puebla de Montalbán (Toledo ). With respect to this temple, its
stylistic parentage is in doubt, because it shares Visigothic features with
other more proper Mozarabic features, nor its date being clear.
Nevertheless, at a popular level, including
in encyclopedias and books, the denomination that has kept prevailing is
Mozarabic Art and among the most important that can be cited in Spain and Portugal , the following can be counted
as Mozarabic:
In Castile and León:
- San Miguel de Escalada (León)
- Santiago de Peñalba (León)
- Santo Tomás de las Ollas (León)
- San Baudelio de Berlanga (Soria)
- San Cebrián de Mazote (Valladolid )
- Santa María de Wamba (Valladolid )
- San Salvador de Tabara (Zamora )
In Cantabria:
- Santa María de Lebeña (Cantabria)
In Aragón:
- San Juan de la Peña (Huesca)
- Church of the Serrablo (Huesca), as the
Church of San Juan de Busa
In La Rioja
- San Millán de Suso (San Millán de la
Cogolla)
In Catalonia :
- Sant Quirze de Pedret (Barcelona )
- Santa Maria de Marquet (Barcelona )
- Church
of Sant Cristòfol (Barcelona ),
in the municipality of Vilassar de Mar, at 30 km from Barcelona
- Sant Julià de Boada (Girona), located in
the small hamlet of the same name, in the comarca of Baix Empordà (Girona)
- Santa Maria de Matadars (Barcelona ), in the municipality of El Pont de
Vilomara i Rocafort
In Galicia :
- San Miguel de Celanova (Orense )
In Portugal :
- São Pedro de Lourosa (Lourosa da Beira)
- Catedral de Idanha-a-Velha
(Idanha-a-Velha)
Literature
The main exponent is the religious
literature: Mozarabic missals, antiphonaries and prayer books created in the
scriptoriums of the monasteries. Examples of quality and originality of the
miniatures and illuminated manuscripts are the Commentaries to the Apocalypse
of Beato de Liébana , the Blessed of Facundus or the Blessed of Tábara . Or
antiphonaries like the Mozarabic Antiphonary of the Cathedral of León .
Source from Wikipedia
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