GRANADA'S CATHEDRAL
The
Cathedral of Granada is one of the principal works of the Spanish
Renaissance. It begins to be constructed at the beginning of the 16th
century, as soon as Granada has been conquered by the Kings
Católicos. They ordered his construction in the place where
previously the Major Mosque of the city was, as symbol of the victory
of the catholic religion on the Muslim.
The
project of the Cathedral it was carried out by the emperor Carlos V -
grandson of the Kings Católicos--, from the year 1523.
His
construction was realized in several stages (ss. The XVth - the
XVIIIth) intervening in it the most important artists of every moment
between whom stand out the architects Enrique Egás, Diego de Siloé
and Alonso Cano (architect painter and sculptor). In 1704, after 181
years of work the works conclude.
The
first architect of the Cathedral of Granada, was Enrique Egas, author
also of the Royal Chapel, which projected the foundations of a Gothic
cathedral taking like model the cathedral of Toledo.
In
1529 Diego de Siloé took charge of the works. He presented a new
completely different project. On the Gothic foundations he planned a
Renaissance cathedral, " to the Roman ", in conformity with
the new artistic trends that were coming from Italy, style more
adapted for the building that was going to be the pantheon of Carlos
V and his successors.
Diego
de Siloé found the perfect solution to connect a Renaissance dome to
a Gothic trace. He joined the floor basilical from five ships to a
circular space, a rotunda of great tradition Roman and used
especially in buildings of sepulchral character and that forms the
major altar.
The
five ships, the major and highest one is the central, are separated
by high props by Corinthian attached columns, and covered with groin
vaults.
The Major Chapel, it is
separated from the central ship by a great arch toral like triumphal
arch, which decreases of thickness in his interior.
It is of circular floor and three bodies with two orders superposed of Corinthian columns, covered with a cupula that is decorated by windows of great beauty and by sculptures and Alonso Cano's paintings.
It is of circular floor and three bodies with two orders superposed of Corinthian columns, covered with a cupula that is decorated by windows of great beauty and by sculptures and Alonso Cano's paintings.
The
chairs of the choir is plateresca.
In the lateral chapels
excellent altarpieces and paintings remain. The former chapterhouse
is nowadays the place of exhibition of the exchequer of the
cathedral, which also exposes pieces in the sacristy and in the
cathedral Museum. It is of emphasizing Alonso Cano's Inmaculate
Conception.
The
temple has three doors of great beauty: the Ecce Homo, San Jerónimo
and the Pardon, the latter with excellent reliefs of the Faith and
the Justice.
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| PARDON'S DOOR |
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| ECCE HOMO'S DOOR |
| SAN JERÓNIMO'S DOOR |
The
main face was reformed by Alonso Cano in 1664 and in it they
appreciate baroque elements. It is a real arch of the victory fitted
by four big stirrups that shape three hollows with round arches in
those who open the accesses to the interior themselves.
The decoration is formed by 4
sculptures that allude to the Former and New Testament, San Miguel
and San Rafael, medallions of marble with reliefs of Evangelists, a
tondo on the principal door with the scene of the Annunciation. The
front is finished off by a pitcher of lilies, Marian excellent
symbol.
Of
both towers projected by Siloé only she became one, and this one
stayed without ending, rising only 57 meters of the 81 that it had
foreseen to reach.





