- Source: Ciudad Rodrigo Cathedral
The Cathedral of Saint Mary (Spanish: Catedral de Santa María) is a Roman Catholic cathedral located in Ciudad Rodrigo, Spain. It was declared Bien de Interés Cultural on 15 September 1889.
The Renaissance composers Juan Navarro Hispalensis and his pupil Juan Esquivel Barahona were both choirmasters at the cathedral.
Architecture
The cathedral has four doors. In the episciple-side transept, there is a Gothic frieze with twelve figures from the Old Testament and a tympanum in which four Romanesque figures were placed in the Modern Age: from left to right Saint John, Saint Peter, Christ Pantocrator, Saint Paul, and Saint James. In the other transept the Puerta de Amayuelas opens, with a multi-lobed arch.
The tower was raised by Juan de Sagarvinaga at the end of the 18th century in a neoclassical style, after the collapse of the second tower during the Lisbon earthquake (the cathedral had had a third tower, which was demolished after the communal war).
See also
List of Bien de Interés Cultural in the Province of Salamanca
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Daftar katedral di Spanyol
- Ciudad Rodrigo Cathedral
- Ciudad Rodrigo
- Roman Catholic Diocese of Ciudad Rodrigo
- Ciudad Colonial (Santo Domingo)
- Rodrigo Gil de Hontañón
- Fernando Gallego
- Segovia Cathedral
- St. Mary's Cathedral
- Province of Salamanca
- Robert Craufurd