Sunday, May 26, 2013

Castle Loarre, Queen's Chapel, Capitals, Church of San Pedro. Chapel of Santa Maria


Castle Loarre, near the village of the same name, is on the tentative World Heritage list. Hope for fast processing, because this is a wonder of 11th Century original structures, never cannoned, never overtaken.  It fell by the literal wayside once it was no longer needed for defense against the Moors, and after incorporating an Augustinian monastery within its walls was not profitable enough. See http://whc.unesco.org/en/tentativelists/5135/


Given a choice between seeing Gothic or seeing Romanesque, I choose Romanesque every time. To me, Gothic is intimidating, a power play, the institution is in control and heretics be burned.  Romanesque is tolerant. For a history of this fine castle and its Romanesque heritage, then tainted by Augustinians (say I), see this Aragon tourism site, http://www.turismodearagon.com/files/Loarre%20ingl%C3%A9sInd.PDF


Is the interior of this religious space the Queen's Chapel, and is the larger structure the Church of San Pedro? Or is the Church of San Pedro a part that the monks had built when the castle incorporated a monastery? I will call all these Queen's Chapel, because it is smaller than I expect the monastery's church would be. Am trying to confirm. The chapel has also been called the Santa Maria Chapel, see the statue below.  These distinctions blur as a tourist not speaking Spanish.







The rosette motif is ancient, with examples from Mesopotamia, see http://www.egyptorigins.org/rosettesx.htm.
It came to mean, as it morphed into a rose, a symbol of secrecy -- sub rosa -- matters discussed under the rose (a carving above the council door, for example), were not to be revealed.   See discussion of the rosette at Castle Burg Eltz in Germany.







This may well be known also as the Santa Maria Chapel.  The dark outline just appeared.  I am not a photoshopper. Is this part of automatic fix?






The best of Spain is the Pyrenees area.


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