- Oporto Cathedral
The Oporto Cathedral ( _pt. Sé do Porto), located in the historical centre of the city of
Porto ,Portugal , is one of the city's oldest monuments and one of the most important Romanesque monuments in PortugalThe current Cathedral of Porto underwent construction around 1110 under the patronage of "Bishop Hugo" and was completed in the 13th century, but there is evidence that the city has been a bishopric seat since the
Suevi domination in the 5th-6th centuries.The cathedral is flanked by two square towers, each supported with two
buttress es and crowned with acupola . The façade lacks decoration and is rather architecturally heterogeneous. It shows aBaroque porch and a beautiful Romanesquerose window under acrenellated arch, giving the impression of a fortified church.The Romanesque
nave is rather narrow and is covered bybarrel vault ing. It is flanked by twoaisle s with a lower vault. The stone roof of the central aisle is supported byflying butress es, making the building one of the first in Portugal to use this architectonic feature.This first Romanesque building has suffered many alterations but the general aspect of the façade has remained romanesque.
Around 1333 the Gothic funerary chapel of "João Gordo" was added. João was a Knight Hospitaller who worked for King Dinis I. His tomb is decorated with his recumbent figure and reliefs of the
Apostles . Also from the Gothic period is the elegant cloister, built between the 14th and the 15th centuries during the reign of King John I, who married English PrincessPhilippa of Lancaster in Oporto Cathedral in 1387.The external appearance of the Cathedral was greatly altered during
Baroque times. In 1772 a new main portal substituted the old Romanesque original and the tower cupolas were altered. Around 1732 Italian architectNicolau Nasoni added an elegant Baroque loggia to the lateral façade of the Cathedral.The interior was also altered during the baroque era. In one of the chapels there is a magnificent silver
altarpiece , built in the second half of the 17th century by Portuguese artists. Also in the 17th century the romanesqueapse (which had anambulatory ) was torn down and a new one was built in baroque style, later decorated with new wall paintings by Nasoni and choir stalls. The altarpiece of the chapel, designed by "Santos Pacheco" and executed by "Miguel Francisco da Silva" between 1727 and 1729, is an important work of Portuguese Baroque.The three red marble holy-water fonts, supported by a statue, date from the 17th century. The
baptistery contains a bronze bas-relief byAntónio Teixeira Lopes , depicting the baptism of Christ by John the Baptist.The South
transept arm gives access to the Gothic cloister, which is decorated with baroqueazulejo s byValentim de Almeida (between 1729 and 1731). They depict the life of Maria and the "Metamorphoses" byOvidius . The remains of the Early-Romanesque ambulatory contain a few sarcophagi. The terrace is decorated with azulejos byAntónio Vidal . The coffer ceiling of the chapterhouse was painted with allegories of moral values by Pachini in 1737.References
*"Portugal/1 - Europa Romanica", Gerhard N Graf, Ediciones Encuentro, Madrid, 1987
*Portuguese Institute for Architectural Heritage [http://www.ippar.pt]
*General Bureau for National Buildings and Monuments (Portugal) [http://www.monumentos.pt]External links
* [http://www.geocities.com/fulviusbsas/seporto1.html Site about Oporto Cathedral]
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