Some Notes On The City of Burgos
Some Notes On The City of Burgos
Some Notes On The City of Burgos
-Diego Porcelos (To Diego Porcelos, outstanding citizen, second Quirine—founder hero and
God)
-Nuño Rasura and Laín Calvo: 9th century legendary judges: A Nuño Rasura, varón
sapientissimo, shield of the city; A Laín Calvo, man of integrity, sword and shield of the city
-Fernan Gonzalez, very strong citizen, thunder and lightning of war
-Charles V, great emperor of the romans, 1537 conquest of tunis
-To the Cid Rodrigo Diaz, extremely strong man, fear and terror of the moors (mid 1040s,
first known as El Cid in a poem to celebrate the conquest of Almeria by Alfonso VII in 1147)
-Saint Mary, maceros, 2 busts of warriors,
-Him who governs everything has established you as the guardian of the city
-protect your people and the councillors who trust in you
Pedro Fernández de Velasco, married to Mencia de Mendoza: head of the royal troops and
most important authority in the kingdom after the monarch; the first lay person to obtain a
chapel in burgos cathedral
Simón de Colonia: casa del cordón, used many times by the kings as it was the best palace in
the city
1498 closing of the trascoro arches: Camino del Calvario sculpted on the exterior of the
transaltar by felipe Vigarny
High altarpiece: Rodrigo and Martín de la Haya with the collaboration of Juan de Anchieta—
‘romanista’ style, but not as good as eg Damian Froment in Santo Domingo de la Calzada
Cimborrio also fell at Santo Domingo de la Calzada —after collapse in 1539. Design by Juan
de Langres
The collapse of the cimborrio may perhaps be due to the fact that initially the structure was
not conceived to have one: in the 13th century it was more likely that the architects would
have thought about a lower structure on the model of santa maria la real de las huelgas
Praise for the cimborrio of Burgos: Felipe II considered it more appropriate to angels than
men; Théophile Gautier (19th century Romantic writer) considered it ‘leafy as a cabbage,
diaphanous like a fish flipper’ ‘something as gigantic as a pyramid and as delicate as
feminine jewel’ and after being there he considered useless his literary work, since that of
men in the past was so much better and also they had no interest in preserving their names for
posterity
very controversial restoration of the main facade in the last decade of the 18th century; but
the side doorways had already been transformed in the mid 17th century in a bad baroque
style
end of the 19th century: Vicente Lamperez y Romea : new inventions in the neo gothic style
for example the reja neogotica of the pellejería doorway; he also destroyed the archbishop’s
palace–this is perhaps linked to the new technique of photography which required larger
spaces for vision
1994: large scale restoration criticised for having left the cathedral excessively white, and
unified older and newer elements by eliminating the patina of both
• The seat of the diocese of Burgos was established in 1074, with the
reorganisation of the dioceses of Oca and Valpuesta. New geographical
definition of the peninsula, following the weakening of unified islamic
power with the fall of Umayyad Cordoba and the beginning of the
taifas. Christian Spain is defined around the axis of the road to Santiago,
and Burgos enjoys the position on the calzada, just to the north of the
cathedral. This is a brief period of splendour, however, since in 1085 the
conquest of Toledo gives a new centre to the peninsula.
• The restructuring of the episcopal seat was promoted by Alfonso VI, establishing a
precedent for the royal support of the cathedral which will continue throughout its
history. Spain does not have a clearly-defined royal church for burial/coronations
such as Westminster in England or Reims/Saint-Denis in France. Burgos cathedral did
not fulfil this function; indeed, the nearby monastery of Las Huelgas was a royal
pantheon of sorts in the period up to ……However, Burgos was a royal cathedral in
its architectural aspiration and in the continuing royal support it received.
• Apart from Alfonso VI’s certain support, little is known of Burgos’ Romanesque cathedral.
Construction must have progressed rapidly in the 1080s, and indeed the high altar,
dedicated to Saint Mary, was functioning by 1085. Churches were traditionally
constructed from east to west and intense effort was put into making the space
liturgically functional as quickly as possible, so this does not mean that the church
was ready by this date. In 1092 there were two further altars, one dedicated to Saint
James and the other to Saint Nicolás of Bari. Saint James is of course Santiago, the
saint whose remains were rediscovered in 813 near Finisterre and were by this time
already at the centre of the most popular pilgrimage of Christendom. Saint Nicolás of
Bari, archbishop of Myria in the early 4th century, is the patron saint of travellers and
especially seafarers. This shows the depth of the connection between Burgos
cathedral and the pilgrimage to Santiago. This emphasis on travel was important in a
wider perspective for as will become more important in later moments of its history,
Burgos was not only located near to the road to Santiago, but also in a privileged
position between the ports of the Northern coast, the east and the plains of the centre
of Iberia.
• The architecture of the Romanesque cathedral was informed by the shift from the
Mozarabic to the Latin rite imposed by Alfonso X in 1080.
• When imagining the Romanesque cathedral of Burgos as a stop on the road to Santiago,
focused on the flux of pilgrims and on travel, we should remember that the city
around it was conceived differently than it is today. Until the conquest of Tudela in
1119 (by Alfonso I of Aragón, also known as Alfonso the Battler), Burgos was under
threat of Umayyad incursions. The city founded Count Diego Rodríguez Porcelos in
884 was a protective castle on the top of the hill, not the modern city on the riverside.
Indeed, the cathedral was outside the city walls until they were expanded by Alfonso
X in 1276. This does not mean that the cathedral was unprotected. Indeed, the Arab
geographer Muhammad al-Idrisi (1100–1165) described the city as divided in two
parts, each with its walls, suggesting perhaps that the cathedral was fortified. In-
between the castle and the river, the cathedral was located on a steep slope which
defined many aspects of its architecture. For example, both of its transept doors are
reached through long staircases: the one leading up to the Sarmental doorway on the
south side and the one leading up to the road level through the famous Golden
Staircases on the North side.
• Although I have said that little is known of the appearance of the Romanesque cathedral,
we may be standing just in front of a remaining part of it. These arches may be the at
the end of the 13th century documents mention the presence of a claustra vieja as
opposed to the claustra nueva, the first level of the cloister which exists today which
was constructed between 1265 and 1270. This would make a lot of sense because in
this area there was also the episcopal palace, destroyed in the 19th century. The
palace, which may have been erected on the lands donated by Alfonso VI at the very
beginning of the cathedral’s history, may have been the place where the chapter of the
cathedral would have lived a community life similar to that of a monastic community
at the very beginning of its history. Had the cloister been located where the ticket
office is now, the canons could have easily entered their church from their common
quarters, without allowing the laity to intermingle with the religious or to break their
quiet—especially because this old cloister would have been located much closer to
the east end of the Romanesque cathedral, which must have been much smaller than
the gothic structure, and therefore very close to the choir where the canons sat for
their services.
• This area is where we can both seen the traces of the Romanesque cathedral and
understand one of the reasons for its demise. In Burgos as elsewhere cathedral
chapters were originally ordered as monastic communities with a shared life, but later
became composed of lay ecclesiastics which did not have to reside together all the
time. This change took place in Burgos around the year 1200 and therefore informed
the architecture of the gothic cathedral, which had different functions from those of
the old Romanesque building.
• The iconography of the Sarmental doorway which you see in front of you was strongly
influenced by the new context and importance of 13th century Burgos, and offer an
introduction to the setting in which the gothic cathedral developed.
• BASIC DATES OF GOTHIC CATHEDRAL
Sarmental Portal
• Due to its location, this portal was that of the archbishop and chapter; the front portal,
which has unfortunately been over-restored quite radically in the 19th century, was
described by Alfonso X as the portal of the kings; the two on the north side were
those used by the population and by the pilgrims. Private doorway.
• Like the main portal, this doorway was also altered quite significantly in the 19th century,
especially in the lower section, where new saints were added to replace missing
sculptures in the jambs. For this reason I will only focus on the upper part.
• This portal is interesting because it challenges a long-standing prejudice against Spanish
architecture: the idea that it simply copies foreign models in an archaising manner
which is not creative. This prejudice is particularly embedded in British scholarship
since very few architectural historians visited Britain in the 19th and early 20th
century. Bernard Bevan and Georges Edmund Street are exceptions, but they had
very biased visions. […] The structure of the portal is indeed inspired by French
examples which provide a dating for it. More that that, the similarities are so close
that architectural historians such as F. B. Deknatel in 1935 suggested that it had
been sculpted by the very same master who sculpted the Beau Dieu sculpture in the
middle of the tympanum of Amiens cathedral (? CHECK). This may well have been
the case, for example due to the pull of Santiago as a ’trade road’ on which master
masons and travelling workshops could find employment. However, the idea that
their production would become more repetitive and old fashioned the further away
they went from France is proven wrong by this doorway. On the basis of similarities
with Amiens and Reims, Henrik Karge has established that the lower parts of the
portal must have been completed around 1230, the upper parts 1240. And we know
for sure from a royal privilege that the doorway was completed by 1257.
• The iconography is initially apparently simple and old-fashioned. The tympanum has an
apocalyptic theme, which was rare in France at the time. Around it there are angels
and cherubims intermingled with the elders of the apocalypse and with allegories of
the arts. The allegories do not follow the model of Trivium and Quadrivium which
had been developed in French universities (CHECK). In this model, the liberal arts
are Grammar, Logic and Rhetoric. The Quadrivium which followed it in university
learning was composed by arithmetic, music, geometry and astronomy. However in
the doorway we have: Medicine, and Practical Music added to the scheme (what is
missing? CHECK). Following new the Lateran Council of 1215, which established
that all cathedral needed to have elementary schools for the education of the
choirboys and clergy, in 1228 Jean d’Abbeville visited the Castilian cathedrals to
check that they conformed to the new decrees. He was impressed by the school at
Burgos cathedral, whose functioning was further improved by Archbishop Mauritius
after his visit. From constitutions of 1250 we know that this was a basic school from
which choirboys were chosen and where the clergy and chaplains learned the basic
of reading and arithmetic. it was different from university education, and this aspect
influenced the iconography of the doorway. Music was a particular concern in the
education of the school, as shown by the fact that the cathedral of Burgos already
had an organ master is 1222. Organ music was the basis for education in polyphonic
singing, a type of singing which had spread from France to Spain and become a
separate discipline from the 12th century. The importance of teaching the new type
of singing to young children justifies the repetition of music in two different guises.
The doorway is also full of scenes of teaching, especially with representation of
young children, and this also makes sense in the context of Burgos’ cathedral
school. Even the scene on the tympanum can be seen in terms of teaching. Indeed,
we have the four evangelists scribbling away next to their symbols, and the fact that
the top of Christ’s head is lost into the clouds evokes classical depictions of
Philosophy, for example its description by Boetius as a statue so tall that it was
impossible to measure for its head disappeared into the clouds. This is Christ-
Knowledge.
Escalera Dorada:
Diego de Siloé, completed 1523; Maestro Hilario; Michelangelo and Bramante
Trascoro
Papamoscas, Francisco Alvarez, 1743; Van der Hamen
Santa Tecla:
Alberto Churriguera
Santo Domingo
Alejandro Carnicero
First half of the 18th century