Basilica of San Isidoro
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The Basilica of San Isidoro of Leon stands on land which was once a Roman temple. Its Christian roots can be traced back to the early 10th century when a monastery for Saint John the Baptist was erected on the grounds.
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[edit] Overview
In 1063 the basilica was rededicated to Saint Isidore of Seville. Isidore was archbishop of Seville, and the most celebrated academic and theologian of Visigothic Spain in the period preceding the Arab invasions. With the agreement of Abou Amr Abbad al-Motadid, the Muslim ruler of Seville, Isidore's relics were brought to Leon where they could be interred on Christian soil. The tomb of the saint still draws many visitors today. An equestrian statue of Saint Isidore is visible, along with many other sculptures, high on the facade.
[edit] History
The original Church was built in the pre-Arab period over the ruins of a temple to the Roman god Mercury. In the 10th Century the kings of León established a community of Benedictine sisters on the site.
Following the conquest of the area by Al-Mansur Ibn Abi Aamir, known to the Spanish as Al-Manzor, (938-1002), the first church was destroyed and the area devastated. León was repopulated and a new church and monastery established in the Eleventh Century by Alfonso V of Leon.
Alfonso's daughter, the infanta Sancha of Leon, married Ferdinand of Castile, and the rulers of the united kingdoms of Castille and Leon established their court in Leon. The church also benefited from its position on the famous pilgrimage route to Santiago de Compostella. Sculptors, stonemasons and artists from across Europe gathered to work on the monastery.
Queen Sancha chose the new monastery as the site of the royal burial chapel. Today eleven kings, numerous queens and many nobles lie interred beneath the polychrome vaults of the medieval "royal pantheon." In 1063 the relics of Saint Isidore were transferred to the chapel, and a community of canons was established to maintain the monastery and ward the relics. The apse and transept of the building are in the Gothic style, whilst other parts of the building are Romanesque or of the Renaissance period.
The basilica is still a collegiate foundation and the canons' office is celebrated each day at 8am and 1pm.
[edit] The Building
Built mostly in the Romanesque style, the basilica has had major additions in the styles of many succeeding centuries including the Gothic. The arches on the crossing of the transept hark back to Islamic art. However the many styles merge into a harmonious whole.
The carved tympanum of the Puerta del Cordero is one of the basilica's most notable features. Created prior to 1100, this romanesque tympanum depicts the sacrifice of Abraham,
[edit] The Royal Pantheon
This funereal chapel of the kings of Castile and Leon is one of the outstanding examples of surviving Romanesque art in Castille. The columns are crowned with rare Visigothic capitals, with floral or historic designs. The twelfth century painted murals are in an exceptional state of preservation and consist of an ensemble of New Testament subjects along with scenes of contemporary rural life.
[edit] The Museum
This contains numerous examples of early medieval art including jewelled chalices and works of ivory and precious metal. The library holds 300 medieval works, numerous manuscripts as well as mozarabic bible dating from 960 and a Latin version transcribed in the Seventh Century. There is lso a text of the Seventh Century law code of the Visigothic rulers of pre-conquest Spain.
[edit] El Cid
Rodrigo Diaz de Bivar, known as El Cid is said to have married Jimena Gomez, who was a local parishioner, at the church of Saint Isidore. The tombs of Ferdinand, Sancha, and their daughter, Dona Urraca of Zamora is in the royal pantheon.