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Church of Santo Adriano de Tuñón

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Saint Adrian of Tuñón
Santo Adriano de Tuñón(in Spanish)
Religion
AffiliationRoman Catholic
ProvinceAsturias
Ecclesiastical or organizational statusChurch
Year consecrated891
Location
LocationSanto Adriano, Spain
Geographic coordinates43°17′29.9″N 5°58′49.9″W / 43.291639°N 5.980528°W / 43.291639; -5.980528
Architecture
TypeChurch
StylePre-Romanesque
Specifications
Length14 metres (46 ft)
Width10 metres (33 ft)

The Church of Santo Adriano de Tuñón (Spanish: Iglesia de Santo Adriano de Tuñón) is a Roman Catholic Pre-Romanesque church in the village of Tuñón, Asturias, Spain dedicated to Saint Adrian.

The church is located on the bank of the River Trubia, next to an old Roman road. Founded on January 24, 891, by Alfonso III of Asturias and his wife Jimena of Navarra as a monastery church, it went through large transformations at the beginnings of the 12th century. It was declared a Spanish national monument in June 1931.

Architecture

The church stands on a classic basilica ground plan, although in the 17th and 18th centuries it was extended with a nave structure at the western end, and a bell gable.

Decoration

Mural paintings were rediscovered in the 20th century. The fresco paintings in this church are the only remains of Mozarabic painters' work in an Asturian art workshop.

See also

Notes

  1. Arias Paramo 1992, p. 32

References

Pre-romanesque art in the Kingdom of Asturias
  • Pre-Romanesque art in Asturias is framed between the years 711 and 925, the period of the rise and extension of the Kingdom of Asturias.
Architecture
1st period (737 to 791)
2nd period (791 to 842)
3rd period (842 to 866)
4th period (866 to 910)
5th period (910 to 925)
Infrastructure
Major figures
Minor arts
Spiritual legacy
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