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Church of Santa Cruz de Cangas de Onís

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Church of the True Cross of
Cangas de Onís
Iglesia de la Santa Cruz de Cangas de Onís (in Spanish)
The entrance to the chapel today
Religion
AffiliationRoman Catholic
ProvinceAsturias
Ecclesiastical or organizational statusChapel
Year consecrated27 October 737
Location
LocationSpain Cangas de Onís, Spain
Geographic coordinates43°21′9.7″N 5°7′49.4″W / 43.352694°N 5.130389°W / 43.352694; -5.130389
Architecture
TypeChapel
StylePre-Romanesque
Groundbreaking437

Santa Cruz de Cangas de Onís is a small Roman Catholic chapel in Cangas de Onís, the first capital of the Kingdom of Asturias, in what is now northern Spain. It was founded on an artificial mound (a pagan dolmen) by Favila, second king of Asturias, and his queen, Froiliuba. It was begun in 737 and consecrated that same year on 27 October according to its original foundation stone, which has been called the first literary monument of the Reconquista.

Santa Cruz originally housed the Cruz de la Victoria, an oak cross supposedly carried by Pelagius, Favila's father, at the Battle of Covadonga. It was probably the first church constructed after the Islamic invasion of Spain in 711.

The church was completely rebuilt on two occasions. First in 1632 and again after its destruction in the Spanish Civil War (1936). Then, local authorities decided to uncover the dolmen beneath it, which had been obscured by a church since the fourth century, when the first chapel was put up on that site. Of the original building only the foundation stone survives.

Burials

Images

  • The dolmen, now visible through the chapel floor. The dolmen, now visible through the chapel floor.
  • The foundation stone reads (in translation from the original Latin): . . . and his children, for whom by it, O Christ, by your sacrifice be all your grace, and after the course of this life may they reach your generous mercy. Here were consecrated altars to Christ by the priest Asterius, on the three-hundredth day of the year in the sixth age of the world in the Era 775. The foundation stone reads (in translation from the original Latin):
    . . . and his children, for whom by it, O Christ, by your sacrifice be all your grace, and after the course of this life may they reach your generous mercy. Here were consecrated altars to Christ by the priest Asterius, on the three-hundredth day of the year in the sixth age of the world in the Era 775.

See also

Notes

  1. Fernández Conde, Francisco (1987). La Iglesia De Asturias En La Baja Edad Media: Estructuras Economico-Administrativas. Oviedo: Principado de Asturias, Instituto de Estudios Asturianos. ISBN 84-600-4912-4.
  2. Antonio C. Floriano (1949), Restauración del culto cristiano en Asturias en la iniciación de la Reconquista.

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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