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| Essential
Architecture- Search by style
Portuguese Gothic architecture |
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| Monastery of Alcobaça. |
Cloisters and church of the Monastery
of Alcobaça. |
View of Santa Maria da Feira Castle. The Keep
is unique in the world with its four pinnacles of four towers stuck in the
main tower. |
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| View of Bragança Castle. The large
keep tower was built in the 15th century. |
Flamboyant Gothic in the Monastery of
Batalha: church façade (left) and Founder's Chapel (right). |
Cloisters of Oporto
Cathedral (14th century). |
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| Ambulatory of
Lisbon Cathedral (14th century). |
Central aisle of the church of
Alcobaça Monastery (12th-13th century). |
Main façade of Silves
Cathedral (15th century). |
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| Cloisters of
Évora Cathedral (14th century). |
Transept and
lantern-tower of Évora Cathedral (13th century). |
Leça do Balio Monastery,
Matosinhos (14th century). |
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| Castle of Ourém
(15th century). |
Gothic bridge of
Ponte de Lima. |
Municipality of
Guimarães with Gothic gallery (early 16th century). |
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| Star rib-vaulting
of the Founder's Chapel of the Monastery of Batalha (15th century). |
Sintra National
Palace (15th-16th centuries). |
Entrance towers of
Penedono Castle (15th century). |
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| Mudéjar-Gothic:
Main façade of St Francis of Évora (late 15th century). |
Portal of the Our
Lady Convent in Beja (15th century). |
Gothic porch in Estremoz
Castle. |
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Portuguese Gothic architecture
Portuguese Gothic architecture is the architectural style prevalent in
Portugal in the Late Middle Ages. As in other parts of Europe, Gothic style
slowly replaced Romanesque architecture in the period between the late 12th
and the 13th century. Between the late 15th and early 16th century, Gothic
was replaced by Renaissance architecture through an intermediate style
called Manueline.
Churches and monasteries
Gothic architecture was brought to Portugal by the Cistercian Order. The
first fully Gothic building in Portugal is the church of the Monastery of
Alcobaça, a magnificent example of the clear and simple architectural forms
favoured by the Cistercians. The church was built between 1178 and 1252 in
three phases, and seems inspired by the Abbey of Clairvaux, in the
Champagne. Its three aisles are very tall and slender, giving an exceptional
impression of height. The whole church is covered by rib vaulting and the
main chapel has an ambulatory and a series of radiant chapels. The vault of
the ambulatory is externally supported by flying buttresses, typical
features of Gothic architecture and a novelty at the time in Portugal.
After the foundation of Alcobaça, the Gothic style was chiefly disseminated
by mendicant orders (mainly Franciscan, Augustinians and Dominicans). Along
the 13th and 14th centuries, several convents were founded in urban centres,
important examples of which can be found in Oporto (São Francisco Church),
Coimbra (Monastery of Santa Clara-a-Velha), Guimarães (São Francisco, São
Domingos), Santarém (São Francisco, Santa Clara), Elvas (São Domingos),
Lisbon (ruins of Carmo Convent) and many other places. Mendicant Gothic
churches usually had a three-aisled nave covered with wooden roof and an
apse with three chapels covered with rib vaulting. These churches also
lacked towers and were mostly devoid of architectural decoration, in tone
with mendicant ideals. Mendicant Gothic was also adopted in several parish
churches built all over the country, for instance in Sintra (Santa Maria),
Mafra, Lourinhã and Loulé.
Many of the Romanesque cathedrals were modernised with Gothic elements.
Thus, the Romanesque nave of Oporto Cathedral is supported by flying
buttresses, one of the first built in Portugal (early 13th century). The
apse of Lisbon Cathedral was totally remodelled in the first half of the
14th century, when it gained an Gothic ambulatory illuminated by a
clerestory (high row of windows on the upper storey). The ambulatory has a
series of radiant chapels illuminated with large windows, contrasting with
the dark Romanesque nave of the cathedral. An important transitional
building is Évora Cathedral, built during the 13th century; even though its
floorplan, façade and elevation are inspired by Lisbon Cathedral, its forms
(arches, windows, vaults) are already Gothic. Many Gothic churches
maintained the fortress-like appearance of Romanesque times, like the
already-mentioned Évora Cathedral, the Church of the Monastery of Leça do
Balio (14th century) near Matosinhos, and even as late as the 15th-century,
with the Main Church of Viana do Castelo.
Several Gothic cloisters were built and can still be found in the Cathedrals
of Oporto, Lisbon and Évora (all from the 14th century) as well as in
monasteries like Alcobaça, Santo Tirso and the Convent of the Order of
Christ.
In the early 15th century, the building of the Monastery of Batalha,
sponsored by King John I, led to a renovation of Portuguese Gothic. After
1402, the works were trusted to Master Huguet, of unknown origin, who
introduced the Flamboyant Gothic style to the project. The whole building is
decorated with Gothic pinnacles (crockets), reliefs, large windows with
intrincate tracery and elaborate crenellations. The main portal has a series
of archivolts decorated with a multitude of statues, while the tympanum has
a relief showing Christ and the Evangelists. The Founder's Chapel and the
Chapter House have elaborate star-ribbed vaulting, unknown in Portugal until
then. Batalha influenced 15th-century workshops like those of Guarda
Cathedral, Silves Cathedral and monasteries in Beja (Nossa Senhora da
Conceição) and Santarém (Convento da Graça).
Another Gothic variant was the so-called Mudéjar-Gothic, which developed in
Portugal towards the end of the 15th century, specially in the Alentejo
region. The name Mudéjar refers to the influence of Islamic art in the
Christian kingdoms of the Iberian Peninsula, specially in the Middle Ages.
In the Alentejo and elsewhere, Mudéjar influence in several buildings is
evident in the profile of windows and portals, often with horseshoe arches
and a mullion, circular turrets with conical pinnacles, Islamic merlons etc,
as well as tile (azulejo) decoration. Examples include the portico of St
Francis Church of Évora, the courtyard of the Sintra Royal Palace and
several churches and palaces in Évora, Elvas, Arraiolos, Beja, etc. Múdejar
eventually intermingled with the Manueline style in the early 16th century.
Castles and palaces
During the Gothic era, several castles had to be either built or reinforced,
especially along the border with the Kingdom of Castille. Compared to
previous castles, Gothic castles in Portugal tended to have more towers,
often of circular or semi-circular plan (to increase resistance to
projectiles), keep towers tended to be polygonal, and castle gates were
often defended by a pair of flanking towers. A second, lower wall curtain
(barbicans) were often built along the perimeter of the main walls to
prevent war machines from approaching the castle. Features like
machicolations and improved arrowslits became also widespread.
Starting in the 14th century, keep towers became larger and more
sophisticated, with rib vaulting roofs and facilities like fireplaces. Keep
towers with improved residential characteristics can be found in the castles
of Beja, Estremoz and Bragança, while some later castles (15th century)
became real palaces, like those in Penedono, Ourém and Porto de Mós. The
most significant case is the Castle of Leiria, turned into a royal palace by
King John I. Some rooms of the palace are decorated with splendid Gothic
loggias, from which the surrounding landscape could be appreciated by the
King and Queen.
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