Guide to Spanish Pre-Romanesque Art:
SANTA MARÍA DEL NARANCO
 Phase/Style: Asturian/Ramiro the First
Period: Ninth century State: Very good      
Location: Oviedo
|
This palace built by Ramiro the First together with San Miguel de Lillo and possibly Santa Cristina during the 8 years of his reign (842-850) is, from our point of view, the most important monument preserved of High Medieval European Art. Both fot its intrinsic value as well as for being a compendium of the best building techniques that come from former periods and, above all, for the roads it opened later to all the art in general.
It is a recreational palace of 20 meters long by around six meters wide and eleven meters high. Built with small very well squared ashlars in horizontal courses with two overimposed naves, both covered with grainsand vaults on perpiaño arches. Located in a place where, besides the San Miguel de Lillo church, there were also some other service buildings that do not any longer exist. This type of structure was already very well known in Spanish Pre-Romanesque Art, with precedents of such importance as the Mausoleo de La Alberca, Santa Eulalia de Bóveda, the crypt of San Antolín in Palencia and, already in the Asturian period, the Holy Chamber of the Cathedral of Oviedo. All of them were double vaulted buildings, except the first one, of which only a few rests remain. The other ones have preserved their lower nave almost intact, but this one is the only case where the upper nave has also been completely preserved, not only because Asturias did not suffer the invasions nor was in the avant garde of any war as the former three, but also due to its exquisite quality of design and construction, very stunning for a ninth century building.
It is very difficult to describe in these few lines such a perfect work for its times. On the outside we find ourselves with a rectangular building with a
pitched roof, upon a stone plinth that visually consists of three horizontal zones, separated by stripes in stone in a different colour, of which the first one corresponds to the lower nave and the other one to the upper one. The ensemble thus created produces an overwhelming sensation of verticality. At the centre of the northern and southern sides, that correspond with the largest sides of the rectangle, there are two doors that end in round arches, that give way to each of the plans; whereas in the northern side there is a double staircase that gives access to the central portico of the upper floor, almost with the same height than the lateral walls and reinforced by buttresses. In the southern side, the door opened to a viewpoint, now disappeared, protected by a portico, possibly of the same type as the former ones but without any staircases. As we have mentioned, each one of these porticos protects an entrance door to the lower floor, that is placed immediately under the upper one. The lateral walls that finish in four windows, two of which correspond to an existing row of balconies at every end of the upper floor and the two others to a lateral chamber placed under each row of balconies on the lower floor; have eight buttresses, four at each side of the porticos with strias' decoration as we will also see in the interior.
Special mention deserve the two façades at the ends. In both of them, totally symmetrical except in their lower part, become more important in the three horizontal zones, each one of them with a different structure, but forming part of a common design of golden section and great beauty, The lower zone, which on its east side counts with three windows that end in round arches has just one door in the nave's entrance. Upon it and in both of them, a great balcony opens in the front with three casted round arches, being the central one larger
|