Guide to Spanish Pre-Romanesque Art:
SAN PEDRO DE NORA
 Phase/Style: Asturian/Alphonse the Second
Period: Ninth century     State: Rebuilt  
Location: Nora (Asturias)
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This small church, recorded for the first time in a donation document of Alphonse the Third in 905 is considered today that it was built in the times of Alphonse the Second due to its similarity with Santullano y Santa María de Bendones, though it could also be a rural church of the end of the ninth century, as suggested by Schlunk. Declared National Monument in 1931, burnt in 1936 and faithfully rebuilt by Luis Menéndez Pidal, it is today a very interesting example of the Asturian Pre-Romanesque Art.
Located in a beautiful place near the Nora river, it looks as a very attractive rural version of San Julián de los Prados, though better stylized due to a higher length/width ratio. It has a basilical plan with three naves and three apses forming a trapezium of 18m long, 13m wide in the main façade and 12m in the chevet, which is flat with three apses and a rectangular window on each one of them. Besides these three windows linteled with a discharging arch in brick and protected by lattice, there is also a triforium window in the chevet's upper plan upon a chamber that, similar to Santullano, it is placed on top of the central apse, and neither offers any communication with the interior of the church. Following the same model it also counts with buttresses, though, in this case, only in the separation of the apses and in the laterals of the chevet. There is a rectangular portico at its feet, somewhat narrower than the main nave, rebuilt during the restauration, according to the remains that were still kept. Originally, this portico could have had two lateral chambers, although no proofs have been found during the excavations, and its similarity with Santullano, that has only one central portico, makes it less probable. However remains of the compartments attached to the aisles have been found, which shape and utility are unknown, though it has been demonstrated that they had two heights. During the reconstruction, a belfry tower was added, probably inspired in the one in Santa María de Bendones, but no traces have been found to let us think that there had been another one in San Pedro de Nora.
The church is built with small stone masonry with ashlars in the corners and flat cover on the three naves, separated by four round arches in brick, somewhat casted on square pillars with framed bases and imposts, being the width of the main nave twice as much as that of the lateral ones. The three apses, narrower than the naves due to the great thickness of the walls that separate them, are communicated between them and also with the naves through round arches in brick, covered by barrel vaults. The main chapel is a bit narrower than the main nave. Its similarity with Santullano is absolutely clear, although in this case, being a church of much lesser importance, for which a royal tribune in the clergy zone would not have been mandatory, there is no the great crossing nave that we find in the basilic of Oviedo; therefore the structure of San Pedro de Nora, despite having a trapezoidal shape ressembles more a classical basilic.
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