San Miguel, located in the middle of the episcopal ensemble, between Santa María and San Pedro, is the best preserved of all three. In principle, it seems unquestionable that it is a baptistry, to such an extent that its first restorer, J. Puig i Cadafalch, installed, not without critics, the baptismal pool, as the original one had disappeared. From the outside, with an interesting effect of volumes, it appears as a set of roofs, two, three and four pitched, at different levels that makes us think that we are in front of a much more complex building than the structures of three nave basilical plans and an apse that initially constituted Santa María and San Pedro. But it is when we enter the church when we really find ourselves in a totally different world. In fact, its set of arches, upon eight columns with capitals that form the square that supports the central vault, surrounded by The shape of its plan that, as we have mentioned, is a Greek cross inlaid in a square and, with an unattached apse oriented to the east, as in the other churches of Terrassa, clearly links with the set of cruciform Visigothic However, San Miguel is the only one among them that maintains the arches' structure upon columns, supporting the central vault that we see in Montelios, altough the addition of the compartments in the angles improved the stability of the ensemble. | |||||
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the stability of the ensemble, in the separation between the arms of the cross and the lateral compartments, A special mention deserves its apse to which access is gained by a continuous horse shoe shaped arch. It is placed in the eastern side, forming an external compartment to the square with inner horse shoe shape, very similar to the one in santa María. However, externally it is octogonal, something without any precedents in the architecture of that period in Spain, except for the remains of a Visigothic church discovered in the cloister of the monastery of San Cugat del Vallés, of the same shape internally and externally, although in this case it is five sided, so it could be a local variation of that period. The building had three doors, one at each side except in the apse. Today only the one at the southern side is left, much modified and possibly it let the direct access to the northern nave of Santa María. Another interesting matter is the existence of a martyrial crypt located beneath the apse, to which access is gained by staircases at the southern side of its interior. It has an aisle, parallel to the eastern wall, and a perpendicular chevet, with a plan formed by three horse In the western facade, in an area with a different building style, of worse quality, we find a big very pronounced horse shoe window, clearly Mozarabic, a proof of a first partial reconstruction around the 10th century, previous to the Romanesque one, but also showing that the original ensemble is prior to the Mozarabic period. With regard to the decoration, besides the existent painting in the apse, there are only left in the capitals of the inner square, schematized Corynthian and little homogeneous, probably reutilized from the Roman period, as well as the columns that are of different thickness. They support the set of arches that on their turn support the walls of the central vault. As can be seen in everything mentioned above, San Miguel de Terrassa is one of the most exciting and conflicting monuments of all Spanish pre romanesque |
| studies have been accomplished that cover the whole ensemble; besides, there is very little published information about those that have been attained partially. For all that has been mentioned above, it is practically impossible to conclude a definite dating, although there are likely options: either its initial construction took place during the zenith of the bishopry of Egara in the last Visigothic period, at the end of the 7th or beginning of the 8th centuries, or that they had been modified during the settlements of the Hispanic March in the second half of the 9th century. Therefore, although without total certainty, our impression is that its origin is Visigothic. We shall limit ourselves to put forward the points we believe most meaningful in favour of each of these two options:
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