Discovered and studied initially by Gómez Moreno and moved in 1930 from its original siting that was going to be covered by water in the reservoir of Esla, on the higher edge of the same valley. In order to move it, it was necessary to dismantle stone after stone to then assemble it in the new site. This permitted to get deeply acquainted with the original structure of the building and with the characteristics of Visigothic art. It was restored replacing the nonexistent pieces by bricks.
Its structure is clearly the one of a cruciform church, of the same type of the ones of Bande, Mata and Melque, but of a later date, when it was added to those churches, besides its initial funerary function, the utilization as a monastic church. That is why, in this case the lateral rooms exist from its original design instead of having been a later addition, as we think it happened with the previous ones.
It has a rectangular plan with the shape of a Latin cross inlaid in a rectangle, with three rectangular accessories; one facing east, that forms the major chapel, and two facing north and south that conform two lateral porticos. It has three naves crossed by the crossing one, of the same height than the central nave that divides them in two very different zones: in the west one, the two lateral naves are separated from the central one by series of arches with three spaces, separated by pillars combined by three horseshoe arches, which, in a way, produces a certain aspect of a basilical church, with windows, also horseshoe shaped upon the crossing. At the east, both naves continue along the sides of the chevet in two chambers, each one of them communicated with the central nave through a door and a window with three spaces, which we will not find again until two hundred years later in some Asturian churches. The church has three doors to the outside, one at the end of the central nave and the other two, one at each end of the crossing. They count with a good lighting provided by windows with horseshoe arches, double in some cases, in the lateral naves, the east zone of the central nave, the dome, the chevet and the west wall. With regard to its cover, the crossing nave and the whole chevet have semicircular barrel vaults, canted upon horseshoe toral arches supported by square pillars with attached columns. The dome in the intersection of the central with the crossing naves has a window on each of its four walls and was covered by a groin vault in stone that was found knocked down and was rebuilt in brick. There are also three elevated chambers, supposedly to hide treasures or archives, over the major chapel and the lateral vestibules. With regard to the cover of the basilical part of the building, it was believed initially that it was made with wooden roofs; gabled in the central nave and lower those of the lateral naves, but further studies by Cámara, Caballero, Zoreda and Arce, support Balba's theory that states it was wholly vaulted.
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The whole church has an excellent decoration in imposts and capitals, completely integrated in the construction with three prefectly defined styles:
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In summary, it is a very harmonic, well proportioned ensemble in an excellent state of preservation, with a very interesting decoration, that gives idea of the maturity reached by the Spanish Visigothic architecture.
The visit to this monument makes us think on the extremely high level reached by the Visigothic art in the nearly over a hundred years that went by since Recaredo's conversion to Catholicism and the Arab invasion, much higher than in the rest of the western European countries; and to what levels of maturity and perfection it would have reached, had it not taken place.
OTHER INFORMATION OF INTEREST Access: Road N-122, direction Portugal, continue until Almendra, 11Km far. Take B road to El Campillo. Information telephone: Ayuntamiento de San Pedro de la Nave/Almendra: 980 555 761
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