Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The laura and coenobium of Saint Pedro of Rocas. A rupestrian complex of Byzantine origin in the northwest of the Iberian Peninsula.
View through CrossRef
The building we see today when we approach the monastery of Saint
Pedro of Rocas reveals the modern architecture: the priory house. But this
architecture "hides" another one that corresponds to the various construction
phases carved in the rock, both in its worship, residential and funerary
function. An architecture excavated in the rock that is directly related to its
hermitic origins linking Saint Pedro of Rocas with an anchoretic tradition
characteristic of the territory in which it is located and which we know as
Ribeira Sacra. Many are the questions, and the enigmas, which still contains
Saint Pedro of Rocas and it is precisely in the rock where we find the answers
to those questions. We do not intend to solve them within the framework of this
article, but we will point out some reflections that allow us to understand the
complexity and enormous historical dimension that enclose the rock of Saint
Pedro of Rocas. The data that we are obtaining from the interdisciplinary
research that we have been carrying out points to a clear oriental origin in the
forms of community life that took place in Saint Pedro of Rocas. The influence
of Saint Martín of Dumio (bishop of Braga, in the second half of the 6th
century) in the importation of monastic life forms of Syrian-Palestinian origin
ended up configuring an architecture carved into the rock at the service of a
clearly Byzantine liturgy.
Universitatea Nationala de Arte George Enescu Iasi
Title: The laura and coenobium of Saint Pedro of Rocas. A rupestrian complex
of Byzantine origin in the northwest of the Iberian Peninsula.
Description:
The building we see today when we approach the monastery of Saint
Pedro of Rocas reveals the modern architecture: the priory house.
But this
architecture "hides" another one that corresponds to the various construction
phases carved in the rock, both in its worship, residential and funerary
function.
An architecture excavated in the rock that is directly related to its
hermitic origins linking Saint Pedro of Rocas with an anchoretic tradition
characteristic of the territory in which it is located and which we know as
Ribeira Sacra.
Many are the questions, and the enigmas, which still contains
Saint Pedro of Rocas and it is precisely in the rock where we find the answers
to those questions.
We do not intend to solve them within the framework of this
article, but we will point out some reflections that allow us to understand the
complexity and enormous historical dimension that enclose the rock of Saint
Pedro of Rocas.
The data that we are obtaining from the interdisciplinary
research that we have been carrying out points to a clear oriental origin in the
forms of community life that took place in Saint Pedro of Rocas.
The influence
of Saint Martín of Dumio (bishop of Braga, in the second half of the 6th
century) in the importation of monastic life forms of Syrian-Palestinian origin
ended up configuring an architecture carved into the rock at the service of a
clearly Byzantine liturgy.
Related Results
Physician and miracle worker. The cult of Saint Sampson the Xenodochos and his images in eastern Orthodox medieval painting
Physician and miracle worker. The cult of Saint Sampson the Xenodochos and his images in eastern Orthodox medieval painting
Saint Sampson, whose feast is celebrated on June 27, was depicted among holy
physicians. However, his images were not frequent. He was usually
accompanied with Saint Mokios (...
Peninsula Lost: Mapping Milton’s Celtiberian cartographies
Peninsula Lost: Mapping Milton’s Celtiberian cartographies
In A Mask Presented at Ludlow Castle (1634), John Milton depicts Comus “ripe and frolic of his full grown age, Roving the Celtic and Iberian fields.” While Milton’s complex engagem...
II. The history of Old Smyrna
II. The history of Old Smyrna
The occupational history of the site, like its name Smyrna, goes back beyond Hellenic times. The earliest observed prehistoric habitation, dating to the third millennium B.C., and ...
Opportunistic Whale Hunting on the Southern Northwest Coast: Ancient DNA, Artifact, and Ethnographic Evidence
Opportunistic Whale Hunting on the Southern Northwest Coast: Ancient DNA, Artifact, and Ethnographic Evidence
Two modes of whale use have been documented on the Northwest Coast of North America, namely systematic whale hunting and whale scavenging. Ethnographically, systematic hunting was ...
Central Greco-Roman Cities
Central Greco-Roman Cities
Argos, situated in the southern peninsula of Greece called the Peloponnese, lies on the northwest side of the Argos Plain, backed by hills to the north and west that are the easter...
Termination of the Last Glaciation in the Iberian Peninsula Inferred from the Pollen Sequence of Quintanar de la Sierra
Termination of the Last Glaciation in the Iberian Peninsula Inferred from the Pollen Sequence of Quintanar de la Sierra
AbstractA 4.5-m-thick late-glacial pollen sequence, supported by 17 AMS 14C dates, has been investigated at the Quintanar de la Sierra marshland (Iberian cordillera, north-central ...
The Spanish Word ‘Matiz': Its Origin and Semantic Evolution in the Technical Vocabulary of Medieval Painters
The Spanish Word ‘Matiz': Its Origin and Semantic Evolution in the Technical Vocabulary of Medieval Painters
In the Romance languages of the Iberian peninsula, the French wordnuancein the meaning ‘a gradation, a barely perceptible degree of difference in a color’ is translated today by th...
Early Bronze Age Colonists in Iberia
Early Bronze Age Colonists in Iberia
The object of this paper is to show that certain Early Bronze Age sites in the Iberian Peninsula are actually colonies established by people coming from the Eastern Mediterranean.T...