Romanesque Churches near Monforte de Lemos

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We had enjoyed the day around Chantada and so decided to take another day exploring the Romanesque Churches near Monforte de Lemos.

Romanesque churches visited over two days
Romanesque churches visited over two days

Monastery of San Salvador de Ferreira

The Cistercian monastery was set up as a ‘double monastery’, i.e. it had both monks and nuns. Apparently this was quite common in Spain between the 7th and 9th centuries, but changed thereafter. The Monastery of San Milan was another example. Today the monastery is inhabited by nuns. A small nun took our money, showed us where to go, and sold us biscuits. Her eyes were deep, and dark, and glowed, just like this of the young nun I had seen in Lerma. It is something which will stay with me.

San Salvador de Ferreira
San Salvador de Ferreira
The small 16th century cloister of the monastery
The small 16th century cloister of the monastery

The 12th century Romanesque Church was open on this visit. It is beautiful, of course. Dark, silent (no canned music), and in many ways very demanding.

The Church of San Salvador at Ferreira
The Church of San Salvador

San Miguel de Eire

The Church of San Miguel de Eire “belonged to an old Benedictine monastery founded by Escladia Ordoñez in the 12th century, which lost its independence in 1507 with the reform ordered by the Catholic Monarchs in the Galician monasteries.”1 

The church with three neighbouring houses
Three neighbouring houses
The church of San Miguel de Eiredates from the second half of the 12th century
The church of San Miguel de Eire dates from the second half of the 12th century

San Martiño de A Cova

This was an Augustinian Monastery of regular canons, again suppressed during the Mendizabal era. The setting is spectacular – perched on a very steep hillside and overlooking the gorges of the Minho River.

San Martiño a Cova
Two pilgrims were passing as we stopped

The cemetery is neat and well-ordered, but round the back of the church is a single, fenced-off grave; it is rather sad.

Looking up at the church from the cemetery
Looking up at the church from the cemetery
The Minho Gorges
The Minho Gorges

St Fiz de Cangas

St Fix de Cangas was once an establishment of Benedictine nuns who were forced out by the Mendizabal changes in the 1830s. There are apparently still murals inside the church, which was locked tightly.

St Fiz de Cangas - cemetery and church
St Fiz de Cangas – cemetery and church

The church is very isolated, surrounded by fields and farmland – the church actually stands in a farm yard.

The field next to the church
Dovecot
The field next to the church
The field next to the church

Santa Maria de Proendos

The church dates from the second half of the 13th century and was refurbished in the 18th century. Apparently there are still some wall paintings.

Santa Maria de Proendos
Sana Maria de Proendos
Santa Maria de Proendos
Rather curious porch attached to the church

The earliest mention of Roman remains near to the church was in the 1860s.2

Excavations at Proendos
Excavations at Proendos

We had two days of hard work – exploring Romanesque Churches around Monforte de Lemos. It was perhaps unnecessarily difficult because the tourist map is inadequate – we should have known, and should have brought a large-scale map. But it was also enjoyable and clearly one could spend a great deal more time on such a project….

Sources

  1. https://turismo.ribeirasacra.org/iglesia-san-miguel-de-eire
  2. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352409X22000311

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