TY - JOUR
T1 - Architecture and liturgical space in the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela. The Libro de la Coronación de los Reyes de Castilla
AU - Santamaría, Eduardo Carrero
PY - 2012/10/1
Y1 - 2012/10/1
N2 - The Libro de la Coronación de los Reyes de Castilla (Real Biblioteca de El Escorial, &-III-3) is an extraordinary manuscript that combines two fourteenth-century coronation ordines of the kings of Castile and Aragon. The first was seemingly prepared for the coronation and anointing of Alfonso XI of Castile, an event that eventually took place in 1332. It is the only such liturgical codex preserved for a Castilian king. Its status as a historical and codicological unicum reflects the Spanish monarchy's lack of interest in such ceremonies or their sacred character. The text is, first, an introduction intended to highlight the virtues of the king and his consecration, and, second, the ceremony itself, which adapts an imperial coronation Ordo, the so-called Ordo of Constantinople. The text remained unfinished after the description of the ceremony of the king's taking up of arms. Its twenty-four full-page miniatures and one decorated initial illustrate key elements of the ceremonial, but they too were left unfinished. The manuscript describes and illustrates a coronation and anointing ceremony in the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela that did not occur because, in the end, the king was only knighted in Santiago, and was instead crowned at the monastery of Las Huelgas de Burgos. In this article, some of the peculiarities of the codex are discussed, including the original choice of Santiago de Compostela as the location for coronation. © 2012 W.S. Maney & Son Ltd.
AB - The Libro de la Coronación de los Reyes de Castilla (Real Biblioteca de El Escorial, &-III-3) is an extraordinary manuscript that combines two fourteenth-century coronation ordines of the kings of Castile and Aragon. The first was seemingly prepared for the coronation and anointing of Alfonso XI of Castile, an event that eventually took place in 1332. It is the only such liturgical codex preserved for a Castilian king. Its status as a historical and codicological unicum reflects the Spanish monarchy's lack of interest in such ceremonies or their sacred character. The text is, first, an introduction intended to highlight the virtues of the king and his consecration, and, second, the ceremony itself, which adapts an imperial coronation Ordo, the so-called Ordo of Constantinople. The text remained unfinished after the description of the ceremony of the king's taking up of arms. Its twenty-four full-page miniatures and one decorated initial illustrate key elements of the ceremonial, but they too were left unfinished. The manuscript describes and illustrates a coronation and anointing ceremony in the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela that did not occur because, in the end, the king was only knighted in Santiago, and was instead crowned at the monastery of Las Huelgas de Burgos. In this article, some of the peculiarities of the codex are discussed, including the original choice of Santiago de Compostela as the location for coronation. © 2012 W.S. Maney & Son Ltd.
KW - Coronation
KW - Santiago de Compostela
KW - Anointing
KW - Automata
KW - Las Huelgas
KW - Burgos
KW - Liturgy
KW - Knighting
UR - https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/articulo?codigo=4068479
U2 - 10.1179/1468273712Z.00000000029
DO - 10.1179/1468273712Z.00000000029
M3 - Article
SN - 1468-2737
VL - 13
SP - 468
EP - 488
JO - Hispanic Research Journal
JF - Hispanic Research Journal
ER -