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Cathedral-Basilica of Our Lady of the Pillar

41°39′25″N 0°52′42″W / 41.65694°N 0.87833°W / 41.65694; -0.87833

See Basilica of Our Lady of the Pillar (Buenos Aires) for the church in Buenos Aires
Cathedral-Basilica of Our Lady of the Pillar
Catedral-Basílica de Nuestra Señora del Pilar
Nuestra Señora del Pilar Basilica
Religion
AffiliationCatholic
ProvinceArchdiocese of Zaragoza
RiteRoman Rite
Ecclesiastical or organizational statusMinor Basilica
Year consecrated1st or 2nd century AD (founded by the pre-Schism Christian Church)
Location
LocationZaragoza, Spain
Architecture
Style
Groundbreaking1681
Completed1961
TypeNon-movable
CriteriaMonument
Designated22 June 1904
Reference no.RI-51-0000083

The Cathedral-Basilica of Our Lady of the Pillar (Spanish: Catedral-Basílica de Nuestra Señora del Pilar) is a Roman Catholic church in the city of Zaragoza, Aragon (Spain). The basilica's titular is the Blessed Virgin Mary under the title of Our Lady of the Pillar,[1] praised as "Mother of the Hispanic Peoples" by Pope John Paul II.[2] It is reputed to be the first church dedicated to Mary in history.[3]

Local traditions take the history of this basilica to the spread of Christianity in Roman Spain attributing to an apparition to Saint James the Great, the apostle who is believed by tradition to have brought Christianity to the country.[4] This is the only reported apparition of Mary to have occurred before her believed Assumption.[2]

Many of the kings of Spain, many other foreign rulers and saints have paid their devotion before this statue of Mary. Saint John of the Cross, Saint Teresa of Ávila, Saint Ignatius of Loyola, and Blessed William Joseph Chaminade are among the foremost ones.[5] The Basilica of Our Lady of the Pillar is one of two minor basilicas in the city of Zaragoza, and is co-cathedral of the city alongside the nearby La Seo de Zaragoza. The architecture is of Baroque style, and the present building was predominantly built between 1681 and 1872.

History edit

 
Front side of the basilica

Apparition of Pilar edit

According to ancient local tradition, soon after the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus, Saint James was preaching the Gospel in Spain, but was disheartened because of the failure of his mission.[4] Tradition holds that on 2 January 40 AD,[3] while he was deep in prayer by the banks of the Ebro,[6] the Mother of God appeared to him and gave a column of jasper and instructed him to build a church in her honor:[4] "This place is to be my house, and this image and column shall be the title and altar of the temple that you shall build."[7]

First chapel edit

About a year after the apparition, James is believed to have had a small chapel built in Mary's honor, the first church ever dedicated to her. After James returned to Jerusalem, he was executed by Herod Agrippa in about 44 AD, the first apostle to be martyred for his faith. Several of his disciples took his body and returned it for final burial in Spain.[4] This first chapel was eventually destroyed with various other Christian shrines, but the statue and the pillar stayed intact under the protection of the people of Zaragoza.[5]

Expansions edit

Romanesque church edit

 
Mudéjar church of the Pillar in 1647 by Juan Bautista Martínez del Mazo.

Numerous churches have been built upon this site through the years. The tiny chapel built by Saint James later gave way to a basilica-like enclosure during Constantine I's time; subsequently being transformed into Romanesque, then Gothic then Mudéjar styles.[8] The venerated shrines at Zaragoza date to the Christian Reconquest by King Alfonso I in 1118.[9] A church in the Romanesque style was built under the pontificate of Pedro de Librana[8] who is also credited with the oldest written testimonial to the Virgin at Zaragoza.[6] A tympanum on the south wall of this Romanesque church still stands.[8]

Gothic church edit

 
Basilica of the Pillar in 1806, before the four high Neo-Mudéjar spiers were most built in 1872. Most part of the angular towers that enhance the exterior volume date to the 20th century, and were not completed until 1961. Engraving by Robert Daudet and Louis-François Lejeune.

The Romanesque church was damaged by fire in 1434, and reconstruction began in the Mudéjar Gothic style.[8] A Gothic-style church was built in the 15th century but only a few parts of it remain intact or were later restored, including the choir stand and the altarpiece in alabaster[10] by Damián Forment.

Current church edit

 
Detail of the fresco of The Queen of Martyrs in the dome, painted by Francisco Goya

The present spacious church in Baroque style was begun in 1681[6] by Charles II, King of Spain and completed in 1686.[5] The early constructions were supervised by Felipe Sanchez[8] and were later modified by Francisco Herrera the Younger under John of Austria the Younger.[11] In 1725, the Cabildo of Zaragoza decided to change the aspect of the Holy Chapel and commissioned the architect Ventura Rodríguez, who transformed the building into its present dimensions of 130 meters long by 67 wide, with its eleven cupolas and four towers. The area most visited is the eastern part of the chapel, because this is where the Holy Chapel by Ventura Rodríguez (1754) is built, which houses the venerated image of the Virgin. Around the Holy Chapel are the vaults or domes painted with frescoes by Francisco Goya: The Queen of Martyrs and Adoration of the Name of God.[10] The gilding and other ornamentation throughout the building were designed and overseen by Goya's father José.[12] By 1718 the church had been vaulted over. However, it was not until 1872 that the final touches were put to these vaults, when the main dome and the final spire were finished.[8]

During the Spanish Civil War of 1936–1939 three bombs were dropped on the church but none of them exploded.[3] Two of them are still on show in the basilica.

Notable choirmasters include the Baroque composer Joseph Ruiz Samaniego.

Pillar and the image edit

 
The basilica, viewed from across the Ebro

The statue is wooden and 39 cm tall and rests on a column of jasper. The tradition of the shrine of El Pilar, as given by Our Lady in an apparition to Sister Mary Agreda and written about in Mystical City of God, is that Our Lady was carried on a cloud by the angels to Zaragoza during the night. While they were traveling, the angels built a pillar of marble, and a miniature image of Our Lady. Our Lady gave the message to St James and added that a church was to be built on the site where the apparition took place. The pillar and the image were to be part of the main altar.[2] The image was crowned in 1905 with a crown designed by the Marquis of Griñi, and valued at 450,000 pesetas (£18,750, 1910).[6]

Layout edit

The building, which can be seen from the nearby Ebro River, is a large rectangle with a nave and two aisles, with two other all-brick chapels, thus giving the whole a typically Aragonese touch. It is illuminated by large oculi, characteristic of the monuments of the region from the 17th century onwards. Twelve enormous pillars support the vaults of the nave and aisles; the whole is topped by domes, as are the chapels.[8]

The chapels within the basilica include:

Organ and music edit

The first organ was built in 1463 by Enrique de Colonia. In 1537, Martín de Córdoba built another organ with the intent to compete with the one at the La Seo.

Guillermo de Lupe and his son Gaudioso restructured the larger organ between 1595 and 1602; he had done the same for an organ in the Cathedral of the Savior of Zaragoza in 1577.

In 1657, there were several organs in the church, of many sizes and offering many possibilities. As a result, the musical activity reached a peak in the Spanish Golden Age; however, it began to decline toward the end of the 19th century.

In the Middle Ages, a minstrel accompanied singers with a dulcian. Polyphony in the Cathedral-Basilica of Our Lady of the Pillar was first documented in the mid-17th century, played by a "tenor" and a "contrabajón". In the late 1600s, an orchestra composed of minstrels agreed to work for the Church of Santa María la Mayor, the predecessor of the cathedral-basilica.

El Pilar and Spanish identity edit

The feast of Our Lady of the Pillar, celebrating the first apparition of Mary to Hispanic people, is on October 12. This coincides with the Día de la Hispanidad and the date of Columbus's discovery of the New World. Every nation of Hispanic colonial origin has donated national vestments for the fifteenth-century statue of the Virgin, which is housed in the chapel.[8] Pope John Paul II praised El Pilar as "Mother of the Hispanic Peoples" during both his visits to the basilica.[2]

It was declared Bien de Interés Cultural in 1904.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Our Lady of the Pillar 2007-10-15 at the Wayback Machine on Catholic-forums.
  2. ^ a b c d Fr. Tommy Lane Homily during a pilgrimage to Zaragoza, Spain on Bible, Prayer, Homily resources website.
  3. ^ a b c . Archived from the original on 2017-11-20. Retrieved 2007-10-25.
  4. ^ a b c d Our Lady of the Pillar on The work of God website on various apparitions of Mary.
  5. ^ a b c Zsolt Aradi The Virgen Del Pilar on Catholic culture.
  6. ^ a b c d Nuestra Señora Del Pilar on Catholic encylopedeia.
  7. ^ City of God, The Coronation, Book One, Part III, Book VII, Chapter XVI, Paragraph 352, Page 325. ISBN 978-0895558251
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Juan Antonio Gracia Gimeno. The Pillar of Saragossa Editorial Escudo de Ora. S.A., ISBN 84-378-1301-8
  9. ^ Ibn Bajja, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  10. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2018-05-25. Retrieved 2018-06-07.
  11. ^ Francisco Herrera (el Mozo, the Younger) in Catholic Encyclopedia.
  12. ^ Connell, Evan S., Francisco Goya: A Life. New York: Counterpoint, 2004. ISBN 978-1-58243-307-3
  • ANSÓN NAVARRO, Arturo y Belén Boloqui Larraya, «Zaragoza Barroca», en Guillermo Fatás Cabeza (coord.), Guía histórico-artística de Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Institución «Fernando el Católico»; Ayto. de Zaragoza, 2008, 4.ª ed. revisada y ampliada, págs. 249–327. Cfr. especialmente la sección «Basílica de Nuestra Señora del Pilar», págs. 287–322.— ISBN 978-84-7820-948-4.
  • «El Pilar» 2018-08-23 at the Wayback Machine, Gran Enciclopedia Aragonesa (en línea). [Consulta:22-7-2008]
  • NOUGUÉS SECALL, Mariano, Historia crítica y apologética de la Virgen nuestra señora del Pilar de Zaragoza y de su templo y tabernáculo desde el siglo I hasta nuestros días, Madrid, Alejandro Gómez Fuentenebro, 1862.
  • ORTIZ ALBERO, Miguel Ángel, Julián Pelegrín Campo y María Pilar Rivero Gracia, El Pilar desconocido, Zaragoza, Heraldo de Aragón, 2006, pág. 13.—D. L. Z-2597-06. OCLC 433533535
  • RINCÓN GARCÍA, Wifredo, El Pilar de Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Everest, 2000. ISBN 84-241-0044-1.
  • RISCO, Manuel, España Sagrada, t. XXX. Contiene el estado antiguo de la Santa Iglesia de Zaragoza [...] y una colección de las epístolas de San Braulio [...], Madrid, Antonio de Sancha, 1775.

cathedral, basilica, lady, pillar, 65694, 87833, 65694, 87833, basilica, lady, pillar, buenos, aires, church, buenos, airescatedral, basílica, nuestra, señora, pilarnuestra, señora, pilar, basilicareligionaffiliationcatholicprovincearchdiocese, zaragozariterom. 41 39 25 N 0 52 42 W 41 65694 N 0 87833 W 41 65694 0 87833 See Basilica of Our Lady of the Pillar Buenos Aires for the church in Buenos AiresCathedral Basilica of Our Lady of the PillarCatedral Basilica de Nuestra Senora del PilarNuestra Senora del Pilar BasilicaReligionAffiliationCatholicProvinceArchdiocese of ZaragozaRiteRoman RiteEcclesiastical or organizational statusMinor BasilicaYear consecrated1st or 2nd century AD founded by the pre Schism Christian Church LocationLocationZaragoza SpainArchitectureStyleBaroqueNeo MudejarGroundbreaking1681Completed1961Spanish Cultural HeritageTypeNon movableCriteriaMonumentDesignated22 June 1904Reference no RI 51 0000083The Cathedral Basilica of Our Lady of the Pillar Spanish Catedral Basilica de Nuestra Senora del Pilar is a Roman Catholic church in the city of Zaragoza Aragon Spain The basilica s titular is the Blessed Virgin Mary under the title of Our Lady of the Pillar 1 praised as Mother of the Hispanic Peoples by Pope John Paul II 2 It is reputed to be the first church dedicated to Mary in history 3 Local traditions take the history of this basilica to the spread of Christianity in Roman Spain attributing to an apparition to Saint James the Great the apostle who is believed by tradition to have brought Christianity to the country 4 This is the only reported apparition of Mary to have occurred before her believed Assumption 2 Many of the kings of Spain many other foreign rulers and saints have paid their devotion before this statue of Mary Saint John of the Cross Saint Teresa of Avila Saint Ignatius of Loyola and Blessed William Joseph Chaminade are among the foremost ones 5 The Basilica of Our Lady of the Pillar is one of two minor basilicas in the city of Zaragoza and is co cathedral of the city alongside the nearby La Seo de Zaragoza The architecture is of Baroque style and the present building was predominantly built between 1681 and 1872 Contents 1 History 1 1 Apparition of Pilar 1 2 First chapel 1 3 Expansions 1 3 1 Romanesque church 1 3 2 Gothic church 1 3 3 Current church 2 Pillar and the image 3 Layout 4 Organ and music 5 El Pilar and Spanish identity 6 See also 7 ReferencesHistory edit nbsp Front side of the basilicaApparition of Pilar edit Main article Our Lady of the Pillar According to ancient local tradition soon after the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus Saint James was preaching the Gospel in Spain but was disheartened because of the failure of his mission 4 Tradition holds that on 2 January 40 AD 3 while he was deep in prayer by the banks of the Ebro 6 the Mother of God appeared to him and gave a column of jasper and instructed him to build a church in her honor 4 This place is to be my house and this image and column shall be the title and altar of the temple that you shall build 7 First chapel edit About a year after the apparition James is believed to have had a small chapel built in Mary s honor the first church ever dedicated to her After James returned to Jerusalem he was executed by Herod Agrippa in about 44 AD the first apostle to be martyred for his faith Several of his disciples took his body and returned it for final burial in Spain 4 This first chapel was eventually destroyed with various other Christian shrines but the statue and the pillar stayed intact under the protection of the people of Zaragoza 5 Expansions edit Romanesque church edit nbsp Mudejar church of the Pillar in 1647 by Juan Bautista Martinez del Mazo Numerous churches have been built upon this site through the years The tiny chapel built by Saint James later gave way to a basilica like enclosure during Constantine I s time subsequently being transformed into Romanesque then Gothic then Mudejar styles 8 The venerated shrines at Zaragoza date to the Christian Reconquest by King Alfonso I in 1118 9 A church in the Romanesque style was built under the pontificate of Pedro de Librana 8 who is also credited with the oldest written testimonial to the Virgin at Zaragoza 6 A tympanum on the south wall of this Romanesque church still stands 8 Gothic church edit nbsp Basilica of the Pillar in 1806 before the four high Neo Mudejar spiers were most built in 1872 Most part of the angular towers that enhance the exterior volume date to the 20th century and were not completed until 1961 Engraving by Robert Daudet and Louis Francois Lejeune The Romanesque church was damaged by fire in 1434 and reconstruction began in the Mudejar Gothic style 8 A Gothic style church was built in the 15th century but only a few parts of it remain intact or were later restored including the choir stand and the altarpiece in alabaster 10 by Damian Forment Current church edit nbsp Detail of the fresco of The Queen of Martyrs in the dome painted by Francisco GoyaThe present spacious church in Baroque style was begun in 1681 6 by Charles II King of Spain and completed in 1686 5 The early constructions were supervised by Felipe Sanchez 8 and were later modified by Francisco Herrera the Younger under John of Austria the Younger 11 In 1725 the Cabildo of Zaragoza decided to change the aspect of the Holy Chapel and commissioned the architect Ventura Rodriguez who transformed the building into its present dimensions of 130 meters long by 67 wide with its eleven cupolas and four towers The area most visited is the eastern part of the chapel because this is where the Holy Chapel by Ventura Rodriguez 1754 is built which houses the venerated image of the Virgin Around the Holy Chapel are the vaults or domes painted with frescoes by Francisco Goya The Queen of Martyrs and Adoration of the Name of God 10 The gilding and other ornamentation throughout the building were designed and overseen by Goya s father Jose 12 By 1718 the church had been vaulted over However it was not until 1872 that the final touches were put to these vaults when the main dome and the final spire were finished 8 During the Spanish Civil War of 1936 1939 three bombs were dropped on the church but none of them exploded 3 Two of them are still on show in the basilica Notable choirmasters include the Baroque composer Joseph Ruiz Samaniego Pillar and the image edit nbsp The basilica viewed from across the EbroThe statue is wooden and 39 cm tall and rests on a column of jasper The tradition of the shrine of El Pilar as given by Our Lady in an apparition to Sister Mary Agreda and written about in Mystical City of God is that Our Lady was carried on a cloud by the angels to Zaragoza during the night While they were traveling the angels built a pillar of marble and a miniature image of Our Lady Our Lady gave the message to St James and added that a church was to be built on the site where the apparition took place The pillar and the image were to be part of the main altar 2 The image was crowned in 1905 with a crown designed by the Marquis of Grini and valued at 450 000 pesetas 18 750 1910 6 Layout editThe building which can be seen from the nearby Ebro River is a large rectangle with a nave and two aisles with two other all brick chapels thus giving the whole a typically Aragonese touch It is illuminated by large oculi characteristic of the monuments of the region from the 17th century onwards Twelve enormous pillars support the vaults of the nave and aisles the whole is topped by domes as are the chapels 8 The chapels within the basilica include Chapel of the Rosary Chapel of Joachim Chapel of Saint Lawrence Lorenzo Chapel of Saint Pedro de Arbues Chapel of Saint Braulio Chapel of Saint Anthony Chapel of Saint Joseph Chapel of Saint Anna Chapel of Saint JohnOrgan and music editThe first organ was built in 1463 by Enrique de Colonia In 1537 Martin de Cordoba built another organ with the intent to compete with the one at the La Seo Guillermo de Lupe and his son Gaudioso restructured the larger organ between 1595 and 1602 he had done the same for an organ in the Cathedral of the Savior of Zaragoza in 1577 In 1657 there were several organs in the church of many sizes and offering many possibilities As a result the musical activity reached a peak in the Spanish Golden Age however it began to decline toward the end of the 19th century In the Middle Ages a minstrel accompanied singers with a dulcian Polyphony in the Cathedral Basilica of Our Lady of the Pillar was first documented in the mid 17th century played by a tenor and a contrabajon In the late 1600s an orchestra composed of minstrels agreed to work for the Church of Santa Maria la Mayor the predecessor of the cathedral basilica El Pilar and Spanish identity editThe feast of Our Lady of the Pillar celebrating the first apparition of Mary to Hispanic people is on October 12 This coincides with the Dia de la Hispanidad and the date of Columbus s discovery of the New World Every nation of Hispanic colonial origin has donated national vestments for the fifteenth century statue of the Virgin which is housed in the chapel 8 Pope John Paul II praised El Pilar as Mother of the Hispanic Peoples during both his visits to the basilica 2 It was declared Bien de Interes Cultural in 1904 citation needed See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Catedral Basilica de Nuestra Senora del Pilar de Zaragoza Marian apparitions Roman Catholic Marian churches 12 Treasures of Spain List of Bien de Interes Cultural in the Province of ZaragozaReferences edit Our Lady of the Pillar Archived 2007 10 15 at the Wayback Machine on Catholic forums a b c d Fr Tommy Lane Homily during a pilgrimage to Zaragoza Spain on Bible Prayer Homily resources website a b c NUESTRA SENORA DEL PILAR OUR LADY OF THE PILLAR Archived from the original on 2017 11 20 Retrieved 2007 10 25 a b c d Our Lady of the Pillar on The work of God website on various apparitions of Mary a b c Zsolt Aradi The Virgen Del Pilar on Catholic culture a b c d Nuestra Senora Del Pilar on Catholic encylopedeia City of God The Coronation Book One Part III Book VII Chapter XVI Paragraph 352 Page 325 ISBN 978 0895558251 a b c d e f g h Juan Antonio Gracia Gimeno The Pillar of Saragossa Editorial Escudo de Ora S A ISBN 84 378 1301 8 Ibn Bajja Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy a b Nuestra Senora del Pilar Basilica Turespana Archived from the original on 2018 05 25 Retrieved 2018 06 07 Francisco Herrera el Mozo the Younger in Catholic Encyclopedia Connell Evan S Francisco Goya A Life New York Counterpoint 2004 ISBN 978 1 58243 307 3 ANSoN NAVARRO Arturo y Belen Boloqui Larraya Zaragoza Barroca en Guillermo Fatas Cabeza coord Guia historico artistica de Zaragoza Zaragoza Institucion Fernando el Catolico Ayto de Zaragoza 2008 4 ª ed revisada y ampliada pags 249 327 Cfr especialmente la seccion Basilica de Nuestra Senora del Pilar pags 287 322 ISBN 978 84 7820 948 4 El Pilar Archived 2018 08 23 at the Wayback Machine Gran Enciclopedia Aragonesa en linea Consulta 22 7 2008 NOUGUES SECALL Mariano Historia critica y apologetica de la Virgen nuestra senora del Pilar de Zaragoza y de su templo y tabernaculo desde el siglo I hasta nuestros dias Madrid Alejandro Gomez Fuentenebro 1862 ORTIZ ALBERO Miguel Angel Julian Pelegrin Campo y Maria Pilar Rivero Gracia El Pilar desconocido Zaragoza Heraldo de Aragon 2006 pag 13 D L Z 2597 06 OCLC 433533535 RINCoN GARCIA Wifredo El Pilar de Zaragoza Zaragoza Everest 2000 ISBN 84 241 0044 1 RISCO Manuel Espana Sagrada t XXX Contiene el estado antiguo de la Santa Iglesia de Zaragoza y una coleccion de las epistolas de San Braulio Madrid Antonio de Sancha 1775 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cathedral Basilica of Our Lady of the Pillar amp oldid 1185966564, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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