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See also: mountain and monastery in See also: north-See also: east See also: Spain, 30 M
.
N.W. of See also: Barcelona
.
The mountain is of See also: grey conglomerate; its See also: main See also: axis trends from W.N.W. to E.S.E., and its circumference is about 18 m
.
The loftiest point is the See also: Tun!) de See also: San Jeronimo, also called Mirador and La See also: Miranda (4070 ft.), which commands a view of the Pyrenees, and the Mediterranean See also: Sea as far as the Balearic Islands
.
On the east the See also: base of the See also: Montserrat is washed by the See also: river Llobregat
.
The Montserrat consists of jagged pinnacles and See also: spires (penascos) rising abruptly from the base of the mass, which is cloven by many ravines, and. abounds with steep precipices
.
It is the mops serratus of the See also: Romans, the See also: monte serrado of the Spaniards, and is thus named either in allusion to its jagged appearance, like the teeth of a saw, or because it is split, as if sawn by the vast fissure of the See also: Valle Malo, which extends from north-west to east
.
This occurred, say the See also: Spanish legends, at the See also: time of the Crucifixion, when the rocks were See also: rent
.
In See also: medieval See also: German legends, which located here the See also: castle of the See also: Holy Grail, themountain is called Monsalwatsck, a name analogous to the See also: modern Catalan See also: form Montsagrat " sacred mountain." From Monistrol, a See also: village on the north-east, with a station on the Barcelona-See also: Lerida railway, the monastery can be reached either by the See also: carriage road built in 1857, or by the mountain rltilway opened in 1892
.
The ascent is also frequently made by a bridle path from the village of Collbat6, on the See also: south-west, where there are some interesting caverns
.
The monastery stands 2910 ft. above sea-level upon a narrow platform on the edge of the Valle Malo
.
It owes its existence to an image of the Virgin, said to have been carved by St See also: Luke, and brought to Barcelona by St See also: Peter in A.U
.
30 . When the Moors invaded the province in 717 the image was taken to Montserrat, where aSee also: Benedictine convent appears to have already existed, and hidden in a cave
.
In 88o Gondemar, See also: bishop of See also: Vich, was attracted to the cave by sweet sounds and smells, and there found the image, which he determined to take to See also: Manresa
.
But at a certain spot on the mountain the image refused to proceed farther; there it was consequently deposited, and a See also: chapel was erected to contain it
.
Round the chapel a nunnery was built, and in 976 this was enlarged and converted into a second Benedictine convent
.
The old monastery (monasterio antiguo) is chiefly in ruins
.
The cloisters, belfry and See also: part of the See also: church were
See also: Gothic of the 15th century
.
The church of the new monastery (monasteyio actual) was built in See also: Renaissance See also: style under See also: Philip II
.
(1500—1592) ; in 1811 it was partially burned, and in 188o a Romanesque apse was added
.
New buildings for the monks were erected under
See also: Ferdinand VII
.
(1784-1833), but
See also: left partly unfinished
.
During the See also: Napoleonic See also: wars (1808—14) it was despoiled of the vast treasures which had accumulated during the See also: middle ages
.
In 1835, as a result of the Carlist insurrection, the convent was deprived of its estates and the number of monks reduced to about twenty . The monks are largely occupied by the management of a school of sacred See also: music
.
In 1874 the convent, which by a See also: grant of
See also: Pope Benedict XIII. had been an See also: independent abbey since 1410, was made subject to the bishops of Barcelona
.
Nuestra Senora de Montserrat, Patrona de Cataluna (" Our Lady of Montserrat, See also: Patron See also: Saint of See also: Catalonia "), is one of the most celebrated images in Spain, and her church is visited annually by more than 6o,000 pilgrims
.
The image is small, black, and carved of See also: wood, but possesses magnificent robes and jewels
.
In See also: September 1881 it was solemnly crowned by See also: Leo XIIL, who sent a See also: crown from See also: Rome for that purpose
.
As the celebrity and sanctity of Montserrat increased, so did the number of devotees
.
See also: Ignatius See also: Loyola (1491–1556) laid his sword upon the altar of the Virgin, and, placing himself under her See also: protection, started from Montserrat to begin his new See also: life
.
Many eminent Spaniards, weary of the See also: world, have retired to this monastery to end their days
.
Some preferred solitary hermitages perched among the rocks
.
Of these there were fifteen, eleven of which once formed a via sacra, ending at the See also: summit of San Jeronimo
.
They were destroyed by the French, but the ruins of some remain
.
There are also caves in the mountain, some of which were formerly occupied by monks . The most celebrated of these are the cave of the Virgin, in which the See also: santa imagen remained hidden until found by Gondemar, and the cave of Fray Juan Garin, a notorious sinner, who ended his days in the practice of revolting penances at Montserrat
.
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