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See also: Spain, in the province of Corunna;'at the See also: northern See also: terminus of a railway from See also: Tuy, near the confluence of the Sar and Sarela See also: rivers, and 32 M
.
S. by W. of the city of Corunna
.
Pop
.
(1900) 24,120
.
See also: Santiago is built on the eastern slope of See also: Monte Pedroso, surrounded by the mountains which draw down the incessant rain that gives the granite buildings of its deserted streets an extra tint of melancholy and decay
.
Its See also: annual rainfall is 66 in., a See also: total rarely exceeded on the mainland of See also: Europe
.
The city was formerly the capital of See also: Galicia; it gives its name to one of the four military orders of Spain, which See also: rank as follows: Compostela, Calatrava, See also: Alcantara and Montesa; and it is still the seat of a university and of an archbishopric, which long disputed the claim of Toledo to the primacy of all Spain
.
In the See also: middle ages its shrine, which contained the See also: body of St See also: James the
See also: Great, was one of the most famous in Europe; so numerous were the pilgrims that the popular See also: Spanish name for the Milky Way is El Camino de Santiago, or " The Santiago Road." The city became, in fact, the focus of all the See also: art and chivalry of neighbouring Christendom, and a spot where conflicting interests could meet on neutral ground
.
The See also: Congregation of See also: Rites declared in 1884 that the See also: cathedral still enshrines the veritable body of the apostle, and few places of pilgrimage in Europe are more frequented
.
The city contains many hospitals and other charitable institutions, which are open to the pilgrims
.
In 190o its ecclesiastical buildings numbered See also: forty-six
.
Its chiefSee also: industries, apart from See also: agriculture, are See also: brewing, See also: distillation of See also: spirits and the manufacture of See also: linen, paper, See also: soap, See also: chocolate and matches
.
The city has also been long celebrated for its See also: silver-smiths' See also: work
.
The belief that St James had preached in Spain was certainly current before A.D
.
400
.
The See also: relics of the See also: saint were said, though the tradition cannot be traced back farther than to the 12th century, to have been discovered in 835 by Theodomir, See also: bishop of Iria, who was guided to the spot by a See also: star
.
Hence Compostela is regarded by some authorities as a corruption of Campus Stellae, " Plain of the Star "; others derive it from See also: San Jacome Apostol
.
According to the See also: legend a See also: chapel was forthwith erected, and the bishopric was transferred thither by a See also: special bull of See also: Pope See also: Leo III
.
A more substantial See also: building was begun in 868, but was totally destroyed in 997 by the Moors, who, however, respected the sacred relics
.
On the reconquest of the city by Bermudo III. the roads were improved, and pilgrims began to See also: flock to the shrine, which fast See also: grew in reputation
.
In 1078 the erection of the See also: present cathedral was begun during the episcopate of Diego Pelaez, and was continued until 1188, when the western doorway was completed
.
Minor additions prolonged the work until 1211, when the cathedral was consecrated
.
It is a cruciform Romanesque building, and keeps its See also: original See also: form in the interior, but is disfigured externally by much poor See also: late work
.
Besides the classic dome andSee also: clock-tower, the two western towers have been raised to a height of 220 ft. and crowned with cupolas, and between them has been erected a classic portico, above which is a niche containing a statue of St James
.
The See also: facade was the work of Fernando Casas y Noboa in 1738, and the statue was by Ventura See also: Rodriguez in 1764
.
The design is mediocre, and gains its chief effect from forming See also: part of an extended architectural composition on the Plaza Mayor, a See also: grand square surrounded by public buildings
.
The ground rises to the cathedral, which is reached by a magnificent quadruple See also: flight of steps, flanked by statues of See also: David and See also: Solomon
.
See also: Access to the See also: staircase is through some See also: fine wrought-iron See also: gates, and in the centre, on the level of the Plaza, is the entrance to a Romanesque chapel, La Iglesia Baja, constructed under the portico and contemporary with the cathedral
.
To the See also: north and See also: south, and in a See also: line with the west front, are dependent buildings of the 18th century, grouping well with it
.
Those to the south contain a See also: light and elegant See also: arcade to the upper windows, and serve as a screen to the cloisters, built in 1533 by Fonseca, afterwards archbishop of Toledo
.
They are said to be the largest in Spain, and are a See also: fair example of the latest See also: Gothic
.
The delicate sculpture over the heads of the windows and along the See also: wall of the cloister is very noticeable
.
On the north of the cathedral is the Plazuela S
.
Juan, where the peasants collect to do their marketing
.
Here is the convent of S
.
See also: Martin, built in 1636, which, after serving as a barrack, is now used as an ecclesiastical seminary, restored to the
See also: church
.
It has a tolerable cloister and
See also: bell-tower
.
The north See also: side of the cathedral is much overlaid by the ugly and extravagant ornamentation styled, after its chief Spanish exponent Churriguera (d
.
1715), Churrigueresque work
.
The same treatment has been applied to the See also: east end, where is the Puerta See also: Santa; this See also: gate is kept closed, except in See also: jubilee years, whenit is opened by the archbishop
.
The corner of the south transept on the Plaza de los Plateros has been mutilated by the erection of the clock-tower, but the facade is intact
.
Perhaps the chief beauty of the cathedral, however, is the Portico de la Gloria, behind the western classic portal
.
It is a work of the 12th century, and probably the utmost development of which round-arched Gothic is capable
.
The shafts, tympana and archivolts of the three doorways which open on to the See also: nave and aisles are a mass of strong and See also: nervous sculpture
.
The design is a general See also: representation of the Last See also: Judgment, and the subjects are all treated with a quaint See also: grace which shows the work of a real artist
.
Faint traces of colour remain and give a See also: tone to the whole work
.
It is probable that, until the erection of the present grand staircase, the portico could not be reached from the Plaza, but stood open to the air
.
There are no marks of doors in the jambs, and the entrance to the chapel beneath would have been blocked by any staircase which differed much in See also: plan from the present one
.
The interior of the church is one of the purest and best examples of Romanesque work to be met with in Spain
.
The See also: absence of a See also: clerestory throws an impressive gloom over the barrel-vaulted roof, which makes the building seem larger than it is
.
A passage leads from the north transept to the Parroquia of San Juan, or La Corticela, a small but interesting portion of the original foundation
.
Many fine examples of See also: metal work are in the cathedral, as, for instance, the two See also: bronze ambos in the choir by Juan B
.
Celma of 1563, the gilt chandeliers of 1763 and the enamelled shrines of Sts Cucufato and Fructuoso
.
The great censer which hangs from the cathedral roof, and is swung by an iron chain, is about 6 ft. high
.
In the Capilla del Relicario are a gold crucifix, dated 874, containing a piece of the true See also: cross, and a silver gilt custodia of 1544
.
The Hospicio de los Reyes, on the north of the Plaza Mayor, for the reception of pilgrims, was begun in 1504 by Enrique de Egas under See also: Ferdinand and Isabella
.
It consists of two Gothic and two classic courtyards with a chapel in the centre
.
The gateway is fine, and there is some vigorous
See also: carving in the courtyards, one of which contains a graceful fountain
.
The suppressed Colegio de Fonseca and the adjoining convent of S
.
Ger6nimo have See also: good See also: Renaissance doorways
.
The university, which was created in 1504 by a bull of Pope See also: Julius II., has a library containing 60,000 volumes and several See also: MSS., many valuable and one dating from 788
.
Those of the Seminario (1777) have no merit
.
The chapel of the convent of S
.
Francisco, the cloisters of the See also: half-ruined S
.
Augustin, the belfry of S
.
Domingo, the church of S
.
Feliz de Celorio, modernized 14th century, and the facades of several houses of the 12th and 13th centuries are also good examples of different architectural styles
.
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