Leon's Basilico St. Isidoro is a good Romanesque counterpart to its Gothic cathedral. Built over a temple to Mercury, then a Visigothic church, then a mosque, the present building, dating from the 10th century, was a church, a monastery, and the burial shrine of a number of Spain's earlier monarchs. That is, until Napoleon's troops used the royal pantheon as a stable in the eary 1800s. The murals adorning the royal pantheon somehow survived, and are today some of the best Romanesque art in Spain.
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| St. Isidore's (he was a pre-Moorish saint from Seville) | 
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On the Camino Santiago from France, St. Isidore's has seen a  variety of additions, renovations, etc. | 
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| Even a little Baroque | 
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| Nave | 
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| Vaulting | 
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| Mostly barrel | 
 
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| Altar | 
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| Very Romanesque | 
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| Nice carving | 
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| Maybe a bit Moorish | 
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| Cloister | 
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| Sort of funny faces | 
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| Not very, however | 
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In the royal pantheon, where they don't allow pix (these are  pix of pix, but give a good sense of the place); referred to, by the St. Isidore folk as the "Sistine Chapel" of Romanesque art | 
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Mostly New Testament scenes, the gospel writers, and, of course, a Pantokrator | 
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| All remarkably well preserved from the 12th century | 
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| More Romanesque faces | 
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| All over, but maybe not the best we have seen | 
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Hilariously, in the gift shoppe, they offer slides--slides--of the "Sistine Chapel" art, in lieu of forbidding photography there! Anyone still have a slide projector?! |