Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

San Bartolomé, Córdoba

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Province
  
Province of Córdoba

Phone
  
+34 957 49 28 29

San Bartolomé, Córdoba

Address
  
Facultad de Folisofía y Letras, Calle Averroes, S/N, 14004 Córdoba, Spain

Hours
  
Open today · 10:30AM–1:30PM, 3:30–6:30PMSaturday10:30AM–1:30PM, 3:30–6:30PMSunday10:30AM–1:30PMMonday3:30–6:30PMTuesday10:30AM–1:30PM, 3:30–6:30PMWednesday10:30AM–1:30PM, 3:30–6:30PMThursday10:30AM–1:30PM, 3:30–6:30PMFriday10:30AM–1:30PM, 3:30–6:30PMSuggest an edit

Similar
  
Casa de Sefarad, Hospital del Cardenal, Calahorra Tower, Córdoba Synagogue, Calleja de las Flores

The Chapel of San Bartolomé (Spanish: Capilla de San Bartolomé) is a 15th-century funerary chapel in the historic centre of Córdoba, Spain. It is dated between 1390 and 1410. Richly decorated, it is one of the city's finest examples of Mudéjar art.

Contents

History

Located on the Calle Averroes in today's Faculty of Arts building, the relatively unknown chapel is one of the city's most notable monuments. With the development of the Alcázar Viejo district in 1391 and the later expulsion of the Jews from La Judería, the parish of San Bartolomé was established while a church of the same name was constructed between 1399 and 1410. The little building continued to operate as a parish church until the 17th century, possibly awaiting completion of a larger church. Although there have been a number of alterations and additions over the centuries, the chapel is a fine example of ancient Mudéjar art.

Architecture

Rectangular in shape, the area is divided into two sections, one for the chapel itself, the other for a courtyard. Built of rusticated sandstone, the chapel has a rectangular floor measuring 9 m (30 ft) by 5 m (16 ft). The chancel is slightly higher than the remainder of the building. There are two doors, one through a porch opening into a courtyard on Calle Averroes, the second, strangely locked from the outside, providing access into a side chapel which may have been connected to a sacristy in another building.

The entrance from the courtyard has a pointed arch with a few simple decorations while the other entrance, also pointed, has zigzag or sawtooth decorations. Two small columns bearing Islamic decorations with scrolls and leaves support the elegantly rib-vaulted ceiling. The interior walls are richly decorated with yeseria plasterwork and tiling while the floor is also decorated with alternating tiles. The wall decorations combine depictions of plants, geometric patterns and heraldry. The coats of arms belong to the Knights of the Band, an order created by King Alfonso XI. Inscriptions are in both Kufic and Naskh scripts.

Listing

The chapel has been listed as a historic monument since 1931.

References

San Bartolomé, Córdoba Wikipedia