Burgos Cathedral: Interior view, Capilla Mayor looking towards apse, altar and retable
Date
Circa 1910
Location
Architecture Library, Hesburgh Libraries
The altarpiece (retable or retablo) of the apse of the central chapel was sculpted by the brothers Rodrigo and Martín de la Haya in a Renaissance or Mannerist style, 1562-1580; it was polychromed in 1593. The foundation stone of the present building, dedicated to the Virgin, was laid by Bishop Maurice of Burgos (reigned 1217-1238) on 20 July 1221. The cathedral is indebted to the design of Bourges Cathedral. In the French High Gothic context the cathedral's plan and elevation are old-fashioned. Since Burgos was on the pilgrimage route to Galicia, however, they make the cathedral a latter-day pilgrimage church, with its three façades, gallery and extra chapels. In the 15th and 16th centuries the building was transformed. First spires were added to the western towers between 1442 and 1458 by Juan de Colonia, then sepulchral chapels were built, and lastly the crossing was given a cimborio. A UNESCO World Heritage Site.
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