Mudéjar

From Freepedia

Mudéjar is the name given to the Moors, and native Ethnic Andalusians practising Islam, who remained in Spain after the Christian reconquista but were not converted to Christianity, and to a vernacular style of Spanish architecture and decoration, particularly of Aragon and Castile, of 12th and 16th centuries, strongly influenced by Moorish taste and workmanship, that they developed.

The word Mudéjar is a Medieval Spanish corruption of the Arabic word Mudajjan مدجن, meaning "domesticated" and the term means "those who accepted submission".

After the fall of Granada in January of 1492, Mudejars kept their status for sometime. However, they were forced to convert to Christianity in mid 16th century, and were known as Moriscos from that time, till their forced expulsion in 1610. Their distinctive style is still evident in architecture as well as music, art, and crafts of the region.

Mudéjar style

Image:Sevilla2005Julio 015.jpg In erecting Romanesque, Gothic, and Renaissance buildings, elements of Islamic art were used, achieving sometimes striking results. Its influence survived into the 17th century.

The Mudéjar style, a symbiosis of techniques and ways of understanding architecture resulting from Jewish, Muslim and Christian cultures living side by side, emerged as an architectural style in the 12th century on the Iberian peninsula. It is characterised by the use of brick as the main material. Mudéjar did not involve the creation of new shapes or structures (unlike Gothic or Romanesque), but reinterpreting Western cultural styles through Islamic influences. The dominant geometrical character, distinctly Islamic, emerged conspicuously in the accessory crafts using cheap materials elaborately worked—tilework, brickwork, wood carving, plaster carving, and ornamental metals. Even after the Muslims themselves were no longer employed, many of their contributions remained as an integral part of Spanish architecture.

Image:Sevilla2005Julio 004.jpg It is accepted that the Mudéjar style was born in Toledo, as an adaptation of architectural and ornamental motifs (especially through decoration with plasterwork and brick). Mudéjar extended northwards (León, Ávila, Segovia, etc.) giving rise to what has been called brick Romanesque. Centers of Mudéjar art are found in other cities, like Sahagún, Toro, Cuéllar, Arévalo and Madrigal de las Altas Torres. It became most highly developed mainly in Aragon, especially in Teruel (although also in Zaragoza, Utebo, Tauste, Daroca, Calatayud, etc.). During the 13th, 14th and 15th centuries, many imposing Mudéjar-style towers were built in the city of Teruel, changing the aspect of the city right down to the present day. Mudéjar brought in a new characteristic by leading to a fusion between the incipient Gothic style and the Muslim influences that had previously been superimposed on late Romanesque. A particularly fine Mudéjar example is the Casa de Pilatos, of the early 16th century at Seville.

Seville includes many other examples of Mudéjar style. The Alcázar of Seville is considered one of the greatest surviving examples of the style. The Alcázar contains Gothic and Renaissance styles as well as Mudéjar. The Palace originally began as a Moorish fort. King Pedro the Cruel continued the Islamic architectural style when he had the palace expanded.

Image:Las-ventas.jpg Neo Mudéjar is a perpetuation or revival of features of the style in the 16th to 19th centuries in Spain and Latin America. It was a frequent style in bullfight rings. Seville's Plaza de España from the 1929 World's Fair uses neo-Mudéjar style. The Gran Teatro Falla in Cádizalso uses this style.

References

John Boswell 1977. Royal Treasure: Muslim Communities Under the Crown of Aragon in the Fourteenth Century

See also



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