Manueline

Manueline
The Tower of Belém, in Lisbon, is one of the most representative examples of Manueline style.

The Manueline, or Portuguese late Gothic, is the sumptuous, composite Portuguese style of architectural ornamentation of the first decades of the 16th century, incorporating maritime elements and representations of the discoveries brought from the voyages of Vasco da Gama and Pedro Álvares Cabral. This innovative style synthesizes aspects of Late Gothic architecture with influences of the Spanish Plateresque style, Italian urban architecture, and Flemish elements. It marks the transition from Late Gothic to Renaissance. The construction of churches and monasteries in Manueline was largely financed by proceeds of the lucrative spice trade with Africa and India.

The style was given its name, many years later, by Francisco Adolfo de Varnhagen, Viscount of Porto Seguro, in his 1842 book, Noticia historica e descriptiva do Mosteiro de Belem, com um glossario de varios termos respectivos principalmente a architectura gothica, in his description of the Jerónimos Monastery. Varnhagen named the style after King Manuel I, whose reign (1495–1521) coincided with its development. The style was much influenced by the astonishing successes of the voyages of discovery of Portuguese navigators, from the coastal areas of Africa to the discovery of Brazil and the ocean routes to the Far East, drawing heavily on the style and decorations of East Indian temples.

Although the period of this style did not last long (from 1490 to 1520), it played an important part in the development of Portuguese art. The influence of the style outlived the king. Celebrating the newly maritime power, it manifested itself in architecture (churches, monasteries, palaces, castles) and extended into other arts such as sculpture, painting, works of art made of precious metals, faience and furniture.

Contents

Characteristics

The window of the Convent of Christ in Tomar is a well known example of Manueline style
Manueline interior of the Jerónimos Monastery in Lisbon.

Manueline artists include architects Diogo Boitac, Mateus Fernandes, Diogo de Arruda, Francisco de Arruda, João de Castilho, Diogo de Castilho, Diogo of Torralva, Jerome of Rouen; sculptor Diogo Pires; and painters Vasco Fernandes, Gaspar Vaz, Jorge Afonso, Cristóvão de Figueiredo, Garcia Fernandes, Gregório Lopes.

This decorative style is characterized by virtuoso complex ornamentation in portals, windows, columns and arcades. In its end period it tended to become excessively exuberant as in Tomar.

Several elements appear regularly in these intricately carved stoneworks:

  • elements used on ships: the armillary sphere (a navigational instrument and the personal emblem of Manuel I and also symbol of the cosmos), spheres, anchors, anchor chains, ropes and cables.
  • elements from the sea, such as shells, pearls and strings of seaweed.
  • botanical motifs such as laurel branches, oak leaves, acorns, poppy capsules, corncobs, thistles.
  • symbols of Christianity such as the cross of the Order of Christ (former Templar knights), the military order that played a prominent role and helped finance the first voyages of discovery. The cross of this order decorated the sails of the Portuguese ships.
  • elements from newly discovered lands (such as the tracery in the Claustro Real in the Monastery of Batalha, suggesting Islamic filigree work, influenced by buildings in India)
  • columns carved like twisted strands of rope
  • semicircular arches (instead of Gothic pointed arches) of doors and windows, sometimes consisting of three or more convex curves
  • multiple pillars
  • eight-sided capitals
  • lack of symmetry
  • conical pinnacles
  • bevelled crenellations
  • ornate portals with niches or canopies.

Examples

When King Manuel I died in 1521, he had funded 62 construction projects. However, much original Manueline architecture in Portugal was lost or damaged beyond restoration in the 1755 Lisbon earthquake and subsequent tsunami. In Lisbon, the Ribeira Palace, residence of King Manuel I, and the Hospital Real de Todos os Santos (All-Saints Hospital) were destroyed, along with several churches. The city, however, still has outstanding examples of the style in the Jerónimos Monastery (mainly designed by Diogo Boitac and João de Castilho) and in the small fortress of the Belém Tower (designed by Francisco de Arruda). Both are located close to each other in the Belém neighbourhood. The portal of the Church of Nossa Senhora da Conceição Velha, in downtown Lisbon, has also survived destruction.

Manueline exterior of the Jerónimos Monastery in Lisbon.

Outside Lisbon, the church and chapter house of the Convent of the Order of Christ at Tomar (designed by Diogo de Arruda) is a major Manueline monument. In particular, the large window of the chapter house, with its fantastic sculptured organic and twisted rope forms, is one of the most extraordinary achievements of the Manueline style.

Other major Manueline monuments include the arcade screens of the Royal Cloister (designed by Diogo Boitac) and the Unfinished Chapels (designed by Mateus Fernandes) at the Monastery of Batalha and the Royal Palace of Sintra.

Other remarkable Manueline buildings include the church of the Monastery of Jesus of Setúbal (one of the earliest Manueline churches) (also designed by Diogo Boitac), the Santa Cruz Monastery in Coimbra, the main churches in Golegã, Vila do Conde, Moura, Caminha, Olivenza and portions of the cathedrals of Braga (main chapel), Viseu (rib vaulting of the nave) and Guarda (main portal, pillars, vaulting).

Civil buildings in manueline style exist in

  • Évora, home to the Évora Royal Palace (1525, by Pedro de Trillo, Diogo de Arruda and Francisco de Arruda) and the Castle of Évoramonte (1531)
  • Viana do Castelo, Guimarães and some other towns.

The style was extended to the decorative arts and spread throughout the Portuguese Empire, to the islands of the Azores, Madeira, enclaves in North Africa, Brazil, Goa in India and even Macau, China. Its influence is apparent in Southern Spain, the Canary Islands, North Africa and the former Spanish colonies of Peru and Mexico.

See also

References

  • Atanázio, A Arte do Manuelino, Lisbon, Presença, 1984.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Manueline — ▪ architectural style Portuguese  Manuelino,         particularly rich and lavish style of architectural ornamentation indigenous to Portugal in the early 16th century. Although the Manueline style actually continued for some time after the death …   Universalium

  • manuéline — ● manuélin, manuéline adjectif (de Manuel Ier, nom propre) Se dit du style décoratif abondant et complexe qui caractérise l architecture gothique portugaise à la fin du XVe et au début du XVIe s. (Monuments les plus célèbres : monastère… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Manueline — adj. built in or characteristic of the compound Portuguese style of lavish architectural ornamentation of the early 16th century that mainly derived from marine and nautical forms …   English contemporary dictionary

  • Manueline — [ manjʊəlʌɪn] adjective denoting an ornate style of Portuguese architecture developed during the reign of Manuel I (1495–1521) …   English new terms dictionary

  • Manueline — …   Useful english dictionary

  • Neo-Manueline — façade of Rossio Railway Station in Lisbon …   Wikipedia

  • Convent of Christ (Tomar) — Convent of Christ in Tomar * UNESCO World Heritage Site Round Church of the Convent of Christ …   Wikipedia

  • Convent of the Order of Christ — Infobox World Heritage Site WHS = Convent of Christ in Tomar State Party = POR Type = Cultural Criteria = i, vi ID = 265 Region = Europe and North America Year = 1983 Session = 7th Link = http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/265The Convent of the Order… …   Wikipedia

  • Diogo de Boitaca — Diogo Boitac laid the foundations for the Jerónimos Monastery as an hall church with five bays under a single vault, having built the walls of the church as far as the cornices. Diogo de Boitaca (c. 1460 – 1528?) was an influential architect and… …   Wikipedia

  • Architecture of Portugal — refers to the architecture practised in the territory of present day Portugal since before the foundation of the country, in the 12th century. The term may also refer to buildings created under Portuguese influence or by Portuguese architects… …   Wikipedia

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