Iglesia san francisco lorca




















Se representa en el, a san Juan escribiendo los Evangelios. Sin embargo la profusa estofa dorada la emparenta con las obras del barroco. En ella una especie de hornacina donde se halla la cruz.

En el remate del retablo un relieve de Cristo resucitado. Recuperan la primitiva capilla de la Vera Cruz en la iglesia de San Francisco. En la calle lateral izquierda, comenzando desde abajo hacia arriba, esta el prendimiento o beso de Judas. Son columnas cuyo fuste se gira o retuerce sobre si mismo. En el cuerpo del retablo, en la hornacina se halla la Virgen de los Dolores, imagen de vestir, muy venerada. Es la titular de la Hermandad de Labradores. Se desconoce su autor.

Registrarse Unirse. Forgot your password? Get help. Crea una cuenta. Cosas de Lorca. This baroque church was built in the 16th century. The present-day church was built as a part of the convent of San Francisco. The building has a single nave with some side chapels, a barrel vault and a main niche. It also has rococo ornaments. Between the 17th and the 18th centuries, works were carried out to build the bell tower. Its significance in Lorca is also underlined by it being the starting point for the Via Crucis route which leads to the hill of El Calvario or Calvary.

History of the Iglesia de San Francisco. The first monastery founded in Lorca by the Franciscans was the Convento de las Huertas in , but it was not until that construction of this church alongside the Convento de San Francisco began.

In around a project to extend the building got under way, raising the ceiling higher and building the bell-tower, while at the same time a second level was added to the main doorway.

This upper level features a niche containing a sculpture of the Virgin and Child, flanked by undetailed coats of arms, and atop all of this is the coat of arms of Lorca.

After the dissolution of the monastery in the church became dependent on the Parroquia de San Mateo, before becoming the religious seat of the Paso Azul.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000