Church of San Vicente Icono google maps

The Parish Church of San Vicente is documented in the year 1322, although the oldest remains that it conserves are from the mid-15th century and its basic structure dates back to the first half of the 17th century. In general, we find a temple with a single nave and rectangular floor plan, a tower at the foot, a rectangular chevet, a portico on its west walls and part of the south, ashlar masonry and gabled roof. The exterior is very austere and only the corner abutments, the line of flared semicircular openings and the bell tower with two well-defined areas, the lower part, late medieval, and the development in height, posterior, and culminating with a dome stand out. , spire and cross. The access is a semicircular arch and lateralized under the midday portico, although it has another to the baptismal chapel, under the tower, in a pointed Gothic arch and voussoirs on corbels, which is attached to the portico distinguished by wooden right feet and corner pilasters in stone, covered with a slope and of modern chronology. The rest of the notable elements are found in an interior articulated in four sections divided by semicircular arches on Tuscan cruciform pilasters and vaulted in terceletes. It is consolidated with stirrups that form side chapels joining these with semicircular arches, like the triumphal one that gives way to the head.

It houses a main altarpiece dated in the eighties of the XIX century and with a clear classicist air with elements such as Corinthian columns, semicircular arches, palm leaves, etc. It has images of: San Antonio de Padua and San Vicente, neoclassical, San José, current and a baroque Calvary. In a chapel of the feet dedicated to La Dolorosa, an image of this one with a Christ at the feet of neoclassical style is found in a niche.

In the neighborhood of El Regato is the Church of San Roque built very close to the hermitage of the same dedication that already existed in this neighborhood since the seventeenth century. We also have three other religious temples. The Church of San José is a construction from 1940 and the work of Ricardo Bastida, who took his patronage from the failed project that Casto Zavala intended to build at the end of the 19th century in the Desierto neighborhood. It has three naves, a circular apse and a tower at the foot that acts as a portico in its lower part. Inside the pointed arches articulate sections and naves, except for the side chapels of the walls that are resolved in a half point. Brick is used in part of its structure and the mural at the head with the life of Saint Joseph and of Renaissance cadence stands out.

Photo of the Church of San Bizente.


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