Title: The Escorial
Author: Albert Frederick Calvert
Release date: February 14, 2020 [eBook #61407]
Most recently updated: October 17, 2024
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
produced from imageChuck Greif and the Online Distributed
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THE SPANISH SERIES
THE ESCORIAL
THE SPANISH SERIES
EDITED BY ALBERT F. CALVERT
Seville
Murillo
Cordova
The Prado
The Escorial
Spanish Arms and Armour
In preparation—
Goya
Toledo
Madrid
Velazquez
Granada and Alhambra
Royal Palaces of Spain
Leon, Burgos & Salamanca
Valladolid, Oviedo, Segovia, Zamora, Avila & Zaragoza
LONDON: JOHN LANE, THE BODLEY HEAD
NEW YORK: JOHN LANE COMPANY MCMVII
Edinburgh: T. and A. Constable, Printers to His Majesty
Your Excellency,
In putting forth this modest account of the Escorial, that marvellous monument to the Hapsburg dynasty, I beg to inscribe it to your Excellency, as a tribute of my esteem and an expression of admiration of your Excellency’s great work in the interests of Spain, and as historian of ‘The Relations between Spain and Austria during the Reign of the Empress Margaret.’
I am,
Your Excellency’s
Sincere and obliged,
ALBERT F. CALVERT.
No work dealing exclusively with the Royal Palace and Monastery of the Escorial, and purporting to give a full historical and descriptive account of that remarkable monument of Philip II. of Spain, has hitherto been published in England. In this volume I have endeavoured to present, in condensed form, a history of the founding and building of the edifice, to deal in detail with the more interesting features of its architecture, and to describe the pictures, fresco paintings, illuminated missals, and other works of art contained in the several portions of this great composite pile.
The Escorial reflects the genius of Spain at the period following upon the final emancipation from the sway of the Moors. It is an image, as it were, of the powerful monarch who founded it, and spent so many years of his life in superintending the construction and decoration of the building. The Real Monasterio de San Lorenzo del Escorial is a repository of many of the world’s masterpieces of art, a library of rare and costly manuscripts and volumes, a sumptuous hermitage, a college, and a sanctuary. It is one of the wonders of Spain, and among the most historically interesting royal residences in Europe. With the aid of the letterpress and the illustrations included here, those readers who have not visited the Escorial will, I trust, be enabled to realise something of its massive grandeur, and to appreciate its significance in the history of the Spanish nation; while those who propose to inspect this ‘Leviathan of Architecture’ will find these pages useful in directing their attention to the chief works of art and objects of interest.
In preparing this description, I have sought for historical facts amid the pages of Don Antonio Rotondo’s large and admirable work upon The Escorial, in the Historia del Escorial of Father Sigüenza, in the writings of Prescott and Dunham, and the volume of Pedro Madrazo on New Castile. I am also indebted to C. Gasquoine Hartley for notes upon the artists of the Escorial, gathered from her Record of Spanish Painting, and particularly to Mr. Walter M. Gallichan for his assistance in the compilation of the material.
Many of the illustrations in this volume appear by the courtesy of Señor Don J. Lacoste, who supplied the photographs and gave me permission to reproduce them.
A. F. C.