Countries<Spain<Comunidad Valenciana<Ontinyent< Iglesia Parroquial de la Asunción de Nuestra Señora de Onteniente

Iglesia Parroquial de la Asunción de Nuestra Señora de Onteniente(Ontinyent)

View on Ocity Platform

logoTwitter logoFacebook

Description

The Church of Santa María was greatly affected by the earthquake that took place in 1258, which accelerated the disappearance of the old building, which had been erected on the remains of the primitive mosque. This led to the construction of a new church following the canons of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, in Valencian Gothic style.

The facade presents different styles in the different doors, so we can distinguish the neoclassical of the door of the Chapel; the plateresque of the main door, dated in 1530, as well as the door that presents the sculpture of the Good Shepherd, of the fifteenth century.

Above one of the doors and at a considerable height is the tomb of Llop Llopis de Vaello, first-born of one of the knights who carried out the distribution of the houses and estates of the municipality of Ontinente in 1250. It is documented a reform in the middle of the 15th century that would correspond to the construction of an apse and the opening of the arms, thus providing the temple with a Latin cross plan. The definitive reform, which took place between 1518 and 1530, is due to Benet Oge, a master builder from Lyon (France). The side chapels, dated around 1540, are the work of Joan de Batea. The presbytery was built around 1570, although it was renovated at the end of the 17th century. The sacristy was built between 1580 and 1610, and underneath is the crypt where the vessels where the presbyters were buried can still be seen. The chapel of the Purísima (patron saint of the city), dated between 1662 and 1692, was built almost simultaneously with the bell tower (from 1689).

Inside you can see great artistic works such as: the image of the Virgin Mary, from the 15th century, which is in the keystone of the vault; the large Florentine baptismal font, from the 17th century; the primitive Gothic baptismal font; the altarpiece of the Annunciation, in Flemish style, dated to the 15th century; the altarpiece of José Segrelles, which was built to replace the old Renaissance altarpiece destroyed in the civil war; some works of Ribalta and anonymous of the XVII century; carvings of the Holy Sepulchre (1943) and the Soledad (1943-1944), sculptures of Mariano Benlliure.

Regarding the bell tower, its construction began in 1689 and took twenty years. The second body and the top of the bell tower was built around 1745, and later suffered the effects of the earthquake of 1748. In 1859, it was struck by lightning, which necessitated an intervention (during which the previous tower was demolished and the current one was built around 1880), which gave it its current appearance, with the wrought iron finial. Its splendor and grandeur (it is more than 71 meters high, being the tallest of the Valencian towers), has been enhanced by demolishing the houses that were at the foot, which has allowed to discover the fortifications of various periods that serve as a base. The bell tower preserves one of the oldest bells in the region, the "Rellotge" bell, called "Rauxa i Foc" (1563).

Image of Iglesia Parroquial de la Asunción de Nuestra Señora de Onteniente