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AR9180651
AR9180656
AR9180653
AR9180654
AA605227
AA605213
AA605226
AA605223
AA605215
AA605218
AA605219
AA605220
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AA605224
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AA605212
AR9180652
AR9180660
Sant Climent de Taull church
Low angle view of Sant Climent de Taull church, 1123, consecrated by Ramon Guillem, the bishop of Roda, Taull, Province of Lleida, Catalonia, Spain. The church of Sant Climent is the largest; its characteristic Lombard architecture and interior decoration make it the symbol of Catalan Romanesque architecture. Its most imposing feature is its bell tower: it is square in plan and soars from a simulated solid base to six storeys. This is a church with three naves separated by cylindrical columns, topped by three semicircular apses. It is known for its campanile and for its murals, which were removed to the MNAC (National Art Museum of Catalonia, Barcelona) in 1922, to prevent the theft of the murals. The Catalan Romanesque churches of the Vall de Boà were declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in November 2000. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
Unique Identifier
AR9180655
Type
Image
Purpose
Public
Size
7625px × 5904px
Photo Credit
Manuel Cohen / Art Resource, NY
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Tags
12TH CENTURY
APSE
ARCHITECTURAL
Architecture
Bell Tower
building
Campanile
Catalan
CATALONIA
CATHOLIC
Christ
Christian
Christianity
Church
color
COLOR IMAGE
colour image
DAY
EUROPE
EUROPEAN
Exterior
GENERAL VIEW
HISTORIC
History
HORIZONTAL
IMAGE
LLEIDA
MC
Morning
no people
NOBODY
Outdoors
OUTSIDE
Photograph
PYRENEAN
PYRENéES
Ramon Guillem
religion
Religious
RELIGIOUS ARCHITECTURE
ROMAN CATHOLIC
ROMANESQUE
Sant Climent De Taull
SOUTHWESTERN
Spanish
Taull
Tourist Attraction
Tower
travel destination
TWELFTH
UNESCO
UNESCO WORLD HERITAGE SITE
Vall de Boi
WORLD HERITAGE
Worship