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CLIL lesson on Spanish History,

Culture and Traditions


Central Market
Valencias Central Market has almost 1000 shops and around 1500 people work here
every day (that is shop owners, cleaning, delivery services, etc.). According to
Wikipedia it is the biggest centre in Europe dedicated to selling fresh products, and one
of the most beautiful Markets in the continent and it is the first one that delivers food to
costumers homes.
The architectural style of this building is called Art Nouveau. It was built at the
beginning of the 20th century. Does anyone know of other Art Nouveau buildings?
(Eiffel Tower in Paris, Sacred Family in Barcelona). We recognise it is an Art Nouveau
building because of the materials: metal, glass, decorated tiles and brick. And if we look
closely at the motifs that decorate the tiles, the mosaics or the columns, we will see that
there are a lot of natural elements such as animals (lizards, dragon flies, etc.) and
flowers and leaves that make beautiful curves.

Lonja or Silk Market


The Lonja is also called the Silk Market and it was used as an exchange market. It was
built between the 15th and 16th centuries in a late gothic style and its now a UNESCO
World Heritage Site.
In the 15th century Europe was going through a big transformation: before, in the
Middle Ages, it had been a feudal, agricultural society, but from the 13th century
onwards it was changing into a more commercial and manufacturing society, a new
social class was appearing: the bourgeoisie, they were bankers, merchants, factory
owners, and they needed places like the Lonja to meet and exchange their products,
borrow money, etc..

This market dramatically illustrates the power and wealth of Valencia in the XV century.
Valencia was at the time one of the great Mediterranean mercantile cities. It was such a
powerful city that there were three valencian Popes in Rome during the XV century, and
you have to take into account that at this time Popes were almost always from Italian
families. Before this building, there was another older exchange market here, but it
became too small and a new one had to be built. The first products to be auction and
exchange here were fish, then later on silk and many others. The Lonja is also called the
Silk Market, because the silk industry had a great importance here. Up to 15.000 people
worked in Valencia making textiles using silk (does anybody knows where silk comes
from, what animal produces silk?). But in the 15th century the Silk Market was mainly
famous for the big volume of bank operations that were made here. It was a bank.
Merchants, factory owners, anyone who needed money for his business came here to
borrow it from bankers. A lot of these bankers were Jewish at the time (we will talk later
about the religions that cohabited in Spain in medieval times). It was the valencian
bankers who borrow money to Christopher Columbus to do his first trip to America.
In the Middle Ages gothic cathedrals were being built everywhere in Europe. Do you
know any? (Notre Dame de Paris, Koln cathedral in Germany). There are many gothic
religious buildings, but it is rather difficult to find a gothic building that is not a church,
this is one of the very few examples - an exceptional example - of a non-religious
building in Gothic style in the whole of Europe. Despite that, it shares some
characteristics with the gothic churches: in the outside, there are gargoyles and
decorated windows and doors, inside they have very tall ceilings and beautiful columns.
It is almost like a temple for commercial exchange.
The building has four main parts or bodies: the first one is the court with orange trees,
then there is also a tower that was used as prison for merchants that didnt pay their
debts. The third part is called the Sea Consulate, it was built in Renaissance style, which
is an art style characteristic of the 15th and 16th centuries. The ceiling is made in painted
wood and decorated with heraldic shields, plants, the zodiac and many other motifs.

The fourth part - and the most impressive - is the hall of Columns, also called the hall of
Contracts. This is the place where all bank transactions were made. This room is
decorated in gothic style. The ceiling of this hall is really beautiful, is made by a set of
vaults supported by 24 columns. Only 8 columns are detached from the walls. Each
column is 11 meters high and it looks like a palm tree with branches that intersect with
other branches.

Valencias Cathedral
Outside
The place occupied by the cathedral was originally a roman temple. The temple became
a Visigoth cathedral, but under the Muslim occupation of Spain, it was turned into
a mosque. Muslims occupied Spain during 800 years. Following a long period of wars
between Christians and Muslims, Muslims were expelled from Spain. But it was a
complex time: Muslims and Christians were not always enemies, they lived together for
very long periods of peace, and they formed alliances to fight other Christians or other
Muslims from other parts of the territory. Christians fought sometimes with Muslims
against the Christian king and the other way round is well. Christians were able to live
in Muslim territories, with Muslim people, and they had their own religion, traditions
and authorities and the other way round, Muslims lived with Christians, preserving their
religion, laws, etc. To make things more complex, there was also a big Jewish
community living in Spain. Jewish acted often as translators between Christians and
Muslims.
The rest of Europe was experiencing a period of decadence which is often called the
dark ages: towns were very small, people work the land, they didnt know how to read

and write, they were very superstitious. Meanwhile Spain was a tolerant society, with
people from three different religions living together, and Muslim Spain was quite rich
and sophisticated. Muslims introduced changes in agriculture such as irrigation systems
and new products like oranges, lemons, and rice. The Muslim capital, Cordova, was the
intellectual centre of Europe, there were big libraries full of books about philosophy and
science, medicine, biology, astronomy, chemistry, etc. All this knowledge was
introduced to the European culture through Spain, and it helped transform Europe into a
more advanced society.
But as we said earlier there were also wars during this time. When the Christians arrived
to Valencia in the 13th Century, the mosque was knocked down, because it was a
Muslim symbol. A new cathedral was built, thats the church you can see now. Later on,
in the 15th Century, Spain became a totally Christian kingdom, the Muslims had lost all
their kingdoms and the last Muslims living with the Christians where expelled from the
territories by a law established by the Catholic Kings. The same thing happened to the
Jews, they were also expelled from the Spanish territory.
Look at Valencias cathedral and try to guess what its architectural style is. What makes
you think it is a gothic church? Normally gothic churches have pointy pinnacles
(towers), and the buttresses that join the pinnacles to the main building, but in this
church the pinnacles were removed, taken away when they were out fashion. We know
its a gothic church because a gothic church, if we look at it from a plane, has the shape
of a cross. The vertical part of the cross is longer than the horizontal part. In this church
we cant see the shape of the cross from outside very well, because there are a lot of
chapels built in the sides of the cross. Each chapel is dedicated to a Saint or to a
Christian symbol. In this cathedral the centre of the cross has an octagonal tower. Its
basically a gothic church, but it also has Romanesque, Renaissance, Baroque and NeoClassical elements.

1. The Main Door


Look at the main door of the cathedral. What style is it? Its Baroque, its very charged
with decoration and causes a unique and studied perspective effect, (although this effect

was distorted because of the demolition of some parts of the building). The door was
built in the 17th Century.

It is a faade with three floors. In the first floor there are angels and plants as ornament
and a shell with the name Maria inside. In the second floor, there are four columns
and the statues. In the centre there is a big oval window covered with a stained glass
depicting the image of the Virgin. Obviously, the door is dedicated to the Virgin Mary.

2. The Door of the Apostles

The Tympanum
Its one of the second oldest door, it dates from the 14 th Century. It has the shape of a
pointy arch and its decorated with human figures that look quite realistic. It has four
pointed arches, with reliefs in the space between the columns representing the virgin
and angels. Under the arches there are six statues of the apostles.
3. The Palau Door
Its the oldest door, it was built in the 13 th Century and its Romanesque. The door is
formed by seven semi-circular arches and the decoration is much more geometrical, the
figures of angels and saints are smaller and less realistic than the figures that appear in
the other doors.

4. The bell tower is called El Miquelet and it was originally an outside tower, but it
was joined to the Cathedral when the cathedral was extended.
5. Behind the main door there are the galleries: three superimposed arcades, supported
by columns forming a semicircle, the top parts are like a balcony form which the priests
contemplated the performances in the square.

6. The Ogival Windows have pointed arches and stained glass and they are
characteristic of gothic architecture.

Inside the cathedral


As it happens in many churches around the world, this cathedral is a mixture of different
styles that we are going to discover. This mixture of artistic and architectural styles is
even bigger in the inside of the cathedral than it is in the outside. But there is one
predominant style. Do you know which one?

Gothic elements:
1. The naves

We recognise it is a gothic church because it has tree naves, three big corridors
divided by columns that sustain the ceiling. The ceiling of the main nave is taller than
the ceiling of the lateral naves. This way it is possible to put windows in the main nave
of the church. For gothic architects it was important to illuminate the church, they
wanted to make churches much bigger and they wanted them to be full of light, perhaps
because previously, in the Romanesque period, churches were quite dark and small.
2. The ceilings
The ceilings are made by extending the pillars, like a tree extending its branches. The
branches then cross other branches coming from other pillars and the effect that
these crossings produce in the ceiling is called a rib vault, its very beautiful because it
produces repetitive patterns that play with different shapes. But its also a very clever
form of construction because it makes the ceiling very strong, it stops it from falling
down.

3. The Dome above the high altar

Also, as typical gothic church, this cathedral has the shape of a cross like the cross
where Jesus was crucified, according to the bible. One of the lines that make the cross is
longer than the other one. And in the place where the two lines meet there is usually a
dome, just like here. The dome is even higher than the main nave. The Dome of the
Valencia cathedral is an octagonal tower that has two sets of eight pointed arches one
above the other. There is a window under each arch, which allows for more light to
come into the church and illuminate the altar that is placed under the dome. This is a
sophisticated example of Gothic architecture, with large windows creating a sense of
grace and luminosity. Bellow the Dome there is the altar, the central place of the church,
where the priest says mass and where we find the main figure to whom the church is
dedicated, which is usually the Virgin or Jesus.

4. The High Altarpiece and the Frescoes

There is a double door that opens and closes the altarpiece and the doors are decorated
inside and outside with paintings representing themes form the New Testament such as
the Nativity or Christmas (The Adoration of the Shepherds) and also Easter (the
Resurrection of Christ). Only when the doors are open we can see the figure of the
Virgin and child.
5. There are many other decorative elements from the gothic period, such as the pulpit,
which is the place from which the priest speaks.
6. The Gothic rose window above the door
Another very characteristic gothic element is the rose window that is usually placed
above the door. Its made with stain glass (glass decorated with different colours making
a kaleidoscope of repetitive shapes). The rose here has the shape of a star, and this is a
reference to the Star of King David form the Old Testament. In the centre of the star
there is a flower and in the centre of the flower there is the cross.

Renaissance elements
We said earlier that there is a mixture of different styles in this church and we are going
to talk them now about.
7. Chapel of the Chalice consists of reliefs showing six episodes from the New
Testament.

In the centre of the chapel there is a Chalice of medieval appearance, it is said that its
the cup used by Jesus in the last supper. Have you seen a film called Indiana Jones and
the Holy Grail? There are lots of churches that claim to have the Holy Grail; Valencia is
not the only one. According to the legend of the Holy Grail, which starts in the Middle
Ages, the Grail is a source of life and whoever drinks from it never dies. If you look at
the reliefs you can see that Renaissance figures look more realistic than gothic figures, and they
almost remind us of classic Greek and Roman figures.

8. The choir stalls and the Archbishop's chair are also from the Renaissance
period

9. Chapel of the Resurrection is a portico, a door, sculpted in alabaster

Barroque elements
10. Martyrdom of St. Sebastian, by Orrente is one of the most important
masterpieces of this Cathedral. We can see its baroque because there is a strong
contrast in the painting between light-dark and also the shape of the body in the painting
is making a curve, like an S shape, and this is characteristic of the baroque period.

Neoclassical elements
10. Chapel of St Francis Borgia
Francis of Borgia belongs to a family of Popes that come from this region, from
Valencia. Pope Alexander VI was his great-great grandfather and other popes from the
Borgia family where Calisto III and Innocence X. There is a legend about the Borgia
family as being extremely corrupt: the Popes had lovers and children, and their children,
in turn, became new Popes. According to the legend they killed other bishops and
archbishops within the Vatican if they became their enemies. It is apparently true that
Pope Alexander VI took his own daughter, Lucrecia Borgia, as his lover. But Lucrecia
had a brother called Cesar who was also her lover and with whom she had a child. After
giving you this piece of historical gossip I have to explain that the Borgias were not any
more corrupt than other Italian families of Popes at the time. All Popes in the 15 th and
16th centuries were apparently corrupt, but the Borgias were foreigners in Rome at a
time when there were only Italian popes. So it is possible that the black legend that
surrounds the Borgia name was created by their enemies.
What is important about these paintings is the fact that they were painted by Goya, one
of the most important painters of all times. At the time Spain was involved in a
traumatic war against Napoleonic France. Spain wanted its independence but also there
were revolts that opposed the reformists who wanted more democracy against the
traditional forces of society. It was a time of violence and Goya show this in his
paintings: people is represented with animal faces that tell us of human cruelty.

Left:

St.

Francis

Borgia saying

goodbye

to

his

family,

dying

man,

by Goya.
Right:

St.

Francis

Borgia assisting

by Goya.

Torres de Serranos
The Torres de Serranos is one of the twelve gates that had the medieval city wall of
Valencia. It is one of Valencia's most iconic buildings and is one of the best preserved
monuments in the city. The gate was built in the 14th century, it was the main entrance
to the city and it was originally build with a defensive function. But it was also used for
ceremonies and the official entrance of ambassadors and kings. It has been used as a
prison, and also as a deposit for all the paintings that were taken out of the Museum of
El Prado in Madrid during the war. Now a day it is used again for ceremonies during the
town festival.

CLIL lesson on Spanish History, Culture and Traditions


1. Link the following art movements to their historical period.
Romanesque

17th century

Art Nouveau

20th century

Baroque

13th-15th century

Gothic

11th 12th century

2. Can you name any other art movements?

3. A new social class appeared in the 13th century. Choose the right answer.
Bourgeoisie

Middle class

Aristocracy

4. Which of the following professions belongs to the social class mentioned


above?
Merchants

peasants

bankers

factory owners

soldiers

nobles
5. Draw one of the columns of the silk market.

6. Gothic columns remind us of the shape of a ________________________ .

7. During how many centuries was Spain occupied by the Muslims?


That is from the beginning of the 8th century to the _______________ century.

8. How was the relationship between Muslims and Christians during this
period? Were they always enemies?

9. There was a third religious community that lived in Spain in medieval


times. Which one?

10. Feel in the gaps:


a. The _______________capital, Cordova, was the _____________________
centre

of

Europe;

there

were

___________________________
medicine,

biology,

big
and

astronomy,

libraries

full

of

books

about

____________________________,
chemistry,

etc.

All

this

_______________________ was introduced to the European culture through


Spain, and it helped transform Europe into a more _________________society.
b. A Gothic church has the shape of a _______________________.
c. Compared

to

Romanesque

churches,

Gothic

churches

much______________________ and full of ________________________.

11. What shape has a rose window?

were

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