Tangier Cathedral
Catedral Espíritu Santo e Inmaculada Concepción
Cathédrale de l’Immaculée-Conception et du Saint-Esprit
Holy Spirit Cathedral
Religion
AffiliationRoman Catholic Church
Ecclesiastical or organizational statusCathedral
StatusActive
Location
LocationTangier, Morocco
Geographic coordinates35°46′N 5°48′W / 35.767°N 5.800°W / 35.767; -5.800
Architecture
Architect(s)Luis Martínez-Feduchi
StyleModernist
Groundbreaking1953
Completed1961

The Roman Catholic Cathedral of Tangier, whose full name is the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception and the Holy Spirit,[1] also known as the Spanish Cathedral,[2] is the seat of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Tangier, Morocco.[3]

Background

The Franciscans had a longstanding presence in Morocco, in line with their early tradition of engagement with the Muslim world going back to the famed encounter between Francis of Assisi and Sultan Al-Kamil at Damietta in 1219.[4] For a long time, the only Catholic place of worship in all of Morocco was a Franciscan chapel on the side of the Spanish consulate building near the Petit Socco of Tangier.[5]:35 From the 1860s onward, Father José María Lerchundi developed the Franciscan presence in Tangier, including the building of the Church of the Immaculate Conception in the medina in 1880–1881.

In 1882, Lerchundi purchased property outside of the medina, in what was still countryside at the time, with the project of establishing a large Franciscan convent.[6][7]:771 Lerchundi started the development with the construction of a hospital, which was inaugurated in 1888 (and more than a century later, was repurposed by the Spanish government as a cultural center named after Lerchundi).[6] In 1891 or 1892, Antoni Gaudí visited Tangier and was encouraged by Lerchundi to prepare a highly original design for the convent, inspired by Saharan vernacular architecture. Gaudí's plans were approved by the Franciscan congregation on 17 October 1893, but remained unrealized even though Gaudí reused some features for the Sagrada Família.[8]

The convent of the Holy Spirit was eventually built in 1902–1904 on a neo-Renaissance design by Franciscan architect Fray Francisco Serra. The construction of its conventual church's apse started in 1904,[9]:209 but was soon left mostly unrealized.[7]:771 In 1938, the Vicar Apostolic of Morocco (i.e. head of the Catholic Church in Spanish Morocco, based in Tangier), Franciscan Father José María Betanzos y Hormaechevarría, started efforts to revive the church building project next to the convent and make it a new cathedral for the entire Catholic community in Tangier, which was mostly Spanish. No financing was forthcoming from the Spanish government, however, during the Spanish Civil War and its immediate aftermath.[7]:773

Cathedral

Circumstances changed by the late 1940s. Italy had built a large church a few years earlier on its grounds next to the former Abdelhafid Palace, and the French community was about to start construction of its own church in Tangier's modern city expansion.[7]:786 Francoist Spain aimed at regaining influence in the Tangier International Zone after the end of its military occupation in October 1945, an ambition also illustrated by the completion in 1948 of a prominent new building for the Spanish Consulate in the city.[6] In 1948, Francisco Franco approved the project to build a Spanish cathedral in Tangier and entrusted it to his foreign minister Alberto Martín-Artajo.[7]:787

A new project was subsequently designed by Luis Martínez-Feduchi, the foreign ministry's architect who had designed the new consulate building.[7]:787 After several iterations, Feduchi settled on a streamlined modern design, with a luminous, angular nave and a soaring bell tower inspired by St Mark's Campanile in Venice.[7]:797 Construction started slowly from late 1950,[7]:803 and a cornerstone laying ceremony was held on 4 June 1953; the cathedral was eventually dedicated on 8 December 1961 to the Immaculate Conception and the Holy Spirit,[10] echoing the respective names of Lerchundi's 1880s church in the medina and of the nearby convent.

The cathedral was the largest building of Tangier and has been described as "a spur for Spain to assert revenge on other colonial powers for all the humiliations inflicted on the Spaniards in the past"[7]:766, 802 – even though, somewhat ironically, the independence of Morocco made the vision of a Spanish-dominated Tangier irrelevant by the time the building was completed.

The completed cathedral became the seat of the newly established Archdiocese of Tangier that had replaced the Apostolic Vicariate in late 1956. The 45-meter-high spire of its bell tower dominated the skyline of Tangier until the construction of the nearby Mohammed V Mosque, dedicated in 1983.[2]

Art

The cathedral's stained glass windows stand out, including three panes in the apse often attributed[7]:812 to Alicante artist Arcadi Blasco,[11]:316 and the other abstract windows by José María de Labra.[7]:811

The cathedral also hosts a suspended crucifix and other works carved by sculptor José Luis Sánchez Fernández.[7]:808-810

Burials

The remains of Father Lerchundi rest in an underground crypt under the church.

See also

References

  1. "Cathédrale de l'Immaculée-Conception et du Saint-Esprit / Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception and the Holy Spirit, Tanger, Morocco". GCatholic.org.
  2. 1 2 "Catedral de Tánger - Tangier, Morocco". Archnet.
  3. "The Cathedral In Tangier!". www.blueloutimes.com. Retrieved 2017-02-16.
  4. Philip Kosloski (28 June 2017). "St. Francis and the Sultan: An encounter of peace between Christians and Muslims". Aleteia.
  5. Gabriel Matringe (1966), "Chrétienté et Islam au Maroc (du XVIe au XXe siècle) (suite)", Revue historique de droit français et étranger: 33–58
  6. 1 2 3 Jordi Mas Garriga (8 June 2017). "San Francisco (Iberia)". Discovering Tangier.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Alberto Darias Príncipe (2014), "La arquitectura al servicio del poder: la Catedral de Tánger como catarsis de las frustraciones coloniales españolas" (PDF), Anuario de Estudios Atlánticos, 60: 765–816
  8. Faiza Rhoul (12 May 2018). "Gaudí à Tanger : Le projet qui n'a jamais vu le jour". Yabiladi.
  9. Antonio Bravo-Nieto (1998), "Formas y modelos de la arquitectura religiosa española en Marruecos", Boletín de Arte nº 19
  10. "Catedral de Tánger". Diócesis de Tánger.
  11. Silvia Nélida Bossio, ed. (2011), Aproximación a los edificios históricos y patrimoniales de Málaga, Tetuán, Nador, Tánger y Alhucemas / Un Rapprochement entre les édifices historiques et patrimoniaux de Malaga, Tétouan, Nador, Tanger et Al Hoceima (PDF), Servicio de Programas del Ayuntamiento de Málaga
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