Beginning of the Via Crucis to the Cruz del Campo.
The Templete (small temple) of the Cruz del Campo, destination of the Via Crucis.
Interior of the Templete of the Cruz del Campo
The Templete illuminated at night

The Via Crucis to the Cruz del Campo (Spanish: Vía Crucis a la Cruz del Campo) in Seville, Andalusia, Spain is believed to be Spain's only Via Crucis that runs through the streets of a city. (The term Via Crucis is of Latin origin; it is used in Spanish, although Spanish orthography places an accent mark on the i, hence Vía Crucis; in English, literally "Way of the Cross", but "Stations of the Cross" is also common.[1]) It is the basis of the famous traditions of Holy Week in Seville.[2] Since the Via Crucis was first laid out in 1521, both the starting and ending points have changed,[2] as has the number of stations.[3]

History

The tradition of the Via Crucis in Spain began with the Dominican Friar Álvaro of Córdoba in 1421, but was popularized mainly by Franciscans.[4] It is a local recreation of what is now called the Via Dolorosa in Jerusalem, by then an established feature of a pilgrimage there, though various routes have been used.

With reference to the Via Crucis in Seville, and especially with reference to the Templete (see below) for events of the 15th and 16th century, a great deal of historical caution is in order. Evidence is incomplete and sometimes contradictory. It is difficult to be confident of the continuity between entities with the same name mentioned centuries apart. The difficulties are compounded by the tendency of most sources to give only one version of events, even when the facts are in doubt.[5]

On 20 October 1520, Don Fadrique Enríquez de Rivera, First Marquis of Tarifa, returned from a trip through Europe and the Holy Land.[3] During Lent in 1521,[2] he inaugurated the observance in Seville of the Holy Via Crucis.[2][4] The route began in the Chapel of the Flagellations of his palace and ended at a pillar[2] located in what some sources say was known as the Huerta de los Ángeles (Orchard of the Angels), but more likely it was called Huerta de la Hermandad de Nuestra Señora de los Ángeles,[6] not far from the Cruz del Campo, the terminus of the route since 1630.[2] This route ran the same distance of 997 metres (3,271 ft) or 1321 paces supposed to have separated the praetorium of Pontius Pilate from Calvary.[2] The Marquis's palace, the Palacio de San Andrés,[2] was then still partly under construction;[7] it later became known as the Casa de Pilatos through its association with the Via Crucis,[2][4] and, much altered over the next few centuries, is now property of the dukes of Medinaceli.[2][8] It was declared a National Monument in 1931.[9] The oldest documentation of the name Casa de Pilatos is from 1754.[3]

In keeping with the theme of Christ's Passion, the procession became strongly associated with penitence through self-flagellation.[10] In 1604, Cardinal Fernando Niño de Guevara issued a series of reforms intended to rein in the tendency of the processions of flagellants to take on the character of a carnival. The brotherhoods and confraternities were formally recognized, but also brought under a set of rules. Schedules were established; nocturnal processions were banned (although that particular provision would soon lapse);[3]) the Cathedral of Seville in the city proper and the Church of Santa Ana across the river in Triana as Stations of Penitence, rather than each group beginning its route at a location of its own choosing.[11]

Processions of flagellants were banned in Spain in 1777, as were most midnight processions; the processions of Holy Week in Seville were excepted from the latter prohibition.[10]

With an alteration of the route in 1630, the observance continued until 1873, when it ceased[2][3] at the time of the First Spanish Republic.[12]

On 8 March 1957 the descendants of the Marquis of Tarifa reestablished the Via Crucis.[13] Fourteen penitential confraternities from Seville walked the route of fourteen stations during Holy Week, culminating on Easter Sunday, April 21.[14] The reestablished stations were blessed by Archbishop (and future Cardinal) Bueno Monreal, (as is now recorded on a commemorative marble memorial). (Bueno Monreal had been Coadjutor Archbishop since 1954, due to a struggle between Archbishop Pedro Segura y Sáenz—extremely conservative even by Spanish standards of the time—with the Holy See. Bueno Monreal became Archbishop on Segura's death 8 April 1957, and would become a cardinal in 1958.[15][16]) This revived Via Crucis continued only for a few years.[3]

In 1976 the council of Brotherhoods and Confraternities of Seville again reestablished the tradition.[17]

Route

The original Via Crucis initiated by the Marquis of Tarifa began inside the Casa de Pilatos in the Chapel of the Flagellations and ended at a pillar near the current Templete (small temple).[2] Beginning in 1630, both the beginning and end of the route changed,[2] beginning at the current shrine with its marble altarpiece erected that year on the façade of the Casa de Pilatos,[3][6] and ending at the Templete.[2] The simple wooden Cruz de las Toallas (literally "Cross of the Towels") that previously marked the first station passed into the possession of the Hermandad de los Negritos[6] (for whom see below).

The practice of the time would have meant that the original Via Crucis of 1521 would have had seven stations, quite different from the current ones: the garden of Gethsemane; the house of the Sanhedrin, Annas; the house of Sanhedrin Caiaphas; the house of Pontius Pilate; the palace of Herod; a return to Pilate's house; and finally the hill of Calvary.[3] Another difference from the current Via Crucis would have been that it would not initially have had such a character of an urban procession: by the fourth station, the procession would have left the walled city and would have been walking through orchards, countryside, and the scattered building on the fringes of the city.[10] It is unclear whether the wooden crosses that initially marked the stations were permanently installed or put in place only for the Lenten season.[10]

Eventually, this changed to a configuration more like the present one. In 1720 the last two stations were added, for a total of 14, resulting in the current route[3] followed by each of the various confraternities who process through the city during Holy Week, which runs roughly 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) along streets in central Seville.[3] Each station corresponds to a scene from the day of Jesus' crucifixion (see Passion).[1] While the stations marked in centuries past by crosses on brick pedestals,[6] originally all wooden but some eventually made of iron,[3] scenes corresponding to the fourteen stations are now represented in azulejos[2] (a style of ceramic tile typical of the Iberian Peninsula), some of which date from 1957, but most from near the end of the 20th century, when they were replaced because of deterioration. The azulejos at each station include both a picture and a written caption.

The Templete

Everything about the origin and early years of the original humilladero (a type of roadside shrine,[18] often at the entrance to a town) that later became the Templete is uncertain; similarly for the religious order believed to have first built it.[6]

The Templete is traditionally dated from 1380,[19] although some sources give a date as late as 1460.[6] It was almost certainly constructed by the cofradía (confraternity) or hermandad (brotherhood) de negros or de negritos of Nuestra Señora de los Ángeles; it was in any case closely associated with them.[4][6] That confraternity was very probably founded in the 14th century by archbishop Gonzalo de Mena;[4][6] although their current Rule dates only from 1554, it is certain that they existed before that.[20] Negros or negritos in their common name refers to the fact that they were originally an order operating a hospital that cared for Black people and, indeed, the members of the Hermandad in its early centuries were primarily (possibly exclusively) Black.[21] In the interior of the original humilladero was a wooden cross. In that period, the modest structure was known as the Cruz del Campo ("Country Cross" or "Cross of the Field") because it stood outside the city walls. By the early 16th century, the site had already become associated with Lent and penitence.[4]

Sources indicate that it was in 1482[22] that the corregidor[23] or asistente[6] of Seville, Don Diego de Merlo, substituted a stone cross and covered it with a Templete in the Mudéjar style,[4] 13 metres (43 ft) in height.[23] That date seems particularly probable because that year the archdiocese received an ostensible relic of the True Cross.[4] However, the words written inside the dome of the Templete giving that date only date from 1881.[24]

Fadrique Enríquez de Rivera, first Marquis of Tarifa, restored the Templete when he initiated the Via Crucis in 1521.[6] In 1536, the Marquis bought the Templete (previously owned by the brothers of the Monastery of San Benito Abad), and moved it to its current location. The current marble cross carved with images of Jesus and Mary (which replaced the earlier wooden cross) is attributed to Juan Bautista Vázquez “The Elder”, and dates from 1571.[23] In either 1624 or 1648 there was a further restoration by Pedro Caballero de Illescas.[24] In 1630 it became the endpoint of the Via Crucis.[2] In 1880 municipal architect Aurelio Alvarez did work to improve its structural integrity, and the following year Juaquín Guichot did some work, writing inside the dome that the structure dates from 1482.[24] Metal strapping was added for structural purposes in 1888; further work was done in 1899, 1912, and 1963, but in general the structure continued to deteriorate.[24]

In 1996, the union of confraternities involved in the Holy Week observances suggested moving the Templete to the intersection of the Avenida de Andalucía and the Ronda de Tamarguillo, but the city government rejected the idea.[23] In 2000, José L. García of ABC Sevilla wrote of the "sad aspect" of a monument on a busy street "practically asphyxiated by modern buildings", much vandalized, with its interior turned into a filthy nest of pigeons.[25]

In 1904 a brewery had been built nearby and took the name Cervezas Cruzcampo; it is now Heineken España.[26] After innumerable years of promises by many entities to restore the deteriorating structure of the Templete (which has been owned by the city of Seville since at least the 19th century,[3][23]) work finally began in 2007, paid for by the Fundación Cruzcampo (founded by the brewery company),[27] and was completed 29 February 2008 with a benediction by Carlos Amigo Vallejo of Seville.[27]

Notes

  1. 1 2 Stations Of The Cross, ourcatholicfaith.org. Accessed online 2010-01-10.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Javier Macías, El origen de la Semana Santa, ABC de Sevilla, 2008-03-03. p. 40. Accessed online 2010-01-10.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Romulaldo de Gelo, El Humilladero, el Via Crucis y la Ermita de la Cruz del Campo, degelo.com, accessed online 2010-01-11.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Carlos J. Romero Mensaque, La Cruz del Campo y el Vía Crucis Archived February 20, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Consejo General de Hermandades y Cofradías de Sevilla. Accessed online 2010-01-10.
  5. Isidoro Moreno Navarro, La Antigua Hermandad de los Negros de Sevilla, on the official site of the Hermandad de los Negritos (Antigua, Pontificia y Franciscana Hermandad y Cofradía de Nazarenos del Santísimo Cristo de la Fundación y Nuestra Señora de los Ángeles), especially La antigüedad de la hermandad en la documentación de esta Archived 2009-05-17 at the Wayback Machine and La situación del primitivo Hospital y Hermandad y su traslado al sitio actual en 1550. Accessed online 2010-01-10. Moreno Navarro indicates, in particular, the difficulty in sorting the evidence about the origin and early years of the humilladero that became the Templete and of the Hermandad de los Negritos itself.
    Romulaldo de Gelo, El Humilladero, el Via Crucis y la Ermita de la Cruz del Campo, degelo.com, accessed online 2010-01-11, makes similar remarks on the state of the sources, expanding the issue to even such matters as the number of stations on the original Via Crucis. De Gelo follows Romero Mensaque in emphasizing that other historians have greatly exaggerated the importance of the Cruz de Campo, mistakenly believing it always to have been the terminus of the Via Crucis, and, related to that, presuming that confraternities were strongly affiliated with the Via Crucis and the processions of Holy Week since their inception, a matter he considers unproven at best.
    Both of these sources, especially de Gelo, are also useful as a review of academic and scholarly sources on the subject.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Isidoro Moreno Navarro, La situación del primitivo Hospital y Hermandad y su traslado al sitio actual en 1550, part of La Antigua Hermandad de los Negros de Sevilla, on the official site of the Hermandad de los Negritos (Antigua, Pontificia y Franciscana Hermandad y Cofradía de Nazarenos del Santísimo Cristo de la Fundación y Nuestra Señora de los Ángeles).
  7. Plaza y Casa Palacio de Pilotas, trianarts.com. Accessed online 2010-01-10.
  8. Monumentos de Sevilla - Casa de Pilatos, Turista Virtual de Sevilla.
  9. Casa de Pilatos - Through visual notes, Fundación Casa Ducal de Medinaceli. Accessed online 2010-01-11.
  10. 1 2 3 4 Romero Mensaque, quoted by Romulaldo de Gelo, El Humilladero, el Via Crucis y la Ermita de la Cruz del Campo, degelo.com, accessed online 2010-01-11.
  11. Carlos J. Romero Mensaque, Cuatrocientos años de las primeras normas eclesiásticas sobre la Semana Santa en la Diócesis de Sevilla: El Sínodo del Cardenal Niño de Guevara de 1604, El Rosario en Sevilla. Accessed online 2010-01-11.
  12. Isabel Mira Ortiz, Semana Santo y textos literarios de la Pasión en la región de Murcia, doctoral dissertation at the University of Murcia, 2006-04-04, alludes to the hostility to such public religious observances in Spain during the First Republic (p. 51) and mentions the suspension of the Via Crucis in Águilas, Province of Murcia (p. 83) and in the city of Murcia (p. 259), but does not specifically mention this as the reason for the tradition in Seville ending that same year. Accessed online 2010-01-10.
  13. Romulaldo de Gelo, El Humilladero, el Via Crucis y la Ermita de la Cruz del Campo, degelo.com, accessed online 2010-01-11, mentions the revival in 1957, but does not mention this precise date, nor does it mention descendants of the Marquis of Tarifa.
  14. El Sábado Santo, adornado con todos los primores de la primavera sevillana, constituyó triunfal y esplendoroso remate de nuestra Semana Mayor, ABC Sevilla 1957-04-21, p. 47 et. seq. cites for the modern revival in 1957 and the processions themselves, but not for the numbers of confraternities or stations.
  15. Salvador Miranda, The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Crónica 1974-2010 - 1987, page personally maintained by a librarian at Florida International University. Accessed online 2010-01-10.
  16. José María García de Tuñón Aza, Segura, el cardenal que expulsó la II República, El Catoblepas, Number 88, 2009-06, p. 13. Accessed online 2010-01-10.
  17. José Luis García, Via Crucis de Sevilla , abcdesevilla.es, 2006. Accessed online 2010-01-10.
  18. Vox Diccionario Inglés-Español Español-Inglés, Barcelona: Biblograf, 1966. p. 1109.
  19. Javier Macías gives this date without qualification.
  20. Isidoro Moreno Navarro, La situación del primitivo Hospital y Hermandad y su traslado al sitio actual en 1550, part of La Antigua Hermandad de los Negros de Sevilla, Hermandad de los Negritos (Seville). Another chapter of the same work, Las Reglas de 1554: integración religiosa y afirmación étnica Archived 2009-05-17 at the Wayback Machine discusses this at greater length. Accessed online 2010-01-10.
  21. Isidoro Moreno Navarro, Don Gonzalo de Mena y su fundación para negros, part of La Antigua Hermandad de los Negros de Sevilla, Hermandad de los Negritos (Seville). Accessed online 2010-01-10.
  22. Carlos J. Romero Mensaque gives this date without qualification, as does the generally article cited from the site of the Hermandad de los Negritos.
  23. 1 2 3 4 5 José L. García, La Pía Unión estudiará el sábado el mal estado del templete de la Cruz de Campo, ABC Sevilla, 2000-02-24, p. 50. Accessed online 2010-01-11.
  24. 1 2 3 4 José L. García, Un sinfín de restauraciones, ABC Sevilla, 2000-02-24, p. 50. Accessed online 2010-01-11.
  25. José L. García, La Pía Unión estudiará el sábado el mal estado del templete de la Cruz de Campo, ABC Sevilla, 2000-02-24, p. 50. Accessed online 2010-01-11. "En la actualidad, el monumento ofrece un triste aspecto, prácticamente asfixiado por construcciones modernas y a pie de la transitada avenida de Andalucía, cuyo tráfico incesante ha terminado por dañarlo casi tanto como el vandalismo que ha roto la verja de hierro que, precicamente para evitar el vandalismo, le fue colocada a finales del siglo pasado. Hoy, el templete sirve de gran nido de palomas, cuyos excremente lo cubren por entero en su interior..."
  26. Quienes Somos Archived January 22, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Fundación Cruzcampo. Accessed online 2010-01-10.
  27. 1 2 Francisco Correal, El templete se abre con todas las bendiciones, Diario de Sevilla, 2008-03-27. Accessed online 2010-01-11.
  28. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Vía+Crucis Penitencial de las Cofradías de Sevilla Archived January 25, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Consejo General de Hermandades y Cofradías de Sevilla. Accessed online 2010-01-10.

References

  • González Moreno, Joaquín (1992). Vía Crucis a la Cruz del Campo. Sevilla. ISBN 84-87041-92-2
  • Amigo Vallejo, Carlos (2003). Santo Vía Crucis de la Pía Unión. Sevilla. Editorial: Tecnographic. ISBN 84-8093-119-1

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