The monastery's land holdings passed one by one into the hands of the new regional aristocracy: first the Count of Cifuentes, followed by Rui Gomes da Silva, Duke of Pastrana, and the Spanish Army. Civil wars depopulated the villages of the upper Tagus valley. Decline įrom the 15th century, changes to the areas surrounding Santa María de Óvila initiated a slow decline. However, even at its height, Óvila remained one of the smallest Cistercian monasteries in the region of Castile. Because of its prosperity and the multiple expansion projects, Santa María de Óvila exhibited examples of every Spanish religious architectural style used from 1200 to 1600.
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The final phase of building took place around 1650, with a new doorway for the church, completed in late Renaissance and Plateresque style full of detail. The cloister was rebuilt around 1617, and is of a simple design with little adornment surrounding a High Renaissance arcade. The church was rebuilt sometime before 1650 in a late Gothic style with a prominent vaulted ceiling. A fine High Gothic chapter house was built of best quality hard limestone. The refectory (dining hall) shows an architectural style in transition between earlier Romanesque and contemporary Gothic. The first buildings were completed in the Gothic style, including the church. The cartulary, Cartulario de Óvila, is preserved at the University of Madrid. The surrounding area of Murel and Trillo along the Tagus prospered, giving tithes and gifts of land to the monastery. The aged abbot of Santa María de Huerta, bishop Martín de Finojosa (later canonized), consecrated the church in September 1213 and died days later. In 1191, the king confirmed the monastery and its surrounding fields as belonging to the Cistercian Order. Its presbytery had a central square topped by a pentagon. The church was built in the shape of a Latin cross with a nave divided into four sections, and a sanctuary with three square apses.
Some of the buildings were given seven-foot-thick (2 m) walls with slit windows, to serve as a refuge in case the Moors returned to the area. The central cloister was bordered on the north by the church, on the west by a barrel-vaulted great nave, on the east by the sacristy, the priory cell, and the chapter house, and on the south by the kitchen, the pantry and the refectory (dining hall). The monastic quarters and the church were built over the following three decades. The Cistercian "white monks" (wearing undyed habits) first chose a site in Murel (now called Carrascosa de Tajo) on the Tagus, but after a few years, had to relocate to more fertile zone a few miles nearer to Trillo, Guadalajara, where a flat hilltop by the river commanded a modest view. In this endeavor, the king was following a general strategy of establishing Catholic institutions on land he had recently won in battle from the Moors of Iberia. The monastery of Santa María de Óvila was founded in 1175 by a grant of land from King Alfonso VIII of Castile to the Cistercian monks of Valbuena Abbey in Valbuena de Duero, Valladolid Province, Castile-Leon, Spain. Today, the remnant buildings and walls stand on private farmland. In Spain, the new government of the Second Republic declared the monastery a National Monument in June 1931, but not in time to prevent the mass removal of stones.
To support the chapter house project, a line of Belgian-style beers was produced by Sierra Nevada Brewing Company under the Ovila Abbey brand. Other stones are serving as simple decorative elements in Golden Gate Park's botanical garden. These stones are now in various locations around California: the old church portal was erected at the University of San Francisco, and the chapter house was reassembled by Trappist monks at the Abbey of New Clairvaux in Vina, California. Its fortunes declined significantly in the 18th century, and in 1835 it was confiscated by the Spanish government and sold to private owners who used its buildings to shelter farm animals.Īmerican publisher William Randolph Hearst bought parts of the monastery in 1931 with the intention of using its stones in the construction of a grand and fanciful castle at Wyntoon, California, but after some 10,000 stones were removed and shipped, they were abandoned in San Francisco for decades. During prosperous times over the next four centuries, construction projects expanded and improved the small monastery. Santa María de Óvila is a former Cistercian monastery built in Spain beginning in 1181 on the Tagus River near Trillo, Guadalajara, about 90 miles (140 km) northeast of Madrid. Official name: Monasterio de Santa María Óvila