Monastery of Poblet, late-18th-century engraving

The Medieval Pyrenees - Catalonia, Roussillon & the Comté de Foix

  • A survey of the extraordinary achievements in Romanesque and Gothic architecture.
  • Delves deep into the French and Spanish Pyrenees but also takes in low-lying and coastal Catalonia.
  • Scenically and architecturally stunning.

During the Middle Ages the Pyrenees supported two very distinct ways of life: the fundamentally urban civilisation of the coastal reaches, mercantile in ambition and Mediterranean in outlook, and that unsung, tireless village culture which flourished in the high places and valleys inland.

Here in the remote mountains a rural and essentially feudal Christianity emerged, consecrated in innumerable small Romanesque churches and largely immune to news from elsewhere. The mediator was monasticism, introduced uncertainly at first but becoming in fact a vehicle of political will under the mighty Oliba of Cerdagne. 

Oliba’s early foundations at Ripoll and Cuxa embody this ambition and are among the seminal essays of Romanesque architecture in Europe. They found a reflection in the parish churches of the High Pyrenees and, moderated by the vernacular of Catalonia, resulted in some of the most serene and beautiful buildings of twelfth-century Europe. Even more remarkably, these churches were largely spared the calamities of the post–Renaissance period, leaving their glorious marble sculpture intact and preserving, albeit often in museums, the finest of their paintings.

These early achievements were enhanced by the arrival of the Cistercians, invited by Count Ramón Berenguer to fill the void left by the expulsion of the Moors from south-western Catalonia, and their monasteries at Poblet and Santes Creus remain even more complete than Fontenay or Fossanova. Neither were the cities neglected: ever more responsive to distant developments, Girona, Barcelona and Lérida were provided with cathedrals of the first rank. Shortly after came that extraordinary flowering of late medieval mercantile culture which transformed the previously neglected market towns of the north, St-Girons, Foix and St-Bertrand-de-Comminges.


Itinerary

Fly at c. 11.00am (British Airways) from London Heathrow to Barcelona. An afternoon walk in Barcelona’s Gothic Quarter takes in the church of Santa María del Mar. Overnight in Barcelona.

Visit the Museum of Catalan Art; a superb collection of medieval painting and sculpture from many of the churches to be visited on the tour. Drive north via Terrassa, a stunning and largely early medieval precinct arranged around three churches. Continue to Vic for the night.

Oliba’s astonishing monastery of Sta Maria at Ripoll has one of the greatest libraries of early medieval Europe. San Juan de las Abadesas is a Romanesque church founded in 887 by Count Wilfred the Hairy as a Benedictine nunnery. Cross into France to Arles-sur-Tech, famed for its tranquil cloister and 12th-cent. sculpture. Continue to the pretty seaside town of Collioure for the first of four nights.

Back into Spain to visit Girona. The Gothic Cathedral, perhaps the finest in Catalonia, houses important illuminated manuscripts and tapestries in the chapterhouse. The early Romanesque abbey of San Pedro de Roda has wonderful views of the coast.

The Romanesque chapel at Fenollar has tiny spaces that carry the most complete cycle of medieval wall paintings to have survived in French Catalonia. See also the fortified cathedral at Elne and fine Pyrenean marble sculpture at St Genis des Fontaines. Free time in Collioure.

Drive in the morning into the foothills of the Canigou Massif. Serrabonne abbey church has a magnificent 12th-cent. carved choral tribune in pink marble. St Jacques at Villefranche-de-Conflent has a fine 12th-cent. portal while St Michel de Cuxa, an important early medieval foundation, was gloriously refurbished by Abbot Oliba during the early 11th cent. Overnight Collioure.

Drive in the morning beneath the northern flank of the Pyrenees to Foix, where there is an arresting three-towered feudal castle. Afternoon visit to the church of St Jean-de-Verges. Overnight in Tarascon.

The Cathedral of St Lizier has a Romanesque cloister and a 14th-cent. brick tower. St-Bertrand-de-Comminges is aisleless and majestic and perhaps the most accomplished late medieval building in the High Pyrenees. Drive via the secluded Aran Valley to Arties. Walk over the bridge to the 12th-cent. Sta Maria with a fine sculpted north door and baptismal font. Overnight in nearby Vielha.

See remote Romanesque churches of the high mountains. Taüll has a superb pair of 12th-cent. churches: Sant Climent, with columnar nave and slender bell-tower, and Sta Maria with a bell-tower to outdo even that of its great neighbour. Sant Joan de Boí has a small and beautifully proportioned single-apsed church. First of two nights in Lleida.

Lleida Cathedral is a sprawling complex of Gothic architecture, painting and sculpture. Poblet has a breathtaking Cistercian church containing tombs of the medieval monarchs of Aragón and a magnificent group of conventual buildings. Santes Creus has a slightly later Cistercian abbey with a superbly sculpted cloister and chapter house.

Drive to Barcelona for an afternoon flight, arriving at London Heathrow at c. 3.45pm.

Download Itinerary

Practicalities

Two sharing: £4,710 or £4,450 without flights. Single occupancy: £5,320 or £5,060 without flights. 

air travel (economy class) on scheduled British Airways flights (Airbus 320); travel by private coach; accommodation as described below; breakfasts and 7 dinners, with wine, water and coffee; all admissions; all tips for waiters and drivers; all taxes; the services of the lecturer and tour manager.

Hotel Condes de Barcelona: a centrally-located 4-star hotel. Parador de Vic-Sau: excellent 4-star parador. Relais des Trois Mas, Collioure: a comfortable 4-star hotel overlooking the bay. Le Manoior d’Agnès, Tarascon-sur-Ariège: 3-star hotel on the edge of town with good restaurant. Parador de Vielha: a 4-star parador in the Arán Valley. Parador de Lleida: 4-star parador occupying a 17th-century convent. Single rooms are doubles for sole use throughout.

The tour involves a lot of walking in town centres, where coach access is restricted, and standing in churches and museums. Uneven ground, irregular paving and steep terrain are standard. There are 5 hotel changes and a lot of driving, at times on minor roads. Average distance by coach per day: 96 miles.

Between 10 and 22 participants.

Before booking, please refer to the FCDO website to ensure you are happy with the travel advice for the destination(s) you are visiting.

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