Cartoixa d'Escaladei
Cartoixa d'Escaladei, or Chapterhouse of Scala Dei, was a monastery of the Carthusian order in the southern Catalonia. It was founded in the 12th century, was an important centre for art in the 17th century and started the planting of vines in the region that became later known as Priorat due to the vineyards of the monks.
History
Foundation and early history
The monastery was established by king Alfonso II of Aragon as the first Carthusian monastery in the Iberian peninsula in 1194. The reason was the recent reconquest of the territory of Catalunya Nova from the Moors and for which the Aragonese kings needed to repopulate the territory. The location proved fitting for the community which was seeking silence, solitude and nature. According to legend, when the Carthusian monks came into the region they met shepherd who told them that he had seen in a vision angels ascending a stairway into heaven into the clouds of the summit of nearby Montsant.By 1218 the monks were well established and were gifted by Jaume I dominion and jurisdiction over the nearby villages of La Morera, Gratallops, Torroja, Porrera, Poboleda and Vilella Alta. The monks introduced viticulture in this region, resulting in first vines in 1263, and the villages form today the wine region of Priorat. Scala Dei's patron saint became the founder of the Carthusian order, Saint Bruno of Cologne, whose feast day in the first week of October coincided the beginning of the vine harvest.
The earliest building of the monastery is the church of Santa Maria which was finished in 1228. Together with it were built a first cloister, called Maius, twelve cells for twelve monks and several other buildings. Thanks to the aid of prince and patriarch Joan of Aragon, the monastery could build another cloister in 1333 and build twelve additional cells, thus doubling in size. A third cloister with six cells was built in 1403 with donations from Berenguer Gallart, lord of Puigverd.
Though the community lived mostly in silence, it was also in contact with the outside world. The physician Arnaldus de Villa Nova dedicated one of his treatises to the prior and monks of Scala Dei and bequeathed some of his books to them upon his death in 1305. Alonso Tostado, a leading scholar of the 15th century, was a novice here in 1444 before he was called by king Juan II to become his advisor.