List of Romanesque buildings


Listed below are examples of surviving buildings in Romanesque style in Europe, sorted by modern day countries.

List

Austria

Belgium

Croatia

  • , Zadar
  • St. Benedict, Split
  • St. Peter, Rab
  • St. Mary the Blessed, Rab

Czech Republic

France

Romanesque architecture expands in France through monasteries. Burgundy was the center of monastic life in France - one of the most important Benedictine monasteries of medieval Europe was located in Cluny. Pilgrimages also contributed to expansion of this style. Many pilgrims passed through France on their way to Santiago de Compostela.
French Romanesque schools of architecture, which are specific for every region, are characterised by the variety of stone vaulting.

Germany

Hungary

Ireland

Italy

In Italy, the prevalent diffusion is in Lombardy, in Emilia - Romagna, in Tuscany, in the continental part of Veneto and in Apulia; everyone of these "Romanesque styles" has proper characteristics, for constructing methods and for materials. For example, a characteristic of Romanesque is that to change the classic elements with Christian elements, but in Tuscany and Apulia the classic decoratings remain.
Materials depended from the local disponibility, because the importation was too expensive. In fact, in Lombardy the most used material is ceramic, because of the argillous nature of the terrain; but that is not true for Como, where there were large diponibility of stone; in Tuscany buildings in white marble are frequent, with inserts of green serpentin marble.
In Lombardy and Emilia, in that age united, in Romanesque epoque there was a great artistic flowering. The most monumental churches and cathedrals are often built with the campata system, with varying columns which weigh a tutto sesto arcos. In plain the material of construction is prevalently the mattone, but buildings in stone do not lack. The greater part of the Roman cities along the via Emilia is equipped in this age of monumental cathedral, between which they already maintain to the medieval system.

Apulia

Abruzzo

Aosta Valley

Emilia-Romagna

Friuli-Venezia Giulia

Latium

Marche

Marche

Piedmont

Sardinia

Sicily
Tuscany
Umbria
  • Basilica of Saint Francis of Assisi
  • Cathedral of Spoleto
  • San Francesco, Terni
  • Chiesa di San Bernardino da Siena
  • Chiesa di Sant'Arcangelo
  • Eremo di San Marco e la grotta del Beato Ventura
  • Chiesa Tonda
  • S. Maria di Pietrarossa
  • S. Stefano di Piaggia
  • S. Nicolò
  • S. Fabiano
  • S. Tommaso
  • S. Sabino
  • S. Pietro a Pettine
  • S. Costanzo
  • S. Andrea
  • S. Egidio di Borgo
  • S. Donato
  • S. Leonardo del Colle
  • S. Martino in Manciano
  • S. Apollinare
  • S. Stefano in Manciano
  • S. Pietro in Bovara
  • S. Maria di Pelan
  • S. Paolo di Coste
  • S. Croce in Val dell'Aquila
  • S. Emiliano
Veneto

Netherlands

Poland

Portugal

Romania

Serbia

Slovakia

During the time of early Christianity every 10 villages were ordered to build a church. Several rotunda have been built in this time.

Spain

Before Cluny`s influence, Romanesque first developed in Spain in the 10th and 11th centuries in Catalonia, Huesca and the Aragonese Pyrenees, simultaneously with the north of Italy, into what has been called "First Romanesque" or "Lombard Romanesque". It is a primitive style whose characteristics are thick walls, lack of sculpture and the presence of rhythmic ornamental arches.
Romanesque architecture truly arrives with the influence of Cluny through the Way of Saint James pilgrimage route that ends in the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela. The model of the Spanish Romanesque in the 12th century was the Cathedral of Jaca, with its characteristic apse structure and plan, and its "chess" decoration in strips called taqueado jaqués. As the Christian kingdoms advanced towards the South, this model spread throughout the reconquered areas with some variations. Spanish Romanesque was also influenced by the Spanish pre-Romanesque styles, mainly the Asturian and the Mozarab. But there is also a strong influence from the moorish architecture, so close in space, specially the vaults of Córdoba`s Mosque, and the polylobulated arches. In the 13th century, some Romanesque churches were built with early Gothic architectural elements. Aragón, Catalonia, Castile and Navarra are the areas where numerous examples of Spanish Romanesque can be found.

[Aragon]

Province of Zaragoza
Province of Zaragoza

[Cantabria]

[Catalonia]

Province of Barcelona
Province of Lleida
Province of Girona
Province of Tarragona

[Castile and León]

Province of Avila
Province of Burgos
Province of León
Province of Palencia
Province of Salamanca
Province of Segovia
Province of Soria
Province of Zamora

Galicia">Galicia (Spain)">Galicia

Province of A Coruña
Province of Lugo
Province of Ourense
  • Cathedral, Ourense, Romanesque and Gothic

[Madrid]

[Navarra]

Norway

Sweden

Switzerland

Turkey

Ukraine

Galicia, Galician architecture

United Kingdom

England

In England, Romanesque architecture is often termed 'Norman architecture'. Castles, cathedrals and churches of the Norman period have frequently been extended during later periods. It is normal to find Norman in combination with Gothic architecture.

Scotland