El franciscanismo en Pamplona. Tres conventos franciscanos típicos [Franciscanism in Pamplona. Three typical Franciscan convents]

  • Tarsicio De Azcona Correspondiente de la RAH [Spain]
Keywords: Franciscan convents (Pamplona), Convent of San Francisco (Pamplona), Poor Clares Monastery of Santa Engracia (Pamplona), extramural Capuchin Convent (Pamplona), old Monastery of San Pedro (Pamplona)

Abstract

This article provides a brief history of the three Franciscan convents in Pamplona during the Ancien Régime. In 1228, the Franciscans settled in San Pedro de las Ribas (to become the Monastery of San Pedro ), from which they moved to what is now Bosquecillo-Taconera in 1245 and then, in 1521-1535 (conquest of Navarre), to the current Plaza de San Francisco, where they remained until 1835 (secularisation). The Poor Clares appeared in Rochapea in around 1228 in the Monastery of Santa Engracia, which was demolished in 1795 (War of the Pyrenees). In 1804, they went from there to Olite. The last convent was the Convent of the Capuchins, founded by Gabriel de Amasa in 1606. It was closed in 1834,...

 

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Published
2017-08-29
How to Cite
De Azcona, T. (2017). El franciscanismo en Pamplona. Tres conventos franciscanos típicos [Franciscanism in Pamplona. Three typical Franciscan convents]. Príncipe De Viana, (267), 183-196. Retrieved from https://revistas.navarra.es/index.php/PV/article/view/889