Iglesia de Santiago, Sigüenza
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/6b/1886%2C_Espa%C3%B1a%2C_sus_monumentos_y_sus_artes%2C_su_naturaleza_e_historia%2C_Castilla_La_Nueva%2C_vol_2%2C_Portada_de_Santiago%2C_Sig%C3%BCenza%2C_Pasc%C3%B3.jpg/200px-1886%2C_Espa%C3%B1a%2C_sus_monumentos_y_sus_artes%2C_su_naturaleza_e_historia%2C_Castilla_La_Nueva%2C_vol_2%2C_Portada_de_Santiago%2C_Sig%C3%BCenza%2C_Pasc%C3%B3.jpg)
The Iglesia de Santiago (Church of St James) is a Romanesque church in the center of Sigüenza, in the autonomous community of Castilla-La Mancha, Spain.
Located on the Calle Mayor (main street), the façade recalls a Roman temple. It served as a parish church. The church was erected by Bishop Don Cerebruno (1156-1167). It consists of a single nave. It suffered damage during the Spanish Civil War and is still undergoing restoration. The church was once attached to a Clarissan monastery abandoned in the 1940s. The entrance portal has a bust of St James the Apostle, and traces of the coat of arms of the 16th-century Bishop Fadrique de Portugal.[1]
See also
References
- ^ Ayuntamiento de Siguenza, entry on church.
41°03′58″N 2°38′25″W / 41.0662°N 2.6404°W / 41.0662; -2.6404
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