Santo Domingo, on the island of Hispaniola,…
1541 CE
Santo Domingo, on the island of Hispaniola, is the first seat of Spanish colonial rule in the New World; it is today the oldest continuously inhabited European settlement in the Americas.
Santo Domingo’s Cathedral of Santa María la Menor, begun in 1514 and completed in 1540, is the Americas’ oldest cathedral.
Fronted with a golden-tinted coral limestone façade, the church combines elements of both Gothic and Baroque with some lavish Plateresque styles as exemplified by the high altar, chiseled out of silver.
Plateresque, meaning "in the manner of a silversmith"—plata meaning silver in Spanish—,refers to the fifteenth and sixteenth century Spanish Baroque architecture and art form in Spain and later its colonies, characterized by an extremely lavish, meticulously refined style of Spanish architecture ornamentation, its main traits being delicately executed ornament.
Derived largely from late Gothic styles in the Low Countries, namely the Florid and Brabant styles, the Plateresque was the last phase of Gothic in Spain before the adoption of forms directly inspired by the Italian Renaissance.
It was soon transferred to Spanish colonies in the Americas, especially the Viceroyalty of New Spain—colonial Mexico.
The Cathedral was commissioned by Pope Julius II in 1504 and its construction began in 1512 under the leadership of Bishop Fray García Padilla.
The arrival of Bishop Alexander Geraldini in 1519 motivated the construction of a temple of greater solemnity, so it was decided to build the current church, whose foundation stone was laid in 1521.
The construction was carried out by Luis Moya, according to plans designed by Alonso Rodriguez, of Seville, Spain.
The construction achieved continuous progress from 1523 until its consecration in 1541.