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The temple has an irregular ground
plan. It has three naves -the Evangelist aisle being the
most remarkable-, triple chancel with three semicircular
apses and two prismatic towers. The main nave is covered
by lunette vaulting ( 17 C ), and the side aisles by plain
groined vaults from the 14 C. The north doorway, splayed,
shows pointed archivolts and is decorated with sculptures
that retain their original polychromy.
The cloister ( 1170 ) shows features from the late Romanesque
and is part of the rich Romanesque heritage in Navarre.
It originally had four galleries, but lost two when the
nearby castle was blown up in 1572. The two that have come
down to us, the north and west galleries, have semicircular
archs over coupled columns with historiated capitals. During
the Middles Ages it served as a graveyard for pilgrims.
In it was buried the Bishop of Patras who carried a relic
for Santiago Apostle when death struck him. This relic is
contained in a silver reliquary that is also in the church.
The temple treasures many works of art,
including the sculptures of St. Adrew and St. Peter, a Romanesque
virgin, a Gothic statue of Our Lady of O, the Romanesque
choir stalls and the font.
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