Portuguese Plain Style architecture
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Portuguese Plain Style architecture (Estilo Chão in Portuguese) refers to a 16th century Portuguese architectural style related to early Mannerism marked by austerity and sobriety of form. The term was coined by the American art historian George Kubler, who defines this style as "vernacular architecture, related to the traditions of a living dialect more than to the great authors of Classical Antiquity".[1] This same author traces the origin of this style back to suggestions by Italian military architects, although there may be influences from Northern Europe and from the Portuguese architectural tradition itself.
Although often associated with the unadorned Spanish style, the truth is that this style predates the Spanish one by about a decade, corresponding to a change in taste during the reign of King John III of Portugal, in which the monarch sought "clarity, order, proportion and simplicity". Compared with the Spanish style, the human scale has not been lost in the buildings that follow this style.[2] It was first given expression in a series of hall-churches erected in Leiria, Portalegre and Miranda do Douro in the 1550s, erected with King Johns support.[3] It supplanted Manueline as the favoured architectural style in Portugal.[4] Miguel de Arruda played an important role in the affirmation of this style.[5][6]
It is an well proportioned architectural style that employs golden proportions, classical geometry and the golden rectangle; shapes are rectangular, compact and orthogonal. Straight lines are used to define almost everything and decoration is avoided, making buildings squat, fortified, low and clean. It is a typically Portuguese architectural expression, born from the attempt to preserve national identity, in a period of political, economic and social crisis.