The orientation as a signature of cultural identity: The historic churches of Lanzarote
Alejandro Gangui, A. Cesar Gonzalez Garcia, Maria Antonia Perera, Betancort, Juan Antonio Belmonte

TL;DR
This study examines the unique church orientations in Lanzarote, revealing a distinctive twofold pattern that reflects local cultural and practical influences rather than standard religious practices.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of Lanzarote's church orientations, highlighting a unique north-northeast alignment pattern not observed elsewhere.
Findings
A twofold orientation pattern in Lanzarote churches, including east/west and a unique north-northeast alignment.
The north-northeast orientation appears to be specific to Lanzarote and may relate to local practical needs.
Most churches follow a traditional eastward orientation, but Lanzarote shows a distinctive deviation.
Abstract
The orientation of Christian churches is a well-known distinctive feature of their architecture. There is a general tendency to align their apses in the solar range, favoring orientations close to the east (astronomical equinox), although the alignments in the opposite direction, namely, with the apse towards the west, are not unusual. The case of the churches built in northwest Africa before the arrival of Islam is paradigmatic in this regard, and may reflect earlier traditions. The Canary Islands is the western end of this North African cultural koine, so we thought it would be relevant to study a compact set of old churches in one of the islands of the archipelago, choosing to start our project with Lanzarote. We have measured the orientation of a total of 30 churches built prior to 1810, as well as a few buildings of later times, nearly a complete sample of all the island Christian…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCultural Heritage Management and Preservation
