Comparing land- and skyscapes in the three main manorial-conquered lands of the Canary Islands
Maria Florencia Muratore, Alejandro Gangui, Juan Antonio Belmonte, Carmelo Cabrera

TL;DR
This study analyzes the orientation patterns of Christian churches in the Canary Islands, revealing a predominant double orientation pattern influenced by astronomical, geographical, and cultural factors, with some churches following solstitial or indigenous patterns.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparative analysis of church orientations across three islands, combining statistical, calendric, and orographic data to explain local variations.
Findings
Double orientation pattern consistent across islands
Some churches follow solstitial or indigenous orientation patterns
Geography and land-sky interactions influence church orientations
Abstract
This work is a study of the relationship between astronomy and landscape focused on the orientation of Christian churches of the three main Manorial (Se\~nor\'io) Islands of the Canary archipelago (Spain): Lanzarote, La Gomera and Fuerteventura. As a background, we have the information provided by the texts of early Christian writers, which imposed that churches should be oriented towards the east [..]. The fieldwork that supports our comparative study is based on the measurement of the precise location coordinates, axis' azimuth and angular height of the horizon for most of the churches of the three islands, which amounts to about 120 sets of measurements. For the study of the sample, we have employed various analyses, both statistical, as well as calendric and orographic. Our results show that on all the islands, the pattern of double orientations is repeated, which contemplates the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistorical and Architectural Studies · Historical Astronomy and Related Studies · Historical Geography and Cartography
