For generations maps of the pilgrimage roads and of the reconquista have
bedevilled the study of Spanish art and architecture. They have also
infiltrated the popular imagination and come to dominate the ways we
think about Spain and Portugal. Art in Spain and Portugal from the
Romans to the Early Middle Ages: Routes and Myths sets out to diminish
the power of these images and to enrich the wider English-language
literature on early medieval art. Starting with the Romans and working
through the vertical layers to the early Romanesque period Rose Walker
draws together scholarly work hitherto confined within disciplinary
boundaries, specialist regional studies, and findings familiar only to
Spanish-speaking audiences. The author builds on these studies and her
own research to present narratives that question art historical and
archaeological orthodoxies. New perspectives emerge from the routes
along which wealth and artistic expertise crossed the peninsula, showing
the endurance of the north-south axis and the strength of networks and
pragmatic alliances that often operated without regard for religious
difference.