![]() |
||
INTRODUCTION |
||||||
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
|||||||||||||||
| The
ossuary The linear disposition of the graves The orthogonal layout Some graves of important families A particular of one of the most interesting graves |
|
Polloe
is the main cemetery in San Sebastian, although there are two more in
the city. Polloe cemetery was opened 127 years ago and the first burial
took place on August 12th 1878. Spanish cities at the end of the 19th Century transferred the concept of bourgeois urban expansion to the cemetery in an orthogonal layout with wide avenues intersected by narrower streets, thus forming small enclosures where the graves were set out following a hierarchical order: from the family vaults and more distinguished graves, near the entrance, to the communal graves at the end of the cemetery. |
Within this internal layout
there are some characteristics, like the cemetery for 'dissidents' or
'civilians', or for the burials of non-Catholics, which had a different
entrance from that of Polloe and had no access. This had a tangential
space, which was closed with the arrival of democracy. In addition,
the servants' quarters, autopsy rooms and a chapel could be found in
the cemetery. |
||||||||||||