Church The church, built in the 12th-14th centuries in a transitional style between the Romanesque and the Gothic, has a Latin cross plan with a single nave including four aisles, and a
transept. The latter is longer but narrower than the nave, to which it is connected by a rectangular crossing surmounted by an octagonal dome, supported by 13th century
squinches. The transept's arms end with square
apse chapels. The nave is covered by
cross vaults, while the transept has
barrel vaults. The bell tower, built over the second section of the nave between 1340 and 1348 under the Abbess Elisenda de Copons, has an octagonal plan. It is in Gothic style. The
presbytery houses the tomb of
Violant of Hungary, wife of King James I of Aragon, who died in 1251 and whose remains were brought here in 1275. To the right of the choir is the Corpus Christi Chapel, which has a polychrome stone image of the Virgin Mary, work of
Guillem Seguer. In the presbytery, on the right side of the altar, there is the tomb of
Violant of Hungary, wife of King James I of Aragon. She died in 1251 in the monastery of Salas de Huesca, but her body was moved to the abbey in 1275, which is the date of the inscription of her sarcophagus. Her daughter, Sancha of Aragon, a nun who died in the Holy Land, was also buried here after her body was transferred to the monastery; her sarcophagus is on three inverted columns "to the funeral" as a sign of mourning. In the southern aisle is the tomb of Ferrer Alamany de Toralla, who died in 1360, and his wife Beatriz de Guimerà, featuring the figures of the husband on the lid dressed as a gentleman with heraldry and of the wife on one side dressed in the Cistercian habit. At the bottom of the wall there is a representation of two angels carrying the souls of the dead to heaven. To the right of the choir is the chapel of Corpus Christi, where there is an image of the Virgin Mary in polychrome stone, the work of
Guillem Seguer. From the altar of this chapel, two
antependia from the 14th century are preserved in the
National Art Museum of Catalonia. A gate separates the nave from the transept.
Portals The main portal is located in the northern transept arm and faces the abbey square or Plaza Mayor. It features a semicircular arch and five
archivolts supported by columns and capitals with foliate reliefs similar to the east gallery of the cloister and a
tympanum sculpted with the Virgin and Child, surrounded by angels. Above it there is a cornice with a frieze of blind arcades with corbels sculpted with various motifs. Another doorway is located on the church's northern wall, but is now obstructed by a sarcophagus enclosed in an
ogival arch as an
arcosolium, on which there is a
Trinitarian chrismon from the end of the 12th century. This wall has a total of five sarcophagi, four in Romanesque style (13th century) and one in Gothic style. All of them bear heraldic symbols and in two of them the names can be read: Sibil-la de Guimerà, wife of Guerau Alamany, and Miquela Sasala, from 1244.
Cloister The
cloister is on a quadrangular plan, whose sides, of different lengths, correspond to different successive ages and construction styles (12th-15th centuries). The oldest section, on the south, shows the original sober Romanesque-Cistercian canons: it has three spans formed by three
piers, with three rounded arcades supported by columns with undecorated capitals. The eastern wing is also in Romanesque style (early 13th century), and has five spans divided by four pilasters, The arcades form triple
mullioned windows with, in the mullions, small
rose windows with decoration in Arabic style. The capitals of the columns have vegetable motifs. The northern wing is the shortest one; it has wide hollows with ogival
traceries in Gothic style, dating to the 14th century. The western side, the most recent one, was built in the 15th century in proto-Renaissance style. The capitals of the columns show the heraldic symbols of the Caldés family, who produced the monastery's abbesses during that period. The chapter hall is accessed from the cloister through a Gothic gate built under abbess Anglesola in the 14th century, and has a cross-vault cover. The pavement features several tomb slabs of abbesses, and there is an
alabaster image of the
Virgin of Mercy, attributed to the sculptor
Pere Johan. ==References==