Identification
San Paulino Parish Church
Location
San Paulino St. nº 1.
Architect
Manuel Fernández-Pujol Fernández (graduated in 1929).
Date of Construction
1946-1954.
Description
The San Paulino church has a Latin cross floor plan, even though the apse, which is polygonal and the arms of the crossing present a lacking development. In the lengthwise direction, it has only a nave with a barrel vault reinforced by transverse arches that download their weight into the pilasters. In the cross-wise direction, that is, the transept, the same is found, although its lacking development already mentioned does not make necessary the use of transverse arches. It is remarkable that an impost reveals the divisor line between the wall and the dome. In the intersection of both naves, we can find a doom with ribs and oculus, lifted on four toral arches through scallops.
Focusing on the exterior, we can remark that the naves were covered with a pitched roof with curved tiles, but at the beginning of the 70’s of the last siècle, it was replaced in the principal nave this type of covering for a flat one. Above the transept and covering the doom, it is lifted a four-sided tower, whose pitched covering is crowned by a lantern, rounded off with a little doom covered with blue tiles. Attached to the main façade we find the bell tower, which is formed by the four-sided tower, an octagonal bell tower and a doom covered with blue and white tiles.
The whole is of great austerity and simplicity, noticeable in the interior as well as in the exterior. It has influence on it the finishing wall hangings, smooth and whitewashed, the lacking and small size of the hollows, and the insignificant presence of the decorative elements. A good example of these characteristics gives to the main façade, with its big door without any ornamental detail, its little rose window and its empty alcove.
It must be added that around the temple, we find various parish spaces, like the sacristy, the office of the parish priest, the archive, the room for catechesis, the home, etc… For the construction of this last one, at the end of the 70’s, it was necessary to demolish a little baptistery located next to the right side of the main façade.
Of the interior of the church, it is remarkable those elements, that – in our view – deserve attention. First of all, five great oil paintings of the Italian painter Ciro de Michele, made between 1954 and 1958, show naval scenes of the Gospel. Secondly, there are six stained glass windows where they are represented the Virgen del Carmen, San Paulino, the Virgen del Pilar, the Virgen de la Oliva, San José and the Inmaculada Concepción, and the rose windows with the Carmelite emblems. Thirdly, Nuestro Padre Jesús Nazareno chapel, in which there are exposed for cult the images of Nº. P. Jesús Nazareno (Vicente Tena, 1927), María Santísima de los Dolores (Miguel Láinez Capote, 1941) and San Juan Evangelista (Juan Abascal Fuentes, 1975). Fourthly, the Medinaceli Christ chapel, in which we observe the sculptures of Nº. P. Jesús Cautivo y Rescatado (Miguel Láinez Capote, 1950) and María Santísima de la Trinidad (Fernando Buiza, 197?). Fifthly, the simple altarpiece in wood, made of mahogany and citronella mainly, presides the presbytery, designed by the endeavour ÇSantarrufina in 1937. In it, we can see the images of the Santísimo Cristo del Amor (Enrique Casterá, 1965), San Paulino (Francisco de P. Gomara, 1944) and the Virgen del Carmen (Eduardo Espinosa, 1938). Sixthly, two images of angel located in the tabernacle, attributed to “La Roldana” and dated between 1686 and 1689. Seventhly, the sculpture of the crucified Christ located in the sacristy, was brought at the beginning of the 20th C. from Vejer and whose author is unknown, as well as its date, although by its characteristics can be dated from the 16th or 17th centuries.
Historical Data
The construction of a temple that could take in the large number of parishioners of Barbate was a need resolved temporarily by the curia with the raising of the modest church of Nuestra Señora del Carmen and San Paulino (1937). The definitive solution would come later, in the coming of a series of favorable circumstances, from which we remark the construction of our diocese of twenty nine parishes in September 1944, between them that of the San Paulina, and the start-up, with it, of determined mechanisms to ease the construction and/or expanding of temples in it. To these events, we should add the economical availability of the central and municipal administrations, with their subsidies. This way it was possible to lay the foundation stone of the new temple the 12th October 1946. Its construction was also possible thanks to the donations of National Consortium of Tunny Fishing and of the neighbors, mobilized around the Council Pro-Parish, organism constituted in January 1948 and in which predominated the representatives of the fishing sector. Lastly, it is remarkable the role played by the priest Manuel López Benítez, destined to our village since 1941, who can be considered as one of the main promoters of the project due to his capacity of coordination and mobilization, a quality that was brought to light even after the benediction of the temple, the 12th October 1954, where it was necessary to tidy up it.
Uses and state of preservation
The San Paulino church is still working. Regarding the architectonical changes, they are not many, but they deserve to be outlined the above cited of the roof of the main nave and the demolishment of the baptistery. In terms of the changes of image, at the beginning of 2004, it was preceded to paint certain areas of the façades in white, abandoning so, the original predominance of lime. In any case, and having this into account, the aspect the temple presents today does not differ very much from which it had fifty years ago, being its current state of preservation more than acceptable. /p>
Administrative situation
The building is property of the diocese of Cádiz and Ceuta.