Nuestra Señora de la Asunción, Bujalance

Nuestra Señora de la Asunción (also known as Catedral de la Campina, Spanish for "Cathedral of the Countryside") is a Roman Catholic church in Bujalance, Andalusia, southern Spain. It originates from the church of Santa Maria, which was built above the medieval mosque, near the town's Alcazaba, after the area had been conquered by Ferdinand III of Castile. The edifice is in Gothic-Renaissance style, with ogival arcades and pillars attributed to , Hernán Ruiz the Younger (1556) and . The Gothic cross-vault ceiling is the oldest part of the church.

Nuestra Señora de la Asunción, Bujalance

Nuestra Señora de la Asunción (also known as Catedral de la Campina, Spanish for "Cathedral of the Countryside") is a Roman Catholic church in Bujalance, Andalusia, southern Spain. It originates from the church of Santa Maria, which was built above the medieval mosque, near the town's Alcazaba, after the area had been conquered by Ferdinand III of Castile. The edifice is in Gothic-Renaissance style, with ogival arcades and pillars attributed to , Hernán Ruiz the Younger (1556) and . The Gothic cross-vault ceiling is the oldest part of the church.