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Essential
Architecture- Madrid
The Escorial |
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architect
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Juan Bautista de Toledo, Juan de Herrera |
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location
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near Madrid |
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date
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1562 to 1584 |
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style
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Spanish
Renaissance |
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construction
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masonry
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type
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Palace |
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A distant view of El Escorial. |
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The facade of the chapel, in the Baroque style of Jesuit
churches, is integrated with the palatial facade
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El Escorial
The Royal Monastery of San Lorenzo de El Escorial (in Spanish,
Real Monasterio de San Lorenzo de El Escorial) is an immense palace,
Augustinian monastery, museum, and library complex located at San
Lorenzo de El Escorial (also San Lorenzo del Escorial), a town 45
kilometres (28 miles) northwest of Madrid in the autonomous community of
Madrid in Spain.
At the foot of the Sierra de Guadarrama mountain range, the
complex was commanded by King Philip II of Spain as a necropolis for the
Spanish monarchs and the seat of studies in aid of the
Counter-Reformation. It was designed by the architects Juan Bautista de
Toledo and Juan de Herrera in an austere classical style, and built from
1563 to 1584. It is shaped as a grid in memory of the martyrdom of Saint
Lawrence. It is said that during the battle of Saint Quentin (1557), the
Spanish troops destroyed a small hermitage devoted to Lawrence. The King
Philip II of Spain decided to dedicate the monastery to the saint in
thanks for his victory.
The complex has an enormous store of art, including
masterworks by Titian, Tintoretto, El Greco, Velázquez, Roger van der
Weyden, Paolo Veronese, Alonso Cano, José de Ribera, Claudio Coello and
others. Also at the complex is a library containing thousands of
priceless ancient manuscripts. Giambattista Castello designed the main
staircase.
It is the burial site for most Spanish kings in the last five
centuries, from the houses of Habsburg and Bourbon. The Royal Pantheon
contains the tombs of the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V (King Charles I
of Spain), Philip II, Philip III, Philip IV, Charles II, Louis I,
Charles III, Charles IV, Ferdinand VII, Isabel II, Alfonso XII and
Alfonso XIII. The two first Bourbon kings, Philip V and Ferdinand VI, as
well as King Amadeo of Savoy (1870-1873), are not buried in the
Monastery.
The complex is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. It is an extremely
popular tourist attraction, often visited as a day trip from Madrid.
The surrounding town of San Lorenzo de El Escorial (Madrid) is
also home for the popular summer courses of Universidad Complutense. A
downhill neighbour town also named El Escorial has a likenamed RENFE
station.
Near El Escorial there is the Monumento Nacional de Santa Cruz
del Valle de los Caidos with the tallest memorial cross in the world.
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links
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www.essential-architecture.com
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