Coordinates: 40°25′5″N 3°42′50″W / 40.41806°N 3.71389°W / 40.41806; -3.71389

Royal Palace of Madrid: Difference between revisions

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It is a rectangular square of curved header, of monumental character, whose final layout responds to a design in 1844 by Pascual y Colomer. One of its main proponents was King [[Joseph Bonaparte]], who ordered the demolition of the medieval houses located on its site.
It is a rectangular square of curved header, of monumental character, whose final layout responds to a design in 1844 by Pascual y Colomer. One of its main proponents was King [[Joseph Bonaparte]], who ordered the demolition of the medieval houses located on its site.


[[File:Plaza de Oriente (Madrid) 11.jpg|left|thumb|220px|Statues of the Gothic kings in the Plaza de Oriente.]]
[[File:Plaza de Oriente (Madrid) 11.jpg|left|thumb|250px|Statues of the Gothic kings in the Plaza de Oriente.]]
Plaza de Oriente is rectangular, although his head located to east, forming a closed curve, headed by the [[Teatro Real]]. It can distinguish three main plots: the Central Gardens, the Cabo Noval Gardens and the Lepanto Gardens.
Plaza de Oriente is rectangular, although his head located to east, forming a closed curve, headed by the [[Teatro Real]]. It can distinguish three main plots: the Central Gardens, the Cabo Noval Gardens and the Lepanto Gardens.


Line 82: Line 82:


=== Campo del Moro Gardens ===
=== Campo del Moro Gardens ===
[[File:Campo del Moro (Madrid) 01.jpg|right|thumb|200px|View of the Campo del Moro, from its western side. In the background, the Royal Palace of Madrid.]]
[[File:Campo del Moro (Madrid) 01.jpg|right|thumb|250px|View of the Campo del Moro, from its western side. In the background, the Royal Palace of Madrid.]]


These gardens are named after allegedly camped in this place the troops of the Muslim leader Ali ben Yusuf in 1109 during an attempted reconquest of Madrid. The first works to condition the area are due to Philip IV, whose reign it were built fountains and planted different kinds of vegetation, but the overall look of the place remained largely neglected. During the construction of the new palace were various landscaping projects based in the gardens of the [[Royal Palace of La Granja de San Ildefonso]], but there was no doing anything due the lack of funds, not being until the reign of Isabel II in which started a landscaping more seriously. At this time it design a great park and [[Romanticist|Romanticist]] style and were installed fountains brought from the [[Royal Palace of Aranjuez]]. With the fall of Isabel II the gardens suffer a period of abandonment and neglect in which it lose a part of the design and not until the regency of [[Maria Christina of Austria]] when it began a series of rehabilitation works, giving the current design, which follows the layout of the [[English garden]]s of 19th century.
These gardens are named after allegedly camped in this place the troops of the Muslim leader Ali ben Yusuf in 1109 during an attempted reconquest of Madrid. The first works to condition the area are due to Philip IV, whose reign it were built fountains and planted different kinds of vegetation, but the overall look of the place remained largely neglected. During the construction of the new palace were various landscaping projects based in the gardens of the [[Royal Palace of La Granja de San Ildefonso]], but there was no doing anything due the lack of funds, not being until the reign of Isabel II in which started a landscaping more seriously. At this time it design a great park and [[Romanticist|Romanticist]] style and were installed fountains brought from the [[Royal Palace of Aranjuez]]. With the fall of Isabel II the gardens suffer a period of abandonment and neglect in which it lose a part of the design and not until the regency of [[Maria Christina of Austria]] when it began a series of rehabilitation works, giving the current design, which follows the layout of the [[English garden]]s of 19th century.


From time to time throughout his reign, for example to hold his saint day of [[John the Baptist|Saint John]], King Juan Carlos has held receptions and gala dinners in the gardens during the summer months.
From time to time throughout his reign, for example to hold his saint day of [[John the Baptist|Saint John]], King Juan Carlos has held receptions and gala dinners in the gardens during the summer months.

=== Sabatini Gardens ===
{{Main|Sabatini Gardens}}
[[File:Jardines de Sabatini (Madrid) 04.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Sabatini Gardens.]]

Located on the north side, between the Royal Palace, the [[Calle de Bailén (Madrid)|calle de Bailén]] and the cuesta de San Vicente. Of French design, are a monumental gardens created in the 30's of 20th century. Receive the name ''Sabatini'' because in this place were the stables built by the architect for service of the Palace. These gardens are adorned with a pond around which place some of the statues of Spanish kings who were originally intended to crown the Royal Palace. Geometrically sited between its rides, there are several fountains.

The Republican government ordered the seizure of different properties of the [[Spanish Royal Family]], including this one, giving to the [[City Council of Madrid]] to build a public park. The project was awarded to Zaragozan architect [[Fernando García Mercadal]] after he win in the held competition.


== Interior ==
== Interior ==

Revision as of 04:50, 27 March 2011

Royal Palace of Madrid
Courtyard of the Royal Palace of Madrid
Map
General information
Architectural styleBaroque, Classicism
Town or cityMadrid
CountrySpain
Construction startedApril 7, 1738
ClientPhilip V of Spain
Design and construction
Architect(s)Filippo Juvara (first of many)

The Palacio Real de Madrid (The Royal Palace of Madrid), is the official residence of the king of Spain.[1] Is the largest palace in Western Europe in extent, with 135,000 m² and more than 3,418 rooms. Its importance is that host to a valuable historical and artistic heritage, as the Stradivarius Palatinos and very important collections of other art forms such as painting, sculpture and tapestry.[2]

Another of the names used to refer to the building is the "Palacio de Oriente". This name originates from the square which bears one of the balconies of the palace, the Plaza de Oriente, which also houses the Teatro Real.

It was built on the ruins of the Royal Alcázar, destroyed by a fire in 1734, by decision of King Philip V of Bourbon. Construction began in 1738, according to plans by architect Filippo Juvara, modified significantly by his pupil Juan Bautista Sachetti. Francesco Sabatini was responsible for the completion of the building and ancillary works of reform, enlargement and decoration. Charles III was the first monarch to continuously inhabited the palace.

The last monarch who lived continuously in the palace was Alfonso XIII, althought Manuel Azaña, president of the Second Republic, also inhabited on it, making it the last head of state to do so. During that period was known as «Palacio Nacional». There is still a room next to the Real Capilla, which is known by the name «office of Azaña».

Interior of the palace is notable for its wealth of art, both as regards the use of all kinds of fine materials in its construction and the decoration of its rooms with artwork of all kinds, including paintings by artists such Caravaggio, Velázquez, Francisco de Goya and frescoes of Corrado Giaquinto, Giovanni Battista Tiepolo and Anton Raphael Mengs. Other collections of great historical and artistic importance that are preserved in the building are the Royal Armoury, Porcelain, Watches, Furniture and Silverware. Currently, the Patrimonio Nacional, an autonomous body under the Ministry of the Presidency, manages the owned of public property in the service of the Crown, including the Royal Palace.

History of the building

Historical evolution of the Royal Alcazar of Madrid.

The direct antecedent of the Royal Palace is the Royal Alcazar, a fortress built on the same site where today stands the baroque building. Its structure was the subject of several reforms (especially the facade), because the King Henry III of Castile made it one of the most popular residences, and the site gets the adjective «real». His son John II built the Capilla Real and several dependencies. However, during the War of the Castilian Succession (1476) the troops Joanna la Beltraneja were besieged in the Alcázar, causing several damage to the royal building.

Under the Habsburg Spain, enthroned in 1516, the Emperor Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor undertook a major restoration of the Alcázar, to Renaissance features unambiguous in order to transform the outdated medieval residence in a palace suitable for his court. Philip II continued the work and showed special emphasis on the decoration of the building, which hired craftsmen from Italy, France and the Netherlands. However, the most important contributions of this monarch were the Golden Tower and the Royal Armory, demolished in 1894. The Habsburgs (Philip III, Philip IV and Charles II) continued the project of Philip II, particularly related to the trace of the building and the facades.

Philip V of Bourbon came to the throne of Spain in 1700. The alcázar of the Habsburgs, austere in comparison to the French palace where the new king had grown again, went through several reforms led by Teodoro Ardemans and René Carlier. On the other hand, the main rooms have been redecorated to the French taste by the Queen Maria Luisa of Savoy and the Princess of Ursins.

Do not know many details of the inner side of the enclosure; but yes know lots of documentation about its plant and exterior, like a drawing made in 1534 by Cornelius Vermeyen. It was a rectangular building, medieval appearance and is structured around various dependencies like the Capilla Real de los Trastámara, the Patio del Rey to the west and the Patio de la Reina to the east. Its patios (courtyards) were open to the public for many years and these were allowed the installation of markets. It also highlights the picture gallery of the alcázar, with works by Tintoretto, Veronese, Ribera, Bosch, Sánchez Coello, Van Dyck, El Greco, Annibale Carracci, Leonardo da Vinci, Guido Reni, Raphael, Jacopo Bassano and Correggio, many which were lost in the disaster of 1734.

The baroque palace

View of part of the Royal Palace from Cuesta de la Vega, by Fernando Brambila (c. 1790-1832). Preserved in the collection of the Ministry of Economy and Finance.[3]

Christmas Eve of 1734 the castle was destroyed by a fire originated in the rooms of the French painter Jean Ranc. Failed to be detected in time, due the warning bells were confused with the call to mass. For fear of looting, the doors of the building remained closed, hampering the inevitable evacuation of the recint. Many paintings were lost, as the Expulsion of the Moors, by Diego Velázquez. Others, such as Las Meninas, were rescued and thrown through the windows. However, shortly before the fire, the king ordered that much of his collection was moved to the Buen Retiro Palace. This fire wiped out definitely the old Alcázar, whose last walls were finally demolished in 1738.

Filippo Juvara was responsible for directing the work of the new palace. The Italian devised a monumental project of enormous proportions, which was not realized because of the inopportune death of the artist. Juan Bautista Sachetti, disciple of Juvara, was chosen to continue the work of his teacher. Raised a square structure centered by a large patio also square and solving the different angles with outgoing bodies.

In 1760 Charles III called to Sicilian Francesco Sabatini, architect of classicist taste that permeated the works of the palace, who was commissioned to enlarge the building. The original idea was to frame the Plaza de la Armería with a series of galleries and arcades which accommodate the different dependences and the construction of two wings over the same square, of which only completed the extension of the southeast tower known as «ala de San Gil». Moreover, also planned to extend the north side by a large building that echoed the same style of the building and included three square courtyards in size somewhat smaller than the large central courtyard. The works of this expansion started quickly but were soon interrupted, leaving its foundations buried under a platform from which later built the royal stables were, demolished in the 20th century and replaced by the Sabatini Gardens. Thus, the palace began to be inhabited in 1764.

Ferdinand VII, who spent many years imprisoned in the Château de Valençay, began the most thorough renovation of the palace in the 19th century. The aim of this reform was to turn the old-fashioned Italian style building in a modern French style palace. However, his grandson Alfonso XII was raised to turn the palace into a Victorian style residence. The works were designed by the architect José Segundo de Lema and consisted in the empowerment of several rooms, replacing marble floors for parquet and the addition of furniture of the time.

Exterior of the palace

Detail of the facade. Reccared II and Erwig, Visigoth kings, flanking the arms of Spain. The statues do not match the names on the bases.

The main facade of the Palace was built on a base pad, on which rises a series of big Tuscan pillars. It is also adorned with a series of statues of saints and kings, relocated under the reign of Charles III to give to the gates of the recint a classicist touch.

At the time, Italian Sachetti decided fourteen vases and placed at the corners statues of the Aztec tlatoani Moctezuma II and the Inca Atahualpa, works by Juan Pascual de Mena and Domingo Martínez, respectively. Near the Tuscan columns are representations of Honorius, Theodosius I, Hadrian and Trajan. A medallion with classical figures topped the set.

On the southern front were placed the statues of Philip V, Maria Luisa of Savoy and Elisabeth Farnese, and that of Ferdinand VI and his wife Barbara of Portugal. Also found flanking both sculptural series an allusion to Zodiac of the Greeks.

Is remarkable the intervention of Juan Domingo Olivieri and his workshop, who labored more than half of the sculptures that adorned the palace at the time of Ferdinand VI. It was also the author of many heads of mask and other allegorical figures of Greek mythology, that not occupied a place as visible as other works.

Plaza de la Armería

Night view of the facade that facing the plaza.

In there is the Cathedral of Almudena, whose construction was funded by King Alfonso XII to house the remains of his wife Mercedes of Orléans.} The works of construction of the temple began in 1878 and concluded in 1992. This place limits to the west with the Lepanto Garens in the Plaza de Oriente.

Narciso Pascual Colomer, the same architect who crafted the Plaza de Oriente, designed the layout of the plaza in 1879, but failed to materialize. The execution was finally in 1892, according to a new project by the architect Enrique María Repullés.

The history of this square date back to 1553, the year in which Philip II ordered up a building to houses the royal stables, renovated in 1670 by José del Olmo. The building survived until 1884, a fire became necessary its collapse.

The site now occupied by the Plaza de la Armería was used for many decades as anteplaza de armas. Sachetti tried to build a cathedral to finish the cornice of the Manzanares, and Sabatini proposed to unite this building with the royal palace, to form a single block. Both projects were ignored by Charles III.

Ángel Fernández de los Ríos in 1868 proposed the creation of a large wooded area that would travel all around the Plaza de Oriente, in order to give a better view of the Royal Palace. A decade later Segundo de Lema added a staircase to the original design of Fernández, which led to the idea of ​​Francisco de Cubas to give more importance to the emerging neo-Gothic church of Almudena, whose historicist and classicist construction blends with the style of the Royal Palace.

Plaza de Oriente

It is a rectangular square of curved header, of monumental character, whose final layout responds to a design in 1844 by Pascual y Colomer. One of its main proponents was King Joseph Bonaparte, who ordered the demolition of the medieval houses located on its site.

Statues of the Gothic kings in the Plaza de Oriente.

Plaza de Oriente is rectangular, although his head located to east, forming a closed curve, headed by the Teatro Real. It can distinguish three main plots: the Central Gardens, the Cabo Noval Gardens and the Lepanto Gardens.

The Central Gardens are arranged around the central monument to Philip IV, in a grid, following the barroque model garden. These are comprised of seven flowerbeds, each packed with box hedges, forms of cypress, yew and magnolia of small size, and flower plantations, temporary. These are bounded on either side by rows of statues paths, popularly known as the Gothic kings, acting as line of division of the other two quadrants.

The square houses a sculpture collection of twenty Spanish kings corresponding to five Visigoth kings and fifteen kings of the early Christians kingdoms in the Reconquista. These statues, made ​​of limestone, are distributed in two rows that cross the recint toward east-west, on both sides of the Central Gardens. Known popularly as the «Gothic kings», mark the dividing line between the main body of the plaza and the Cabo Noval Gardens at north, and the Lepanto Gardens at south. The group of statues is part of a series dedicated to all monarchs of Spain, ordered to make for the decoration of the Royal Palace of Madrid during the reign of Ferdinand VI. Were executed between 1750 and 1753.

Campo del Moro Gardens

View of the Campo del Moro, from its western side. In the background, the Royal Palace of Madrid.

These gardens are named after allegedly camped in this place the troops of the Muslim leader Ali ben Yusuf in 1109 during an attempted reconquest of Madrid. The first works to condition the area are due to Philip IV, whose reign it were built fountains and planted different kinds of vegetation, but the overall look of the place remained largely neglected. During the construction of the new palace were various landscaping projects based in the gardens of the Royal Palace of La Granja de San Ildefonso, but there was no doing anything due the lack of funds, not being until the reign of Isabel II in which started a landscaping more seriously. At this time it design a great park and Romanticist style and were installed fountains brought from the Royal Palace of Aranjuez. With the fall of Isabel II the gardens suffer a period of abandonment and neglect in which it lose a part of the design and not until the regency of Maria Christina of Austria when it began a series of rehabilitation works, giving the current design, which follows the layout of the English gardens of 19th century.

From time to time throughout his reign, for example to hold his saint day of Saint John, King Juan Carlos has held receptions and gala dinners in the gardens during the summer months.

Sabatini Gardens

Sabatini Gardens.

Located on the north side, between the Royal Palace, the calle de Bailén and the cuesta de San Vicente. Of French design, are a monumental gardens created in the 30's of 20th century. Receive the name Sabatini because in this place were the stables built by the architect for service of the Palace. These gardens are adorned with a pond around which place some of the statues of Spanish kings who were originally intended to crown the Royal Palace. Geometrically sited between its rides, there are several fountains.

The Republican government ordered the seizure of different properties of the Spanish Royal Family, including this one, giving to the City Council of Madrid to build a public park. The project was awarded to Zaragozan architect Fernando García Mercadal after he win in the held competition.

Interior

The interior that is open to visitors consists of:

  • The main staircase
  • Halberdiers Room
  • Hall of Columns
  • Throne Room
  • Saleta and antechamber of Charles III
  • Chamber and bedroom of Charles III
  • Gala Dining Room
  • Music Room
  • China collection
  • Royal Chapel
Throne room
The Royal Armoury ([La Real Armería] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)) museum
  • The imperial ballroom
  • The imperial bedchamber
  • 252 royal guest bedchambers
  • The diplomatic foreeea'
  • Two grand maid's rooms
  • The blue porcelain room
  • The green porcelain room
  • The red reception room

Today

The vast palace is richly decorated by artists such as Velázquez, Tiepolo, Mengs, Gasparini, Juan de Flandes, Caravaggio, and Goya. Several royal collections of great historical importance are kept at the palace, including the Royal Armoury and weapons dating back to the 13th century, and the world's only complete Stradivarius string quintet, as well as collections of tapestry, porcelain, furniture, and other objects of great historical importance.

Below the palace, to the west, are the gardens of the Campo del Moro that were given this name due to the fact that here in the year 1109, Muslim leader Ali ibn Yusuf, encamped with his men in the attempt to recapture Madrid and its Alcázar (fortress) from the Christians. The east façade of the palace gives onto the Plaza de Oriente and the Teatro Real opera house. To the south is a vast square, the Plaza de la Armas, surrounded by narrow wings of the palace, and to the south of that is located the Catedral de la Almudena. To the north are the Jardines de Sabatini (Sabatini Gardens), named after one of the architects of the palace.

On the Plaza de Armas facade, two life-size statues on both sides of the main entrance honor the two native Emperors from the Americas, Moctezuma, Emperor of the Aztecs, and Atahualpa, Emperor of the Incas.

The wedding banquet of Prince Felipe and Letizia Ortiz took place on 22 May 2004 at the central courtyard of the Palace.

The palace is open to the public and it is closed when used by the king for state functions like state banquets for visiting heads of state, official government receptions and the presentation of new ambassadors to the king.

40°25′5″N 3°42′50″W / 40.41806°N 3.71389°W / 40.41806; -3.71389

See also

References

  1. ^ Patrimonio Nacional «Royal Palace of Madrid».
  2. ^ Madripedia. «Palacio Real».
  3. ^ Ministry of Economy and Finance of Spain [http://serviciosweb.minhac.es/apps/museo/Pintura5/Brambila1.htm «View of part of the Royal Palace taken from la Cuesta de la Vega».