Thursday 25 September 2014

A VISIT FROM FINCA AL-MANZIL TO TRUJILLO -WALKING THROUGH THE CENTURIES


Discover the fascinating history of Trujillo through art, architecture and anecdote.

A walk through atmospheric lanes lined with secret gardens, jasmine and orange trees glimpsed over high stone walls, conquistador palacios with exquisite facades and beautiful interiors, sublime churches endowed with impressive works of art.



The walk starts in the magnificent Plaza Mayor, an almost theatrical space surrounded by a collection of interesting and sometimes outlandish buildings, each with a story in the long history of Trujillo. The many arcades around the plaza are identified by their medieval names denoting which products were sold there; Portal del pan, de la verdura, de la carne, del ajo, de los paños. We stroll around the plaza under the stern bronze gaze of Francisco Pizarro y González, 1st Marquess de los Atabillos, conquistador of Peru, perhaps Trujillo’s most notorious son. Imagine how the Incas trembled at being confronted with these huge unknown four legged animals topped with wild Spanish warriors.


This impressive equestrian statue of Pizarro is a 20th century bronze by the American sculptor Charles Rumsey, it was originally supposed to represent Cortés but was rejected with affront by the Mexican government and so it ended up in Trujillo renamed as Pizarro in 1927…….. a conquistador by any other name would be as nefarious.

Palacio Marqués de la Conquista.




One of the most bizarre palacios on the plaza is the huge and somewhat clumsy chunk of masonry known as the Palacio Marqués de la Conquista. It was constructed by order of Hernándo Pizarro in the 1560s. He was the legitimate half brother of Francisco Pizarro, the only Pizarro brother not to die a bloody death in Peru. After 20 years in jail for murder he returned to Trujillo and married his niece Francisca, Francisco Pizarro’s daughter. The building must have been an enormous undertaking at the time, a statement of power. It has five floors and is embellished with 12 statues around the roof representing the months of the year with musical instruments, a corner balcony and a massive coat of arms showing the two bears and pine tree of the Pizarro family, higher up there are several heads in chains representing the Inca slaves brought back to Spain from Peru.


There are also four quite detailed stone busts jutting out which are reputedly supposed to represent Francisco and his wife Princess Yupanqui, renamed Inés, their daughter Francisca Pizarro and her husband/uncle Hernándo.


 

Casa de Piedras Albas 



16th century palacio erected by Pedro Suárez de Toledo. It has a beautiful portico of Florentine influence due to a marriage with an Italian family. There are two towers which house the spiral stairs to upper floors one of which is decorated with the scallop shells of Santiago denoting that this building may have been used as a hospice for pilgrims at one time.
 By the way this is where we run a cooking week 3 times a year. A very special treat to be able to stay in the palacio which retains its original format preserving some wonderful architectural elements from the 16th century, the gardens and pool are also a delight. 
Best of all is the portico with it's endlessly intreresting view of the plaza. 
see www.cooking-extremadura.blogspot.com  








 Iglesia de San Martín 




XIV – XVI century has two notable statues, the Virgen de la Coronada from the 13th century and the Cristo de la salud of 14th century. There is an impressive baroque organ in the choir from 1759-1761.

Palacio de Santa Marta. A large palacio of the 16th century. The façade is built in ashlar masonry with additional sculptured stone by Francisco Becerra. After many years of neglect it has now been converted into a hotel but some aspects of the original building can still be appreciated.

Palacio de los Duques de San Carlos  (seen  above in the corner of the plaza)

 A 16th century renaissance palacio which has a magnificent baroque façade with a coat of arms including a double headed eagle, the symbol of (amongst many other things) the Habsburg dynasty who ruled Spain in the 16th century. It was the Habsburg Holy Roman Emperor Carlos V who gave permission to the owners of the palacio, the Vargas-Carvajal family, to include the eagle in their own crest of diagonal and wavy lines, the crest also includes the cross of the Dominicans, each point ending in a fleur-de-lis, a tribute to St Dominic. The building is now a convent for the Order of St Jerome nuns. It is not open to the public except during the Trujillo music festival in June, the courtyard is a spectacular area for the concerts.



Casa de la Cadena
Named after the heavy chain that is suspended over the entrance which symbolizes the right of asylum at this house which was initiated after Philip II stayed here in 1583 on his way to take possession of Portugal. His confessor Fray Diego de Chaves, a Dominican wanted the King to stay in his family house in order that the right of asylum would forever be in force, this was a privilege always given to houses where the sovereign stayed. The coat of arms with five keys and ten coins is of the Chaves-Orellana families. Unfortunately the house was given a new façade at the beginning of the 19th century replacing the original façade with galleries and gothic windows similar to the Alfilar tower behind the house

Torre del Alfiler


The tower was demolished by order of Queen Isabel in the 16th century when the Catholic monarchs decreed the destruction of most of the high towers in Extremadura as castigation for over ambitious noblemen who were causing many problems with their rivalry which took the form of the building of ever taller and taller towers. The tower has been restored several times and now appears in its original design.
It is located at the back of the 14th century Casa de las Cadenas, topped by a metal rod that resembles a large pin hence its name. The roof is in the Gothic style with a brick dome and a decoration in glazed tiles of the coat of arms of Chaves-Orellana.

La Casa del Peso Real  


The official house for controlling weights and measures in the busy medieval market town of Trujillo. It has a beautiful entrance with salomonic (barleysugar) columns and windows of gothic Isabelina design. It is typical of many houses in Trujillo, a medieval gothic origin with later architectural additions from the renaissance era.

From the plaza we make our way up to the castle entering the most ancient part of Trujillo through the Puerta de Santiago known as El Sol in Moorish times, the tower of the Iglesia de Santiago on the right is the original Moorish defensive tower for the gate.

Casa dos Pizarros

On the way up to the castle we pass the humble old family home of the Pizarro family before the changing fortunes brought by the conquistador period. It is now a small museum.



The Castillo and Moorish Alcazaba


The castle was the site of the first structures in Trujillo. Turgalium the Roman name has its roots from the primitive Celtic fort that was built on this defensive position which dominates the surrounding countryside. Different epigraphic and funerary evidence suggests Turgalium became a population of some importance. Some of the Roman tombstones were integrated into the castle built by the Moors in the XI century, we can see some displayed e.g. Castres Juliae, Norba tax Caesarina
It continued as a defensive stronghold through Visigoth, Moorish and Medieval times, each culture adding their imprint on the structure. The entrance to the Alcazaba is through a magnificent horseshoe arch typical of late Visigoth or Moorish architecture of the VIII - IX century when Trujillo was known as Turjalah. Inside the austere walls is an open space with two aljibes underground.

The Christian Knights invaded the city late in the 12th century but  in 1196 the Muslims recaptured it at the battle of Alarcos. Finally with the aid of knights from the orders of Santiago, Templar, Alcántara and Hospitalarios de San Juan and with troups of the Bishop of Plasencia Trujillo was reconquered on Jan. 25, 1232. According to local tradition, the attacking troops saw between the castle towers a vision the Virgin Mary and infant Jesus  which encouraged the Christians to overpower the Moors and the Virgin de Victoria now has a chapel within the castle.


From the battlements of the castle the views are endless, across the rock strewn plains to the distant mountains, also down into the heart of the town where we can identify the sites we will be visiting and enjoy a birds-eye view into some of those secret gardens. Of particular note are the two impressive towers of the Santa Maria church which rise up just below the castle. 


LA VILLA - THE ANCIENT CITY

The Moorish and later medieval wall encloses La Villa.
During the XIII and XIV centuries the outer defensive walls were strengthened and improved but still followed the line and encorporated the original Moorish walls. There were 17 towers arranged at irregular intervals and 7 portals of which there now remain Puerta Coria, Arco del Triunfo, Puerta San Andres and Puerta Santiago. This wall enclosed the town of Trujillo until the end of the XV century when the urban development started outside the wall with the building of many noble conquistador palaces in the Plaza Mayor and surrounding streets.

On leaving the Castle we dive into the labyrinth of small lanes and alleys each one bringing a new delight We will be visiting several palacios, churches and convents where the nuns still make and sell typical cakes, the Coria monastery, La Alberca a Moorish aljibe in constant use through the ages as the stone drinking trough for animals testifies with its worn away edge, but first we enter the gothic arch of the Santa Maria church.

The Church of Santa Maria la Mayor


Built on the site of a demolished mosque after the reconquista in 1230. The capitals are Romanesque, the three interior naves of Gothic style and the balustrade of the choir, plateresco. The Julia tower is of Romanesque origin, it fell into ruins after the Lisbon earthquake of 1755 and was only rebuilt in the 50s. The other tower is not as old and has been renovated several times, the last renovation included the belfry which is now accessible, it has spectacular views of the town and the vast countryside in all directions.
The church preserves Romanesque and Gothic elements from its first foundation in the XIII century but underwent considerable restoration in the 16th century. It has three naves in three sections and a polygonal apse, covered with cross vaults with tiercerons. The Plateresque choir is outstanding.




The most impressive element is the magnificent retablo painted by Fernando Gallego of the Flemish school in 1480. It consists of 25 wooden panels painted in glowing oil paint.
At the bottom are the Passion and Glory of the Lord, on the side panels are the Evangelists and fathers of the Church.
The centre represents the life of the Blessed Virgin Mary. A glorious work of art which has survived six centuries to delight us today with intimate details of the dress and customs of the late 15th century.





A fascinating aspect of the church are the numerous stone tombstones set into the floor, Pizarros, Cervantes, Bejaranos, Vargas and Carvajals—all of who had participated in the conquest of the New World with their coats of arms carved into the stone.






Fortified Palaces of the XIII Century

We continue our walk following the line of the wall enclosing La Villa and pass by some of the oldest structures from the reconquista.

A very important element in the architecture of Trujillo are the fortified palaces built immediately after the reconquista by the most powerful families. They were built within the Moorish defensive walls next to entrance portals, coarse and robust, made from local granite with small windows and doors. The outer walls were adorned with the coat-of-arms of the family, a show of nobility and the privilege conferred by an important lineage.

The church of Santiago

Built after the reconquista but the bell tower was created from one of the original Moorish defensive towers.  Seen above from within the walls looking down through the  Puerta de Santiago with the Palacio Luis de Chaves El Viejo on the right.

The Palacio of Luis de Chaves El Viejo 

Built during the XV century and includes the tower next to the Puerta de Santiago which was known as the Puerta del Sol in Moorish times. Isabel and Ferdinand stayed here many times including the sad occasion when they learned of the death of their only son Juan Prince of Asturias who died at 19 thus leading to the Hapsburg accession to the Spanish throne through a series of royal deaths, leaving one daughter Juana to succeed. She was later known as Juana Louca after marriage to Philip son of the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian and heir to the Hapsburg empire. It was their son Carlos I who would inherit all the glories of the Hapsburg empire and the crown of Spain which of course included all the newly conquered lands of the New World .

Following the wall we next come to

  El Alcazarejo de los Altamirano 

A fortified palace built in the 13th century by Fernán Ruíz with the entrance door added in the 16th century above which is the coat of arms of the Altamirano family. A Moorish cistern can be viewed as well as the remains of two towers demolished by order of the Reys Catholicos at the end of the XVth century.

A little way along the wall is the Puerta de San Andres which is defended by the fortified palace of the Escobar family





This sadly decaying palacio dates from the late XVth century. It was the home of Maria de Escobar the woman renowned for bringing the first wheat seeds to the new world. She became the wife of Diego de Chaves one of Pizarro’s officers who had the courage to protest against the execution of Atahualpa in 1533. Maria followed her husband to Peru, shared the fatigues and dangers of the Spaniards, and introduced the cultivation of wheat and barley. The first experiment was tried on a small scale near Cuzco with a few grains brought by her from Spain, within a few years there was sufficient grain to furnish seed for all the colonists of the different provinces. Maria taught the Indians personally how to cultivate the grain, and after the death of her husband in Lima about 1540, Pizarro granted her a fine piece of land near Lima together with the Indians upon it. The grateful colonists resolved to clear the land and cultivate it for her for ten years, but it seems that they soon forgot their promise, Maria is said to have died very poor in Cuzco in about 1560. If you look closely at the facade there are small coats of arms with wheat sheaves which must have been added by later generations of Escobars to commemorate Maria's enterprise.

Next we come to the Alcazar de Bejarano, a XIII century fortified house guarding the portal known as the Arc de Triomphe , it was the gate which was breached by the Christian forces in 1232 which led to the final reconquest of Trujillo from Moorish rule.



Only two towers are preserved, by their lack of uniformity and the distance between them, it is thought that they might have belonged to two different buildings. The brickwork of the windows has a Moorish influence .The arms of Bejarano above the entrance door has an inscription alluding to the Reys Catholicos.
As we make our way around the walls there are many sites of interest on the way such as
La Alberca, the originally Roman bath converted into one of many aljibes constructed  by the Moors in Trujillo



 Convento de Coria


A noble family, the Loaisas, constructed the Convento de la Coria in the 15th century.
Over the next three centuries, the Loaisas collaborated with other aristocratic families of Trujillo to commission enlargements to the convent. The convent initially housed an order of local Franciscan nuns, but during times of war, the wives and daughters of Trujillo’s soldiers sought refuge here, thus giving birth to the site’s alternative name, the Convent of the Noble Ladies.
The convent had strong associations with Spanish involvement in the Americas: Francisco Pizarro,  illegitimate, was born in the Coria.
The Convento de la Coria, once an epicentre of community life and symbol of Spanish New World exploration, was largely destroyed when Trujillo was ransacked by French troops retreating after the Peninsular War (1808–1814).  Because of Trujillo’s isolation, the ruins were left to lie until the 1980s when the renovation of the convent took place.Unfortunately the result is rather souless and the permanent exhibition dedicated to the conquest of the new world is lacking in imagination and content.The most atmospheric area is the chapel left in ruins, wreathed in ivy and the entrance flanked by roman columns.

On our way back to the Plaza we pass through more enchanting streets with many conquistador palacios built in the XVIth century. Casa de Francisco de Orellana, Casa de Los Chaves Caldero, Casa de los Rol- Zarate y Zuñiga 
Palacio de Juan Pizarro Orellana, now a convent, it is possible to visit the patio accompanied by a nun.

 Palacio Chaves Mendoza which became a hospice and is now privately owned.

Finally we go through the Cañon de la Carcel the original entrance to the prison and back into the plaza through the arch of the .Ayuntamiento Viejo,  the old town hall. It is beautiful building with thee arched porticos. There is a sala with frescoes depicting the judgement of King Solomon. At one time it was also the Royal Prison, nowadays the justice courts.





Nature in Trujillo

Besides the wonderfully varied architecture and beautiful views we cannot fail to notice the varied birdlife of Trujillo. The emblemic bill-clattering White Storks build their untidy nests around the Plaza Mayor on the towers of Iglesia de San Martín, the Palacio de la Conquista and the Torre del Alfiler tower. The elegant Lesser Kestrel performs a unique and colourful display on roof tops and chimneys every spring, their characteristic stunts in the air are accompanied by a piercing and noisy call. House Swifts also fill the air, alone or in flocks, they fly close to roof tops, screaming their shrill call before hiding in craggy masonry. Up in the castle are the large groups of Jackdaws perching on the castle battlements and wheeling around the towers.












Friday 29 August 2014

GRANADILLA - A TRAGEDY WITH A HAPPY ENDING




The remote village of Granadilla, north west of Plasencia has a unique format made by the 9th century Moorish walls which completely surround the 250 dwellings in a circular form. The streets of the village radiate from a central plaza. It was a stopping place on the Via de la Plata with mule trains and carts crossing the River Alagón on the ancient bridge.



The Christian reconquest reclaimed this part of Extremadura in the middle of the 13th century and in 1473 the Duques de Alba built the substantial fortified tower which forms part of the walls next to the main portal. For centuries the remote village survived within the walls, unusually never extending beyond except for some scattered barns. The villagers supported themselves by working their extensive lands down in the valley of the Alagón river, olives, crops and lifestock, fish from the river and hunting the prolific game in the surrounding forests, within the walls were lush vegetable gardens and fruit orchards. By the beginning of the 20th century there was an infant school, a visiting doctor and the post arrived at the river crossing bridge, a bar-café was established in the plaza, the church remained the social centre with many religious fiestas throughout the year. As in many Extremeno villages modernity never arrived, no electricity, piped water, sewage disposal but life went on until a fateful day in 1955 when the village was doomed to extinction.

The Franco government initiated plans for creating a huge reservoir in the fertile Alagón river valley below the village. The land, 4683 hectares, was forcibly expropriated by the government, it was the livlihood of the village, without the land it was difficult for the villagers to survive and most of them had to move away. The work on the dam started and was completed in 1961, the future embalse was named Gabriele y Galán after the poet. The valley was slowly inundated covering the old cementary and also the bridge over the Alagón river, the only access to the village.


In 1965 the houses of the village were also expropriated, the engineers in charge of the project calculated that the village was in danger of being drowned by the rising waters of the lake. This seems odd as the village sits on a high bluff and it would be impossible for the lake waters to rise to this height, in fact there has never been even a remote threat, the waters of the reservoir have remained far below the village. The government had agreed to compensate each owner by paying the value of their property only, not any compensation for the destruction of their whole lives. Unbelievably these payments were not made until 1972 , very late and very badly. However, because of this bizarre enforced abandonment, the village avoided any future encroachments of the modern world and was preserved as it was in the 1950s, a sad relic, a folorn ghostly place slowly decaying as the villagers departed, sadly deprived of their homes and the fertile valley where they had cultivated the land for centuries.


In 1980 after 15 years of total abandonment the village was declared as a Conjunto Historico- Artistico, rather late in the day and somewhat cynically, what a pity this hadn’t happened to benefit the needlessly exiled villagers.



In 1985 Grandilla was chosen by the Ministeries of Public Works, Agricultura and Education to be adopted by the association, Programa de Recuperación y Utilización Educativa de Pueblos Abandonados (PRUEPA)

http://www.magrama.gob.es/es/ceneam/programas-de-educacion-ambiental/pueblos-abandonados/

The programme is for the benefit of young students from all over Spain. They stay for a week or two to learn about country life and skills, also helping with the recuperation of the buildings, vegetable gardens, orchards, animal husbandry including chickens, goats, cows and horses.I was amused by a group of girls being directed by one of the "monitores", they were in a meadow with very elaborate chicken coops, the chickens had been free ranging in a large area with bushes and trees but it was time to get them back in the coops, the girls were sent to the boundaries of the meadow and started to clap and scrabble in the undergrowth to flush out the chickens, they slowly advanced clapping away, it was all so jolly and they were having fun, good to see kids not umbilically attached to their mobiles. There were bread making and various country skill workshops going on in one of the renovated buildings, the kids looked happy and relaxed and why not? A great experience for them.






The programme started in Granadilla in 1990 and since then much good work has been done especially with the beautifully tended gardens, many of the houses have been renovated and put to use as accommodation and social areas for the on- going student incentive.












Many of the original owners of the houses have now died or heirs have disappeared, since the village was not drowned and has survived it seems unfair that the ex-villagers and their heirs should not have some priviledges, in fact they are allowed to celebrate some religious fiestas and I beleive there is still a group of original owners who are allowed to live in the village at some times of the year but to come back and live there on a permanent basis would be problematic. There are strict rules about the running of the village, admirable for the visitor but difficult for everyday living e.g. no cars are allowed to enter the only gate in the surrounding walls but must park outside the walls, the agriculture is strictly ecological, there are limited times for visiting, a bell is tolled to indicate when the gate will be locked, there is not a single social meeting point, shop, bar or café. Granadilla is an enchanting sanctuary of peace and beautifully organized agriculture but it is not a living village anymore.






We enjoyed the visit, an interesting and poignant experience, maybe there are a few ghosts wandering around the cobbled streets with now renovated houses painted in vivid colours as was traditional for this area.





We particularly enjoyed the walk encircling the village on the Moorish wall, looking down into the carefully tended gardens and animal pens, vistas of the lake and mountains, the vast water area the very reason for the sad recent history but now certainly giving the village a spectacular location on its peninsular surrounded by an endless forest of pine woods replanted to replace the disastrous Eucalyptus plantations of Franco’s era. The castle tower has a viewing platform with even more panoramic views towards Los Gredos and the Sierra de Francia.






Outside the stunning circular wall there are endless walks around the lake or into the pine forest, we ate our picnic in the cool shade near the water, tranquility for reflecting on the fate of Granadilla and it’s present day destiny.







Don't forget the opening times!












Wednesday 20 August 2014

SPECTACULARLY SPECKLED AND TOTALLY DELICIOUS

These lovely little quail eggs come from our local organic garden run by Jantien Henriet. She delivers to the finca and to clients staying in our other houses. What a treat, every Thursday we get a fresh supply of vegetables havested that morning as well as herbs, jams and preserves, hens eggs and now these little beauties. I am inventing new recipes to make the best of them but in fact I just love looking at the incredible speckle patterns, each egg a little miracle.
See this link for more information about Jantien and her project;






Monday 11 August 2014

GOOD MORNING! SLEEPING UNDER THE STARS AND WAKING UP WITH SUN COMING OVER THE MOUNTAIN

The new outside bed for the upstairs roof terrace at the Cortijo.............very romantic sleeping under the canopy, it's a normal double bed size for comfy sleeping and great for lounging during the day with plenty of shade, each side of the bed  adjusts in several positions for reading or sunbathing when the canopy is rolled up. The view of mountain peaks is stunning, a perfect place to observe the birds circling the peaks and closer in the trees.




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