Monasterio de las Descalzas Reales

Photos: Monasterios Reales de Madrid – Las Descalzas y La Encarnación, Connaissances des Arts

Text: wikipedia.com

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The Monasterio de las Descalzas Reales resides in the former palace of Emperor Charles V and Empress Isabel of Portugal. Their daughter, Joanna of Austria, founded this convent of nuns of the Poor Clare order in 1559. Throughout the remainder of the 16th century and into the 17th century, the convent attracted young widowed or spinster noblewomen. Each woman brought with her a dowry. The riches quickly piled up, and the convent became one of the richest convents in all of Europe. Tomás Luis de Victoria, Spain’s finest Renaissance composer, worked at the convent from 1587 to the end of his life in 1611.

The demographics of the convent slowly changed over time, and by the 20th century, all of the sisters were in poverty. The convent maintained the riches of its past, but it was forbidden to auction any of the items off or spend any of the money it received from the dowries. The state intervened when it saw that the sisters were poor, and the pope granted a special dispensation to open the convent as a museum in 1960.

Main staircase.
Main staircase.
Main staircase.
Main staircase ceiling.
Entrance hall.
Funerary monument in honor
to Juana de Austria, in the church of the
Descalzas Reales. The figure of the founder
of the monastery, made of white marble
white by Pompeo Leoni
Eι archangel Raphael by Bartolomé
Roman in the first third of the sixteenth century, in entrance hall.
The triumph of the Eucharist over ignorance and blindness, in the Tapestries Chamber.
Isabel de Austria, Queen of France, by Moorish van der Straeten, known as Jorge de la Rúa (1573).
Don Juan de Austria by Alonso Sánchez Coello (1567).
The triumph of the Eucharist over ignorance and blindness, in the Tapestries Chamber.
Antechoir.
There are fifteen chappells on the high cloister. One of them houses the Christ lying down, sculpture by Gaspar Becerra.
High choir.
Main staircase.
High cloister.
Chappell of Our Lady of Guadalupe.
Our Lady of Helpless in the antechoir.
High cloister.
The triumph of the Eucharist over ignorance and blindness, in the Tapestries Chamber.
Calvary in the Tapestries Chamber.

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