Castle of the Calatravos explained

Castle of the Calatravos
Native Name:Castillo de los Calatravos
Native Name Lang:es
Hotel Chain:Paradores
Alternate Names:Parador de Alcañiz
Mapframe-Zoom:15
Location City:Alcañiz (Teruel)
Location Country:Spain
Status:Active
Building Type:Castle
Embedded:
Embed:yes
Designation1:Spain
Designation1 Offname:Castillo Interior o Alcázar
Designation1 Type:Non-movable
Designation1 Criteria:Monument
Designation1 Date:25 June 1925
Designation1 Number:RI-51-0000312

The Castle of the Calatravos is a castle in Alcañiz (Teruel), Spain, that belonged to the Order of Calatrava. This military order played an important role in the reconquest of the town in 1157; the oldest rooms in the building date back to the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. During the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, elements of Mudéjar ornamentation were added both to the castle itself and to the walls that surrounded it. The late-Renaissance main façade was added in the eighteenth century. Since 1968 it houses a Parador hotel designed by the Spanish architect José Luis Picardo.[1]

External links

41.0484°N -0.1327°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Castillo de los calatravos - parador nacional. Ayuntamiento de Alcañiz. es. 2022-09-24.