Palacio de Campo Real

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Built1545-1785
ArchitectJosé Vargas y Sánchez
Architectural style(s)Renaissance - Neoclassical
Palacio de Campo Real
LocationJerez de la Frontera, Province of Cádiz, Andalusia, Spain
Built1545-1785
ArchitectJosé Vargas y Sánchez
Architectural style(s)Renaissance - Neoclassical
TypeNon-movable
CriteriaMonument

Palacio de Campo Real is a palace in Jerez de la Frontera, in the Province of Cádiz, in southern Spain. It was built in 1545. It has been declared a Bien de Interés Cultural site.[citation needed]

According to tradition, when the city was conquered by Alfonso X the Wise, he granted the site of the current palace to a noble knight of the city who had helped him in the conquest. The noble families gradually intermixed with other noble families in the city, like the Benavente and Cabeza de Vaca families in the 16th century.

The origin of the building, according to the headstone on display in the doorway of the residence, dates from 1545, built by Pedro Benavente Cabeza de Vaca and Carvajal on the remains of an Islamic building.[1]

The heirs of the property were the Marqueses de Campo Real.

Description

The current façade is of mixed Renaissance and Neoclassical style and was built in 1785 by José Vargas y Sánchez. It consists of two floors. The main door is flanked by two Ionic columns and above it, a balcony framed by an arch.

The patio is rectangular with four sides and is decorated with plant and heraldic motifs. One of the medallions represents the marriage of Pedro Banavente and Beatriz Bernalte.

Currently

References

See also

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