Pla de Mallorca Golden Lands
Transcription
Pla de Mallorca Golden Lands
Pla de Mallorca Golden Lands Index 5 7 9 15 The Pla Area’s Municipalities 17 Historical-Cultural Introduction Presentation Introduction Maria de la Salut Montuïri 21 The Zone’s Features 35 45 69 87 95 107 Algaida Ariany Costitx Lloret de Vistalegre 45 Cultural Routes 59 Bicycle Tourist Routes Markets, Fairs, and Holidays Accommodation Porreres Sant Joan Santa Eugènia Sencelles Sineu Vilafranca de Bonany Bibliography 173 185 201 213 237 259 276 Routes 65 Gastronomic Routes Pla de Mallorca 3 Índex How to arrive... 25 Llubí 119 131 143 Petra 157 >> >> Pla de Mallorca_How to arrive... How to arrive… Pla de Mallorca Palma Pla de Mallorca >> > By Car Palma – Algaida, Motorway: Ma-15 / Palma – Sineu, MA-3011. > By Train Intermodal Station of Palma. Train: Palma – Inca / Sa Pobla (Llubí) / Manacor. Plaça d’Espanya, s/n. Palma. Balearic Islands Transport Authority (TIB) Information: 971 177 777. http://tib.caib.es > By Bus Lines 300 and 400. Balearic Islands Transport Authority (TIB) Information: http://tib.caib.es 5 The Pla District occupies the central region of Mallorca, in the geological depression located between the mountain ranges of Serra de Tramuntana and the Serres de Llevant, which comprises the municipalities of: Algaida, Ariany, Costitx, Lloret de Vistalegre, Llubí, Maria de la Salut, Montuïri, Petra, Porreres, Santa Eugènia, Sant Joan, Sencelles, Sineu, and Vilafranca de Bonany: Pla de Mallorca >> Introduction Location... >> Pla de Mallorca_Presentation Pla de Mallorca_Presentation >> Sineu Market Art, culture, tradition and nature Dear Travellers, in this travel guide, you will find all sorts of information about the towns and lands that comprise Pla de Mallorca: Its information includes the historical origins of the Pla de Mallorca and each of the towns that comprise it as well as different routes which will allow you to personally experience the essence of the district’s rich natural and cultural heritage Likewise, we offer you a wide range of >> Giants Festival Restaurant and Hotel/Accommodation services to assure that your visit to these towns will be unforgettable. We are sure that you will fall in love with the culture and the traditions of this island’s interior region; hence we warmly welcome you to discover the other Mallorca. 7 Presentation Presentation Pla de Mallorca >> Introduction Pla de Mallorca_Introduction 9 Introduction to the Pla de Mallorca Municipal Association The Pla de Mallorca Municipal Association (Mancomunitat Pla de Mallorca) was founded as a public organization in 1982 with the aim to coordinate the treatment of solid wastes from all the district’s municipalities. As time passed, the entity has evolved and expanded its objectives with the aim to facilitate the Town Halls’ management in specific areas and improve the quality of life for the district’s inhabitants. The data for the Municipal Association Information Office is shown below: C/ L’Hospital, 28 – 07520 Petra Tel. 971 830441 / Fax 971 830440 Timetable: Monday to Friday from 08:00 to 15:00. Pla de Mallorca >> >> del of PlaPla dede Mallorca desde Cocó desdes Corb >> Vista Scenicgeneral Overview Mallorca fromelthe Cocó Corb >> Pla de Mallorca_The Pla Area’s Municipalities Pla de Mallorca_Introduction The geomorphology models a landscape, which although it is the name of the district, it is not exactly a plain. On the other hand, we highlight the existence of different mountainous hills that offer spectacular panoramic views of the district such as the Randa Hill (Puig de Randa). In addition, several of them are protected by the Law of Natural and Special Interest Areas, such as the Bonany Hill (Puig de Bonany). >> Sencelles Landscape The other common factor is their dedication to agriculture. In the Pla region, the dominant crops are cereals, non-citric fruit trees, and forage. Although agriculture has suffered a major decline, we can discover a remarkable amount of architectural ruins in the Pla de Mallorca lands which reflects its major importance throughout its history. The maximum exponent and unmistakeable symbol of this agricultural exploitation are the “possessions” (possessions or country estates), the farmhouses where all the tasks related to agriculture and cattle raising were carried out. Although at present, very few possessions maintain the active exploitation of their resources, these elegant Estate houses are the jewels of rural Mallorca that should be conserved. We can highlight, among many others, Albenya (Algaida), Defla (Sineu), Sant Martí d’Alanzell (Vilafranca de Bonany), Sa Bastida (Sant Joan), Son Joan Arnau (Lloret de Vistalegre), or Tagamanent (Montuïri). Furthermore, in the Pla district villages, we can find many other buildings related to agricultural operations and its main economic activity until just recently: Flour mills, wells, waterwheels, rainwater cisterns, etc. In reference to the architecture of the Pla Municipalities, we highlight the importance of the Parish Churches. In addition to being one of the main elements that influenced the popular traditions and the sociocultural life style of the Pla villages (many of the holiday festivities have a religious origin), the Church has also been a determining factor in the architectural evolution of these towns. The Parish Church constitutes the most important building in each of the Municipalities due to its historical and artistic value, and in some cases, such as the Churches of Sineu, Petra, or Porreres, they are noted for their antiquity. The majority of the small city centres of the Pla de Mallorca grew under the shadow these buildings. Besides the Churches, there are many other buildings that permanently remind us of the major importance that religion and worship have had: Municipal border crosses, rectories, convents/monasteries, sanctuaries, and chapels/ hermitages, etc. 15 The Pla de Mallorca zone is comprised by fourteen municipalities (Algaida, Ariany, Costitx, Lloret de Vistalegre, Llubí, Maria de la Salut, Montuïri, Petra, Porreres, Santa Eugènia, Sant Joan, Sencelles, Sineu and Vilafranca de Bonany) which are primarily drawn together and united by two strongly defined common factors: The geomorphology and agriculture. Introduction The Pla Area’s Municipalities Pla de Mallorca >> Pla de Mallorca_Introduction >> Pla de Mallorca_Historical-Cultural Introduction >> Son Fornés Talayotic Village >> Son Corró Talayotic Sanctuary >> Interior of Cova des Corb The Muslim territorial organization separated the city (only one in the entire island, Madina Mayurqa) and the rural zone. The rural area was grouped and there were five major population centres classified as urban centres (the only one of these cities which is located inside the current Pla de Mallorca is Yiynau, currently Sineu). The rest of the rural zone had a scattered population which inhabited the exploitation centres, which means, the farmhouses and the country estates. The territory was divided into thirteen districts or “juz” and the current Pla District partially participated in the old districts of Murûh (Maria and Llubí) Canarrossa (Santa Eugènia, Sencelles, and Costitx) and Muntuy (Montuïri and Algaida), as well as Yiynau-Bitra (Sineu-Petra), which is completely integrated within the Pla district. As a result of the Catalonian conquest in 1229, the Christian rulers conserved the city-rural duality in the territorial organization of Mallorca, but they eliminated its division into districts. Initially, the Christian rural zone was organized around the small churches which were built from the outset of the Conquest. Four of these Churches were built in Pla de Mallorca: Santa Maria of Sineu, Sant Pere of Petra, Santa Maria i Sant Pere of Montuïri, and Sant Pere of Sencelles. In 1300, King Jaume II enacted the “Ordenacions” (Ordinances for the civil organization of the territory) and this gave rise to the founding of eleven new cities. Consequently, the villages of Sineu, Petra, and Porreres were added to the pre-existing villages of Petra, Sant Joan, Porreres, and Algaida. 17 The presence of settlers since 2000 B.C. means that the Pla area has numerous Archaeological sites from different time periods. The Talayots are the main source of material evidence. In the zone, we highlight the Talayot village of Son Fornés in Montuïri, and the Sanctuary of Son Corró de Costitx (where bronze bull heads have been found). Introduction Historical-Cultural Introduction Pla de Mallorca >> >> Jaume II, King of Mallorca >> Pla de Mallorca_Historical-Cultural Introduction This duality was institutionally reflected; consequently the “Consell de la Part Forana” (Village Affairs Council) assembled in the Inca Parish Church and the Sineu Palace every other year. This balance was respected at the time of electing the maximum representation of the zone which were ruled by the two so-called Síndics Clavaris– one for the Mountain and one for the Plain. Based on the tax collection registers, this division lasted well into the 19th Century. The Sindicat could impose fees for their own maintenance and also collected the Kingdom’s tax revenues in the rural zone and for the services that they provided to the Crown. Even in those times, it was possible to note two socioeconomic realities. On the one hand, the mountain The Revolta dels Forans (1450-1453) and the Germania Revolt (1521-1523) were both struggles caused by the same problems; they separated rural Mallorca from the development that took place in the modern and contemporary periods. Following this phenomenon, the majority of the peasant land-owner’s property passed into the hands of the citizens. In the 17th and 18th Centuries, the villages of the Pla district, the same as the peasant community were threatened by a crisis of subsistence, with poor harvests, increased mortality rates, and “bandolerisme„ (highway bandits) which arose due to the social discontent. The Sindicat de Fora ended up as a simple tax collection agency maintained by the Bourbon Monarchy even after the elimination of the Kingdom’s traditional institutions. In the 19th Century and the first half of the 20th Century, the Pla Municipalities continued to supply the essential agricultural products. Solely, the village of Porreres and its municipality were the exception. With an abundance that was already amazing in the 18th Century due to the linen fields that they maintained in production, the population of Porreres was almost equivalent to Sineu. However, in the second half of the 18th Century and in the 19th Century, Porreres participated in the introduction of viticulture and wine/liquor manufacture and it became the most populated city in the Pla district at the end of the 19th Century. In the 20th Century, tourism, the leisure industry, and the activities directly related to them became the main basis of the island economy with major benefits for the coastal zones, which consequently left the traditional production system of the interior villages obsolete and impoverished. At present and in recent years, interior tourism has led to the rebirth of Mallorca’s rural zones. In this sense, the Pla has benefited from its practically untouched landscape, its traditions, and the last images of peasant life which can still be found in its lands, which have consequently become a major tourist attraction. Introduction The district’s division in the Christian age probably dates back to the period of Pere IV, a time of maturity for the supramunicipal organization of the Mallorcan rural area with the Sindicat de Fora (Village Representative Body) . Besides the city, the villages were grouped into two large areas: el Pla (the Plains) and la Muntanya (Mountains). Consequently, the Pla comprised the municipal boundaries of Sineu (with Lloret), Algaida, Porreres, Montuïri, Sant Joan, Petra (with Vilafranca and Ariany), Muro (with Llubí), Santa Margalida (with Maria de la Salut), Artà (with Capdepera and Son Servera), Manacor (with Sant Llorenç des Cardassar), Felanitx, Santanyí (with Ses Salines), Campos, and Llucmajor. Within the generalized poverty, the Pla district played a key role as supplier of primary staple products. Thus, lands such as Petra, Sineu, Sant Joan, or Montuïri became the largest wheat production zone, complemented by vineyards, fig trees, as well as pig and sheep ranching. 19 and its surrounding area specialized in an economy based on olive oil production, organized around the trading centre of Inca which opened its market every Thursday, and on the other hand, it had a cereal-based economy, predominantly in Pla with its trading centre in Sineu which celebrated their market every Wednesday. Pla de Mallorca For his part, King Sanç of Mallorca promoted the autonomous rural organization as opposed to the city, granting the villages a one-third representation in the Kingdom’s Assembly of Mallorca, also called the Great or General Council. >> Pla de Mallorca_The Zone’s Features Geography The Pla District includes the municipalities of the central depression of Mallorca and occupies approximately 600 km2, 21.56% of the island’s surface area. The most central section has a significant geological complexity with overlapping folds of soil with different ages and lithology, mountains and valleys. The majority of the zone’s land oscillates between heights from 50 to 150 metres, while the Mountain heights usually do not exceed 300 metres. The highest peak in the district is the Randa Hill (Puig de Randa), which has a height of 548 metres. In reference to the Pla Hydrology, the district is crossed by diverse streams and tributaries which flow towards the Bay of Alcúdia (the streams of Son Bauló, Son Real, and na Borges), towards the Albufera (fresh water lake) of Alcúdia (the streams of Muro and Sant Miquel), towards the Bay of Palma (by means of the riverbed system of Punxuat – Canyon (barranc) of Sa Talaia, the Canyon of Son Gual and others), or from the Campos depression (a series of waterways that flow into the Son Barbut stream, a tributary of the Son Xorc stream). There are also two major subterranean aquifers: The one in the Sa Pobla – Muro plain (which extends in the district of Raiguer and the Western part of Pla de Mallorca), and the one in Sa Marineta (in the Southeastern part of the Bay of Alcúdia, which has now become difficult for human usage since it is easily salinated). Climate It has a typical Mediterranean climate, with a hot dry period during the Summer and cold wet Winters. The rainfall primarily appears in Autumn, the same as in the rest of Mallorca. Nevertheless, Pla has several specific characteristics: The thermal oscillation is Introduction The Zone’s Features 21 Pla de Mallorca_Introduction Pla de Mallorca >> >> Pla de Mallorca_The Zone’s Features Flora The effects of the Summer drought in the Pla lands make it extremely difficult for plants with tender leaves to survive. The typical plant communities of the zone which comprise its natural landscape are the holm-oak, the kermes oak, or the wild olive trees. We highlight several zones where the Pla’s natural vegetation can be found: The mountains of Randa, Son Seguí, Bonany, Sant Miquel, and Sant Nofre, as well as the Comuna of Lloret or the na Borges zone. All these areas have a major natural beauty and are currently protected by the Law of Natural Spaces which has classified them as Natural Areas of Special Interest (ANEI). Population Although it is true that the Pla District is one of Mallorca’s least populated zones, the demographic data shows that it has experienced a small population growth in recent years. Based on the data collected by the Statistics Institute of the Balearic Islands, the population of the Pla de Mallorca has grown from approximately 28,000 inhabitants in 1996 to around 32,600 inhabitants which were officially recorded in 2005. To a certain degree, the population has increased due to the arrival of people from other Autonomous Communities of Spain and even from other countries. In addition, the demographic figures have risen due to the trend, especially in recent years, to flee from the cities in search of peace and quiet and a better quality of life. Introduction considerable since the interior layout of the district diminishes the moderating effects of the sea, hence fogs are common and intense precipitation can take place (as in other points of the island) which can exceed 200 mm in a few hours. 23 Pla de Mallorca_Introduction Pla de Mallorca >> Pla de Mallorca Markets, Fairs and Holidays Weekly Markets One of the most outstanding socioeconomic features is the weekly markets which are held in the towns that comprise the Pla de Mallorca. Among them, the most relevant is undoubtedly the Sineu Market which is celebrated every Wednesday in the Plaça d’es Fossar and >> Sineu Market Markets, Fairs and Holidays Pla de Mallorca_Markets, Fairs and Holidays 25 >> the town’s major streets. It is Mallorca’s only live animal market. It has a very ancient origin; records show it dates back to the year 1252, and it enjoyed the privilege of a Royal Market (Mercadal) issued by King Jaume II in 1306. >> Pla de Mallorca_Markets, Fairs and Holidays Tuesday: · Llubí (in the Plaça de la Carretera) · Pina (in sa Plaça) · Porreres (in the Plaça de la Vila) Wednesday: · Petra (location: carrer Ample) · Sencelles (in the Plaça Nova) · Sineu (in the Plaça des Fossar) · Vilafranca de Bonany (in the Plaça Major, on Wednesdays, except for holidays).) Thursday: >> Santa Eugènia Fair · Ariany (in sa Plaça) · Sant Joan (location: carrer des Mestre Mas) Friday: · Algaida (in the Plaça d’Algaida) · Maria de la Salut (in the Plaça des Pou) Saturday: · Costitx (in the Plaça de la Mare de Déu) · Santa Eugènia (location: carrer Escoles) Fairs and Holidays There are numerous fairs and local holidays which take place in the Pla de Mallorca Municipalities throughout the entire year. We highlight the Patron Saint Holidays of Saint Bartomeu in Montuïri (24th of August) and Saint Honorat (16th of January), the Patron Saint of Algaida. The most renowned tourist attraction of both festivities is the cossiers which forms part of an ancient tradition that dates back to the 14th Century in Mallorca. The dancers are three pairs of men and a lady, all dressed in white. The traditional cossiers costumes feature dangling images of saints, wide skirt, and sashes. They carry silk handkerchiefs and branches of basil in their hands. Correspondingly, the lady carries small bells in her hands. They are accompanied by musicians that play the flageolet (flabiol) and small drum (tamborí). On the other hand, the Demon provides a delightfully festive and humorous element, especially for children. The Melon Festival has been celebrated in Vilafranca de Bonany on the first Saturday of September since 1994. The purpose of this fair is to promote the local products made in the Municipality, such as handicrafts and the products made with melons. In recent years, it also celebrates the largest melon competition. Since 2000, the Sunday before the traditional Saint Catalina Fair (on the 25th of November, if it falls on Tuesday or the following Tuesday), the Honey Fair of Llubí is celebrated. It serves as a marketplace and showcase for all the products and equipment related to apiculture. This Honey Fair of Llubí attracts the participation of the majority of beekeepers from Mallorca, Menorca and the Pitiusas. It includes delicious foods, information stands, and/or the sale of products related to the honey-bee sector. >> Calendar of Fairs and Holidays: January: · 16/01 Saint Honorat: Algaida · 17/01 Saint Antoni: Ariany, Lloret, Llubí, Maria, Montuïri, Petra, Pina, Porreres, Sant Joan, Santa Eugènia, Sencelles, Sineu and Vilafranca · Saturday after Saint Antoni, Blessing of the Animals: Biniali, Porreres and Sencelles · 20/01 Saint Sebastià: Costitx Markets, Fairs and Holidays · Lloret de Vistalegre (in the Plaça de l’Església) · Montuïri (in the Plaça Major) 27 >> Dried Tomatoes Monday: Pla de Mallorca >> Weekly Markets in the Pla de Mallorca district: >> Cossiers Dance · 11/02 La Mare de Déu de Lourdes (Our Lady of Lourdes): Santa Eugènia · 27/02 Sor Francinaina Cirer: Sencelles · Holy Week, Processions: Sineu · Holy Friday, descent to Consolació Sanctuary: Sant Joan · Easter Sunday, Procesión de l’Encontre (Procession): Maria, Montuïri and Santa Eugènia · 3rd Easter Holiday (Tuesday), Carnival: · Carnival Saturday Sa Rua: Algaida, Lloret, Porreres, Sant Joan, Santa Eugènia, Sencelles and Villafranca - Visit to the Pau de Castellitx Chapel: Algaida · Festa des Siurell (Holiday): Llubí · Carnival Sunday, Sa Rua: Vilafranca - Visit to the Chapel Ermita de la Verge Poderosa: Sineu · Tuesday after Carnival, Burial of the Sardine: Vilafranca · Cataracta – Mundi: Porreres - Pancaridad in the Caseta de ses Monges: Sencelles March: · One Sunday in Spring Nature Holiday: Lloret · 4th Sunday of Lent, Festa des Pa i es Peix (Bread and Fish Holiday): Sant Joan - Pancaridad in the Chapel of Son Seguí: Santa Eugènia · Mascarada del Jai Carnal (Masquerade) and la Jaia Quaresma (Lent): Porreres · Fair: Porreres - Visit to the Chapel of Saint Miquel: Montuïri - Visit to Bonany: Ariany, Maria de la Salud, Manacor, Petra ,Sant Joan and Vilafranca - Festa de l’Ermita (Chapel Holiday): Llubí · Sunday after Easter, Visit to the Chapel of Monti-sion: Porreres 29 February: · 05/02 Saint Àgueda: Sencelles Easter: Pla de Mallorca >> Calendar of Fairs and Holidays: Markets, Fairs and Holidays >> Pla de Mallorca_Markets, Fairs and Holidays >> Calendar of Fairs and Holidays: >> Lorem ipsum July: · 1st Weekend: Pina’s Festes d’Estiu (Summer Holidays): Pina · 10/07 Saint Cristòfol: Biniali and Sant Joan April: · 3rd Sunday, Agriculture and Cattle Trade Fair: Santa Eugènia · 25/04 Saint Marc: Sineu · 16/07 La Verge del Carme (Our Lady of Carmen): Ruberts-Sencelles · Last sunday paellas in Es Fossar: Sineu · 21/07 Saint Pràxedes: Petra May: · 01/05 Fair of Costitx: Costitx · 25/07 Saint Jaume: Algaida · 03/05 Blessing of Fruits in Cura: Algaida · 1st Sunday, Fira de Maig (May Fair): Sineu · Last Sunday, Festa de la Independència Municipal (Municipal Independence Holiday): Ariany · 2nd Sunday, Religious Pilgrimage: Romería de Sa Casa Blanca: Sencelles · Late July or Early August: - La Beata: Vilafranca · 2nd Sunday, Fair: Lloret August: · 01/08 Saint Feliu: Llubí · 3rd Sunday, Fair: Sencelles · Musical May: Petra · 02/08 Virgin Mary Holiday: Festa de la Mare de Déu dels Àngels (Festa des Convent): Petra June: · Tast de la Confitura (Jam Tasting) Porreres · 1st Sunday, Festas Patronals (Patron Saint Holidays): Santa Eugènia · 24/06 Saint Joan, es Sol que Balla (Summer Solstice: Night of St. John): Saint Joan Sant Joan: Porreres · 08/08 Saint Domingo: Lloret · 08/08 Traditional Peasant-Farmer Trades Fair: Maria de la Salut Markets, Fairs and Holidays >> Pla de Mallorca_Markets, Fairs and Holidays 31 Pla de Mallorca_Markets, Fairs and Holidays Pla de Mallorca >> · 3rd Sunday, Visit to Son Serra in carriage: Petra · 15/08 La Mare de Déu d’Agost (The Virgin Mary of August Holiday): Sencelles and Sineu · 16/08 Saint Roc: Porreres · 22/08 Pla de Mallorca Products Trade Fair: Maria de la Salut · 24/08 Saint Bartomeu: Jornets-Sencelles and Montuïri · 29/08 Sant Joan Degollat: Sant Joan · Last Sunday of August: Randa · Mare de Déu d’Atotxa (Our Lady of Atocha): Ariany September:· First Weekend, Melon Festival: Vilafranca · First Saturday, Festa des Sequer (Sequer Holiday): Lloret · 08/09 La Mare de Déu (Virgin Mary Holiday): Costitx and Maria · 3rd Weekend, Homage to Father Serra and fair: Petra · 27/09 Saint Cosme and Saint Damià: Pina · 4th Saturday, Culture and Sports Festival: Santa Eugènia · 1st Sunday, Festa des Botifarró: Sant Joan · 4th Sunday, Mostra d’Art i Empresa (Art and Company Exhibit): Petra · Week of 12/10 approx., Fira del Teatre (Theatre Fair): Vilafranca · 1st Saturday before Saint Lluc, Fair: Algaida · 20/10 Ses Verges: Porreres · Last Sunday, Fair: Porreres November:· Saturday nearest to St. Catalina, Festa Payesa (Peasant Holiday) Porreres · Tuesday 25/11 or following Tuesday, Honey Fair: Llubí December: · 01/12 Fair: Llubí · 04/12 Saint Bàrbara: Vilafranca · 1st Sunday - Fira de sa Perdiu (Fair) Montuïri - Fira Sant Tomàs (Fair), matances (slaughter feasts): Sineu · 10/12 Virgin Mary Holiday: Festa de la Mare Déu of Loreto: Lloret Another outstanding event in the Pla district is the International Music Festival of the Pla de Mallorca. This is a music festival which hosts a series of classical music concerts, all free of charge, in the Churches and Temples of the Pla District towns throughout the months of July, August, and September. Its origins date back to 1988 and it was formerly known as the Music Festival of the Cura Sanctuary and it is currently celebrated in seven of the district’s municipalities every year. The Festival is a first-class artistic experience which has become a solid tradition in the towns of Pla de Mallorca, whose musical programme assembles the world’s most renowned and prestigious choirs, solo artists, and orchestras in the island. 33 August: October: Pla de Mallorca >> Weekly Markets in the Pla de Mallorca district: Markets, Fairs and Holidays >> Pla de Mallorca_Markets, Fairs and Holidays >> Pla de Mallorca_Accommodation 6 7 8 24 25 4 5 13 3 16 34 15 14 12 Accommodation 17 Pla de Mallorca 1 30 2 32 31 19 18 21 22 33 20 The Hotel Establishments of the Pla District of Mallorca have experienced significant growth in recent years. This phenomenon is directly related to the promotion of rural/ interior tourism, focused on those who seek something more than the “sun” and “sand” of the islands. In this sense, the establishments that we find in this zone are almost all Rural Tourism or Interior Hotel types. Many of these lodgings are located in old farm houses or refurbished village houses, a factor which makes them even more charming and special. Below, there is a list of several hotels and rural houses which we can find in el Pla of Mallorca: Accommodation 26 35 23 29 Pla de Mallorca 27 28 10 9 11 >> 1 Pla de Mallorca_Accommodation Possessió Binicomprat Finca de Binicomprat, s/n (Algaida). Tel. 971 125 028 www.fincabinicomprat.com This rural farm house is an ideal spot for nature lovers who seek a peaceful setting. It has 150 hectares of land, one third of which is forest and the rest is dedicated to various crops, above all vineyard cultivation which they use to elaborate their own wines. >> Pla de Mallorca_Accommodation 2 Es Recó de Randa Hotel – Restaurant 3 Finca Raïms – Hotel de Interior C/ Font, 21. (Randa - Algaida) Tel. 971 660 997 www.esrecoderanda.com C/. de la Ribera, 26 (Algaida) Tel. 971 665 157 www.finca-raims.com The Recó de Randa Hotel is a typical peasant farm house located at the foot of the Puig de Randa (the Randa Hill). It has 14 rooms with all major conveniences. A small and cozy hotel located inside a seventeenth-century warehouse that has preserved virtually intact the character of the traditional Mallorca. Finca Raims friendly service combines a quiet and relaxing hotel with the charm of rural life. 4 Agroturismo Sa Rota d’en Palerm Ctra. Lloret – Montuïri km. 0,8 (Lloret de Vistalegre) Tel. 971 521 100 www.sa-rota.com Sa Rota is an elegant Estate from the 18th Century located on a mountain with splendid views. It has been refurbished and transformed into a lovely rural hotel. 5 Finca Son Bauló Camí de Son Bauló, 1 (Lloret de Vistalegre) Tel. 971 524 206. www.son-baulo.com In Son Bauló, there is a perfect blend of culture and cuisine. This rural hotel is a comfortable space which features apartments with the traditional Mallorcan style. In Son Bauló, they place a special emphasis on cuisine and ecological gardening. 6 Can Pericó Restaurant i Petit Hotel 7 Hotel Ca´n Bagot C/ Farinera, 7 (Llubí) Tel. 971 857 138 www.canperico.com Passeig de la Riba, 6 (Llubí) Tel. 971 522 611/ 645 862 687 www.canbagot.com Can Pericó is a traditional Mallorcan house located in the centre of the Llubí village. In 1947, it became a home-made sausage and cured meats shop and for over two decades, it was one of the most renowned family businesses. At present, the family has refurbished the house, and converted it into a small 3-room hotel and a restaurant, where you may sample Mallorca’s delicious cuisine. Our small hotel is an old Mallorcan house located in a very peaceful area in the historical city centre of Llubí. Recently refurbished, it combines its traditional character with today‘s premium comfort. 8 Sa Casa Rotja-Agroturisme (Llubí) Tel. 971 185 290 600 606 842 www.sacasarotja.com Sa Casa Rotja is an elegant Estate from the 19th Century which is located 4 km from Sineu. It was refurbished in 1989 and its old Mallorcan style has been respected. >> Pla de Mallorca_Accommodation >> Pla de Mallorca_Accommodation Hotel Casa Girasol 9 Petit Hotel Son Fogueró 10 Finca Roqueta 11 Hotel Casa Girasol Finca 7519 (Maria de la Salut) Tel. 971 525 343 www.sonfoguero.com C/ Pedro Roqueta, s/n (Maria de la Salut) Tel. 636 739 927 www.agroroqueta.com C/. Font i Roig, 1 (Maria de la Salut) Tel. 971 85 80 07 www.casagirasol.biz Son Fogueró is an old Mallorcan farm house which has been transformed by its owners (the interior designer, Mª Antònia Carbonell and the painter, Pere Alemany) into a serene hotel. In the home of these artists, Nature is easily confused with Art. The Houses of Roqueta, which date back to the 13th Century, form part of one of the Chivalry Orders which King Jaume I granted to his collaborators in the Conquest of Mallorca in 1229. They have been refurbished, conserving the elegant architectural beauty, to accommodate four apartments above the former wine-cellar (bodega) which jointly with the garden, comprise its rural tourism lodging. This was a fourteenth century farm converted into a hotel by the German family Fels. Its charm meets every demand for comfort. A hotel to relax and enjoy at the center of the island. Its terraces and gardens invite you to stay and enjoy the best day of the year in an elegant setting. 12 Hotel Rural Es Figueral Nou Ctra. Montuïri – Sant Joan km. 0,7 (Montuïri). Tel. 971 646 764 www.esfigueralnou.com This old Mallorcan farm house dates back to the 15th Century. In 1879, it was transformed into a wine-cellar, and its arched vaults can still be seen in the restaurant. 13 Hotel Rural Puig Moltó 14 Hotel Rural Son Manera 15 Son Torrat Casa Rural Ctra. Pina – Montuïri km. 3 (Montuïri) Tel. 971 181 758 www.espuigmolto.com Ctra. Montuïri – Lloret km. 0,3 (Montuïri) Tel. 971 161 530 www.sonmanera.com Camí de Bonany km. 2 (Petra) Tel. 630 017 858 www.agroturplaya.com This farm house is one of the oldest in Mallorca. It is located among olive trees, fig trees, and carob trees. Due to the discovery of archaeological ruins in this site, it is considered to be a zone with a long history. The Son Manera rural hotel has 25 rooms fully equipped with all major conveniences. The decoration reflects a 19th Century Country Estate style. This completely refurbished farm house dates back to the 15th Century and offers 6 cozy and comfortable residences. 16 Hotel de Interior Sa Plaça de Petra Plaça Ramon Llull, 4 (Petra) Tel. 971 561 646 Located in the heart of the town of Petra in the interior of the island of Mallorca, we found this little hotel-restaurant housed in a former manor house, where time stops and evokes the nostalgia of the past. >> 17 Pla de Mallorca_Accommodation Agroturismo Son Santandreu Ctra. Petra – Felanitx, Km. 2 (Petra) Tel. 971 561 128 / 629 370 023 www.sonsantandreu.com Son Sant Andreu, a former seventeenth century Majorcan house and a good taste of What life was like in rural Majorca of our ancestors, which combined peace and tranquility with livestock farming which continues to this day. Now, we celebrate all sorts of events and agro-tourism just like an additional office task. >> Pla de Mallorca_Accommodation 18 Can Feliu Ecoagroturisme 19 Finca Son Roig Finca Son Dagueta Camí de sa Serra, s/n (Porreres) Tel. 609 613 213 www.sondagueta.com Camí de sa Torre, s/n (Porreres) Tel. 971 168 189 www.fincasonroig.com The Son Dagueta House is an old rural building which dates back to the 17th Century and it has fully conserved its century-old structures and features. It has been meticulously restored to recover its original architectural elements, with traditional and ecological materials. The house harmoniously blends the comfort of modern installations with the ancient rural atmosphere. The Houses of Son Roig were formerly a major agricultural farming and cattle centre of the village lands. This rural tourist lodging has been built based on the detailed and respectful restoration of the building which concluded in 2005. 20 Sa Bassa Rotja Hotel Rural 21 Finca Son Jorbo 22 Agroturismo Son Mercadal Finca Son Orell. Camí Sa Pedrera s/n (Porreres) Tel. 971 168 225 www.sabassarotja.com Camí de s’Olivar (Porreres) Tel. 971 181 251 / 647 711 106 www.fincasonjorbo.com Camí Son Pau s/n. (Porreres) Tel. 971 181 307 / 610 758 332 www.son-mercadal.com Sa Bassa Rotja is an old Mallorcan building-property from the 13th Century, which has been currently refurbished and converted into a rural hotel, which still conserves its original structures and features. Its installations are equipped with 25 rooms, spacious halls, a library, restaurant, etc. 17th Century house with two floors, now transformed into a small hotel. Located beside a hill with views of the country, the nearby villages, and the mountains in the distance. The house has been divided into apartments, each with a different style, which blends the rustic charm of a traditional Mallorcan house with the comforts of contemporary life. Splendid 19th Century building completely refurbished and adapted to the needs of its guests. Its thick stone walls contain cozy rooms, which combine a taste for antique style with a practical design to create the desired comfort. 23 Agroturismo Sa Torre de Santa Eugènia C/ Alqueries, 70 (Santa Eugènia) Tel. 971 144 011. www.sa-torre.com The history of this farm house, linked to the Ribas de Pina, dates back to the 16th Century, which already belonged to this family in 1560. Currently, the heirs have reused the building to adapt it to their present business: agriculture, rural tourism, and restaurant. 24 Hotel Rural Son Jordà Ruberts (Ruberts – Sencelles) Tel. 971 872 279 www.sonjorda.com This rural tourism farm house consists of 21 rooms, distributed in 3 houses from the 16th Century (Lords House, Peasant House, and the WineCellar) which in that age, were the main houses of the Ruberts village. Attached, it has a small 18th Century Church, which can be directly accessed from the hotel. >> Pla de Mallorca_Accommodation >> Pla de Mallorca_Accommodation Hotel Rural 25 Hotel Rural Son Xotano 26 Hotel León de Sineu 27 Can Joan Capó Hotel d’Interior 28 Hotel Celler de Ca’n Font 29 Son Cleda Hotel d’Interior Judí (Judí – Sencelles) Tel. 971 872 500. www.sonxotano.es C/ dels Bous, 129 (Sineu) Tel. 971 520 211 www.hotel-leondesineu.com C/ Degà Joan Rotger, 4 (Sineu). Tel. 971 855 075 www.canjoancapo.com Sa Plaça, 18 (Sineu) Tel. 971 520 295 www.canfont.com Plaça Es Fossar, 7 (Sineu). Tel. 971 521 038 www.hotelsoncleda.com This sixteenth century manor house has a total of 16 rooms including 8 suites. It is also equipped with a lobby with 24-hour reception, safe, bar and a restaurant. The hotel also has a conference room and Internet connection. The house was built in the 15th Century and has been renewed in every detail. The Family Owners of the Hotel provide the best possible service to their customers, by meticulous attention and care in the smallest details. In can Joan Capó, they have merged avant-garde design, tradition, and modernity, maintaining the typical elements of the Pla de Mallorca residence and providing all the 21st Century conveniences. The hotel features 8 rooms, which each have their own unique personality. The Celler de Ca’n Font is an elegant building from the 16th Century, which has conserved the original structure and has been restored and fitted with the most modern conveniences. Likewise, the cuisine from Celler Ca’n Font offers an excellent variety of Mallorcan dishes. This is a small house whose construction began in the 16th Century in the heart of the Sineu village. It is a family hotel with 8 different rooms and each has its own particular charm. In reference to gastronomy, the house mother or “Mama” is in charge of preparing the dishes which are served in the restaurant, which is an excellent sample of good Mallorcan, Mediterranean, and vegetarian cuisine. 30 Agroturismo Sa Franquesa Vella Ctra. Petra – Felanitx, intersección con Ses Basses, km. 3,8 (Vilafranca de Bonany). Tel. 629 834 452 www.safranquesavellamallorca.com This old farm house from the 15th Century has been tastefully restored, to conserve the charm of the typical Mallorcan rural houses. It is located on a mountain surrounded by farm lands, which are dedicated above all to cereal crops. This rural tourism building has 9 apartments which all provide maximum comfort for their customers. On the other hand, it is fitting to mention that for decades, religious and spiritual tourism has gained many devoted fans. Consequently, it represents a major opportunity for tourist activity, since unlike what frequently occurs with traditional tourism, these tourists usually return to the same place within a short period of time, and thus, it produces a tourism which is faithful to the location which they visit. In this sense, the Pla de Mallorca district has several sanctuaries and chapels which offer accommodation services: 31 Cura Sanctuary (Santuari de Cura) (Randa - Algaida). Tel. 971 662 052 [email protected] Mt. Zion Sanctuary (Santuari de Monti-sion) (Porreres) Tel. 971 647 185 St. Honoratus Chapel (Ermita de Sant Honorat) (Randa – Algaida). Tel. 971 660 998 Bonany Sanctuary (Santuari de Bonany) (Petra). Tel. 971 561 101 32 33 34 >> Pla de Mallorca_Routes Routes Mystic route We begin the itinerary in Algaida, in the antiga Parròquia de Castellitx (Tel. 971 665 022), it is also called la Mare de Déu de la Bona Pau, located between Algaida and the Puig de Randa (Randa Hill). It corresponds to the Early Christian Gothic style and we have found records of it in 1244, but under the Patron Saint of Sant Pere (St. Peter). It has a single nave with three sections and diaphragm arch roof which buttress the beams. According to legend, the image of the Virgin, a sculpture made in 1230, was found near the current hermitage. >> Petra Street In this same path, we find the Hermitage: Ermita de Sant Honorat (Tel. 971 660 998). The Philosopher and Beatified Ramon Llull was the first to seek spiritual retreat in this zone. In the mid 14th Century, other knights also selected Randa to begin a religious life and they requested authorization 45 We continue our ascent towards Puig de Randa and on the right, we find a detour sign which points the way to the Santuari de Gràcia (Tel. 971 180 479), which forms a part of the Municipality of Llucmajor. Its origin can be found in the cave, cova d’Aresta, the place where the Franciscan Monks swore their vows of poverty and austerity in the 15th Century. The first Hermitage became a pilgrimage centre under the Patron Saint of Nostra Senyora de Gràcia (Our Lady of Grace). In the Church interior, we highlight the floor tiles of the Chapel of Santa Anna, the first Chapel on the left side from the 18th Century, which also conserves the Apse of the Early Christian Oratory, and the Image of the Virgin. Pla de Mallorca As we have seen earlier, the Pla de Mallorca district has a priceless architectural wealth and heritage. In this sense, below, we propose a series of routes or itineraries to explore several of these points of historical interest. Routes Cultural Routes Pla de Mallorca_Routes >> Routes_Mystic >> The Sanctuary of la Mare de Déu de Bonany Near the Randa rock mass, but located in the Municipality of Porreres, we find the Santuari de Monti-sion (Tel. 971 647 185) which was already documented as a Hermitage in the 14th Century. The current Oratory dates from the 15th Century with several subsequent refurbishments. In the 16th Century, it housed the first Latin Grammar School with classrooms and cells for over 100 students. It has an astonishing pentagonal cloister as well as a NeoGothic altar piece located above the main altar with a Gothic image of the Virgin. The Sanctuary has a guest quarters service and restaurant. >> Oratory of Mt. Zion >> The Sanctuary of Nostra Senyora de Cura In the summit of Puig de Bonany (Bonany Hill), between the Municipalities of Petra, Vilafranca de Bonany, and Sant Joan, we find the Santuari de la Mare de Déu de Bonany (Tel. 971 826 568), in the Municipality of Petra. The origin of this Sanctuary is a small Oratory from the 17th Century, built to venerate the Gothic sculpture of the Virgin, which according to one legend, was concealed in a cave by the Christians to save it from destruction at the hands of the Muslim invasion; it was later rescued from its hiding place after the Christian Conquest in 1229. The Sanctuary style is a combination of NeoBaroque and NeoClassical elements which resulted from the refurbishments carried out in the 19th Century. Bonany has been considered as the last temple in which Friar Juníper Serra, resident of Petra and evangelist of California, preached his last sermon. It also has a guest quarters service. Windmills route Due to its historical dedication to agriculture, cattle-raising, and in general, all activities related to the land, the Pla de Mallorca district has many buildings to use and/or exploit its natural resources. Among these buildings, we especially highlight the windmills. Routes On the summit of the Puig de Randa, we find the Santuari de Nostra Senyora de Cura (Tel. 971 660 994), a building which began in the 15th Century. Ramon Llull had a spiritual retreat in one of its caves, and legend states that a mission was revealed to him here: To write a book which would refute all the false beliefs of the infidels. The revelation was in the Hebrew and Arabic languages written on the leaves of a mastic shrub. Here, he founded the first Latin Grammar School which was active until 1826. The initial chapel from the 15th Century was refurbished and converted into a Temple in the 17th Century. This Sanctuary also has a guest quarters service with 22 cells, in one of the most privileged locations to behold a spectacular panoramic view of the island. One kilometre from Sant Joan, climbing up a steep slope, we find the Santuari de Consolació (Tel. 971 526 041), built in the 13th Century, subsequently renovated and restored between the years 1959 and 1966. It is presided by the Image of the Virgin of the Sanctuary’s Patron Saint. 47 to build the Hermitage. Today, it belongs to the order of the Missioners dels Sagrats Cors (Sacred Heart Missionaries) and it has guest quarters. Pla de Mallorca >> Mystic Route 6 Molí de can Sinto 26 Molí Nou 5 7 Molí d’en Nina 27 Casa Museu Fra Juníper Serra Antiga Parròquia de Castellitx 8 Molí d’en Beato Molins de sa Pleta de Sant Martí 6 9 Molí d’en Poleo 28 Molí d’en Tòfol 2 Santuari de Gràcia 10 Molí d’en Bubo 29 Molí des Recó Museu i fons artístic de l’Ajuntament de Porreres 3 Ermita de Sant Honorat 11 Molí d’en Romaguera 30 7 4 Santuari de Nostra Senyora de Cura 12 Molí d’en Pep Gomila Molí de Son Porquer Museu Arqueològic de Son Fornés 13 Molí d’en Pau 31 Molí d’en Gospet Santuari de Monti-sion 14 Molí d’en Gaspar 32 Molí des Fraret 33 Molí de sa Torre 1 6 5 4 4 18 12 3 9 7 2 2 1 14 13 8 7 24 6 25 33 7 32 7 26 27 1 6 28 29 5 30 21 20 23 22 5 31 4 1 3 2 19 5 6 Santuari de Consolació 15 Molí de Son Rafal 7 Santuari de la Mare de Déu de Bonany 16 Molí de can Suau 17 Molí des Cós Museums Route 18 Molí fariner de can Nepto 1 Museu del Santuari de Cura 2 Museu de Vidre de Gordiola 3 4 Windmills Route 19 Molí de can Cotó 1 Molí d’en Xina 20 Molí d’en Marinero 2 Molí d’en Pau 21 Molí d’en Rigo 3 Molins des Puget 22 Molí d’en Tromper 4 Molins de Son Pau i can Joan 23 Molí d’en Font 24 Molí d’en Tronca 5 Molins de can Mascaró 25 Molí d’en Carritxó 8 Archaeological Route 49 1 10 3 4 11 2 5 3 1 Talaiot Son Fred 2 Poblat d’Es Turassot 3 Santuari de Son Corró 4 Talaiot de Cascanar 5 Talaiot de Binifat 6 El poblat talaiòtic de Es Racons Observatori Astronòmic de Mallorca 7 El poblat talaiòtic de Son Fornés Museu de Ciències Naturals 8 Poblat talaiòtic d’Es Pou Celat (Salat) Pla de Mallorca 16 17 15 6 Routes >> Routes_Cultural Pla de Mallorca_Routes >> Routes_Windmills In Sencelles, we find the windmills: molins de can Mascaró, (C/ del Capità y C/ Rector Molines), documented by Jeroni de Berard as flour windmills in 1789. Likewise, note the windmill: molí de can Sinto (C/ dels Molins), a windmill tower with base, built with ordinary stonemasonry and constructed with irregular stones and cement roof. >> Windmill: Molí d’en Pau In Lloret de Vistalegre, we recommend the molí d’en Nina, located reside the Font Figuera (Fig Tree fountain), in the Southern zone of the city centre. Part of the enclosure and the intersecting wood sections are conserved as well as the old machinery and support structure. We also highlight the windmill, molí d’en Beato, which jointly with the one in d’en Poleo and the now disappeared one in d’en Mino, comprised one level of the city centre in the East section of the village known as Es Molins. In the Municipality of Sineu, we highlight molí d’en Pep Gomila (Motorway of Lloret de Vistalegre), molí d’en Pau (Motorway of Santa Margalida) a flour windmill formerly called: molí d’en Ros. It was restored in 1992, and now functions as a restaurant. Likewise, in ses Cases Noves, we find the windmill: molí d’en Gaspar. In Llubí, there is the molí de Son Rafal (beside the plaza with the same name), a tower-windmill with a round base, the molí de C’an Suau (C/ de la Creu) and the molí des Cós (C/ de la Carretera), also a windmill tower with an arch centre. In Maria de la Salut, there are ruins of the windmill tower: molí fariner de can Nepto , located in Son Puig, and the windmill: molí de can Cotó which date back to the second half of the 19th Century. In Ariany, we recommend the molí d’en Marinero or d’en Sureda, located very near the town, in the road to Maria; and the windmill: molí d’en Rigo (C/ Vista Alegre), possibly one of the village’s oldest windmills. Rutes In the Municipality of Santa Eugènia, specifically the village of Ses Alqueries, we may visit the windmills: molins de Son Pau, whose enclosure has been conserved in excellent condition with a completely refurbished interior and the windmill of can Joan. It is also interesting to visit the three windmills which are conserved in the des Puget zone in Santa Eugènia. Costitx has conserved the windmill: molí d’en Bubo (C/ de la Pau), which underwent numerous interventions over time and it was used for different activities. In the street: carrer dels Molins, we find the windmill: molí d’en Romaguera, which conserves a tower with a circular base. 51 Let’s begin the route in Algaida, where we can find many windmills. We highlight the following: molí d’en Xina (C/ de la Ribera), built in 1738, restored in 1979 and converted into an artist’s Studio; and the molí d’en Pau, (C/ de can Carrintà), dated in 1792. Pla de Mallorca >> Pla de Mallorca_Routes >> Routes_Windmills In Vilafranca de Bonany, there is the windmill called molí Nou, which is currently the only urban windmill which remains in the village since the others have vanished. It is located at the village exit, on the corner of the streets: carrer de Sant Martí and carrer des Molí Nou. We also highlight the molins de sa Pleta de Sant Martí, located outside of the town, heading towards Felanitx and Porreres. In Porreres, we recommend the windmills: molí d’en Tòfol (C/ del Molí d’en Donzell), which is currently the Central Office of the Confraria d’Amics del Vi (Wine Friendship Association); with windmill molí des Recó and with windmill, molí de Son Porquer. >> Windmill: Molins de sa Pleta de Sant Martí In Montuïri, we find the molí d’en Gospet, located in Molinar d’en Gospet, and the windmill: es molí des Fraret which jointly with those of de sa Torre, d’en Xigala, and el d’en Fideuer - the latter two missing- comprise another windmill in the North of the village. >> The Sanctuary of Cura Museum We begin the museum route of the Pla de Mallorca district in the Municipality of Algaida, where in the first stop, we can explore the Museu del Santuari de Cura (Cura Sanctuary Museum) (Tel. 971 660 994). In the premises of the former Llullian School where the Latin Grammar School was founded, which reported to the Llullian School which was established in Estudi General de Palma (General Studies School of Palma). The Grammar Classroom now conserves religious objects and books related to worship in the Sanctuary as well as printed books and manuscripts in Ramon Llull topics. The Classroom also has a collection of religious type paintings, engravings of the image of Ramon Llull and a small collection of dishes and utensils. Other objects which we can contemplate are diverse architecture plans and projects, a collection of Randa liquor bottles manufactured many years ago in the Porciúncula de Palma and in the Sanctuary, as well as a valuable copy of the Map of Mallorca by Cardinal Despuig. El Museo de Vidre de Gordiola (Glass Museum) (Tel. 971 665 046), also in Algaida, it is located in the Palma – Manacor motorway at km. 19. The Gordiola family has followed this artistic glass-making tradition for almost three centuries. In the Municipality of Costitx, the first stop is the Observatori Astronòmic de Mallorca (Astronomical Observatory of Mallorca) (Tel. 971 876 019), located in the street: Camí de Routes In the Municipality of Sant Joan, we highlight the molí d’en Tronca (C/ dels Molins), which was built jointly with the windmill: molí d’en Carritxó and those that once existed: d’en Peixerí and d’en Perdut which provided the name for this village’s zone. Museums route 53 In Petra, the molí d’en Tromper is located also known as: ca sa Fideuera, built in 1919; and the windmill: molí d’en Font, located in the street: carrer dels Molins. Pla de Mallorca >> Pla de Mallorca_Routes >> Routes_Museums Located in Petra, on carrer Barracar nº 6, we find the Casa Museu Fra Juníper Serra (Friar Juníper Serra House Museum) (Tel. 971 561 166), where you may make scheduled visits to see the two permanent exhibits: The Museum of the life and works of this Beatified Friar who founded the missions in Upper California and the Visit to the House where Friar Juníper Serra (1713 – 1784) was born. >> Son Fred Talayot In the Municipality of Porreres, there is the Museu i fons artístic de l’Ajuntament de Porreres (Museum and Art Collection of the Town Council of Porreres (Tel. 971166 617), located on the street: carrer Reverend Agustí Font, in the former Hospital building. Since 1982, during the holidays of Sant Roc, it has received artworks donated by artists, galleries, and individuals. In spite of this, it was not until 1985 when the consultancy commission was created Finally, we conclude in the Municipality of Montuïri where there is the Museu Arqueològic de Son Forners (Son Fornés Archaeological Museum) (Tel. 971 644 169), located on the street: carrer Emili Pou s/n (Molí d’en Fraret). This is a monographic Museum which exhibits the discoveries that have been made in the archaeological site of Son Fornés, located in km 2.4 of the city centre of Montuïri in the direction of Pina. The current exhibit displays the discoveries of the first 8 excavation campaigns which are on exhibit in three rooms. Archaeological Route The Pla de Mallorca territory has an immense wealth of archaeological ruins which provide evidence of human presence since very ancient times. You may explore several of these Archaeological sites in this route. We start the itinerary in the Sencelles – Inca motorway, past the cemetery of Sencelles, where on the right, we find an asphault path (200 metres) with the sign: “Talaiot Son Fred”. This building, with a circular plan with 12 metre diameter, formed part of the settlement, where there is another talayot and a wall section. Routes Also in Costitx, you will find the Museu de Ciències Naturals (Natural Sciences Museum) (Tel. 971 876 070), located in the first floor of the Casa de Cultura (Cultural Centre) of the village of Costitx, in the street: carrer Rafael Horrach, 2. It was inaugurated in 1987 and it has a permanent exhibit of one of the Balearic Islands’ most important collections in the subject of Natural Sciences. and the following year, the Museum was officially inaugurated. It currently has approximately 265 artworks which include paintings, sculptures, ceramics, drawings, and graphic works. 55 l’Observatori s/n, it was inaugurated in 1991 and represents the first Observatory of the Balearic Islands. Its primary aims are to promote astronomic research, communication, and also the teaching of Astronomy. Pla de Mallorca >> Pla de Mallorca_Routes >> Routes_Archaeological metre diameter which conserves its entrance and it has height of approximately 4 metres. It formed part of a settlement which now has hardly any ruins. Very near and not very visible, there is a ceremonial centre with one circular and one square talayot. In the motorway which exits from Costitx towards Sencelles, at approximately km. 2.8, we see the sign for the archaeological site of Son Corró, on the right. A recent controversial reconstruction represents it as a building with a rectangular floor plan and three naves separated by columns, however other researchers believe that these columns did not exist and were monolithic ritual pillars which were scattered and not aligned like their present state. It was discovered by a pagès (peasant farmer), in 1894, who was plowing the soil when he discovered three bronze bull heads, which are currently conserved in the National Archaeological Museum of Madrid. Half a km from Llubí on the Sineu motorway, we find the Es Racons settlement, which is one of the best conserved sites on the island, where we can clearly appreciate the existing relation between the villages and their nearby ceremonial centres, which were comprised by square and circular talayots and burial mounds, to which Sanctuaries and other buildings were later added. Two km from Sencelles by the Sineu motorway, we find the village of Cascanar, which is the location of talayots with the same name. It is a ceremonial centre formed by two square talayots and several nearby burial caves, all related to the settlement located below the houses of the village, and the stone wall, whose traces can still be seen in the wall which runs along side the access road. After that, we now move on to the talayot of Binifat, in the Municipality of Sencelles, a circular talayot circular with a 15 >> Cascanar Talayot >> The Sanctuary of Son Corró The Talayotic village of Son Fornés is located on the Montuïri – Pina motorway on the right at km. 2.4. At present, it is in the process of excavation, thus it is very probable that soon there will be new structures visible; at this time, it is possible to see three circular Talayots joined by different houses and a wall. It represents a Talayotic village complex with various stages of growth. The Porreres motorway to Felanitx provides access to the wall of the Talayotic settlement of Es Pou Celat (Salat). After a little over two km, we exit on the right onto the motorway to head towards Son Mesquida. The wall is built with large slabs, and near its end, we can see the ruins of a circular Talayot. 57 Beside the Astronomic Observatory of Costitx, we can see the settlement of Es Turassot. This site has not been excavated and is comprised by a dozen naviformes, each with an enclosure for the cattle. Routes >> Wall: Murada d’Es Pou Celat (Salat) Pla de Mallorca >> Sineu- Sant Joan- Petra (Ermita de Bonany) - Ariany Maria de la Salut- Sineu Lloret de Vistalegre- Pina- Algaida Santa Eugènia- Biniali- Sencelles Costitx- Lloret de Vistalegre Sineu- Lloret de Vistalegre- Ruberts Sencelles- Biniali- Ses Alqueries Santa Eugènia- Algaida- Pina- Lloret de Vistalegre- Sineu Llubí- Sineu- Sant Joan- Montuïri Randa- Cura- Randa- Algaida Bicycle Tourist Routes Algaida >> Castellitx >> Randa >> Montuïri >> Porreres >> Vilafranca >> Es Calderers >> Sant Joan >> Algaida. 55 km approx. We depart from Algaida in the direction of Llucmajor (Ma-5010), after 3km, we turn to the left on the Castellitx road, we follow it and at the junction, we turn left and continue straight on to Castellitx. Having arrived here, we then head back following this road straight on until we reach the Algaida-Llucmajor motorway. Once there, we turn left on the first road that we encounter which has a steep ascent. At the end of this road, we turn left and continue in the direction of Randa. We cross the village heading towards Montuïri (Ma-5017) and continue straight. After travelling 5.5 km, at the road junction, we turn right to take the Camí Vell de Porreres road. At the roundabout, we take the second exit and continue straight on to Porreres (Ma-5030). In the town, we ride straight towards the church and then turn left towards Vilafranca. We depart from Porreres to Vilafranca in a route of about 5 km (Ma-5101). At the roundabout, we take the third exit in the direction of Vilafranca and, prior to ascending the bridge which crosses the motorway, we take the detour on the left on the Vial de Servei (Service Road) parallel to the motorway and continue our advance. At the roundabout, we take the first exit in the direction of Vilafranca/Es Calderers. At 250 metres, we turn left towards Es Calderers and we follow it until the end of the road (optional visit). When we reach the road junction, we turn right towards Sant Joan (Ma-3222) and once in the village, we continue to go straight at the first junction and then turn left at the second junction. We then leave the village, and at the roundabout, we take the second exit in the direction of Algaida (Ma3230). We continue straight in the direction of the junction of the Lloret motorway (Ma-3231), and at the next junction, we turn right towards Palma/Pina/Sencelles (Ma-3200). We advance forward and after 4 km, we take the detour on the left which goes to Algaida (Ma-3130). End of the route. Sineu >> Sant Joan >> Petra >> Ermita de Bonany >> Ariany >> Maria de la Salut >> Sineu. 26/30 km approx. We depart from Sineu (de la Plaza d’es Fossar) in the direction Sant Joan (Ma-3232). At the roundabout, we exit towards the village and Routes Algaida - Castellitx - Randa Montuïri - Porreres - Vilafranca Es Calderers - Sant Joan- Algaida >> Routes_Bicycle Tourist 59 Pla de Mallorca_Routes Pla de Mallorca >> cross it heading towards Petra on the road: Ma-3230 (optionally, in Petra, we can ascend to the hermitage, ermita de Bonany, which is located 4 km. from the village, following the signs that we encounter along the way). We cross the village in a straight line and at the cemetery level, we turn on the third right at the roundabout towards the Petra-Santa Margalida motorway. After one km, we turn to the right towards the Ariany bypass. Once in the village, we exit on the right onto the motorway of Sta. Margalida and, once on this road, we pass the bridge and turn left in the direction of Maria de la Salut (Ma-3342). When we arrive at the village, we cross it to take the calle de Sineu and we depart following this same motorway (Ma-3510) towards Sineu. End of the route. the same motorway). Approximately 3 km, we reach the junction with the Sencelles motorway and take a right towards Biniali, where we may visit the village and then continue our route on the same motorway to Sencelles. We cross through the entire village and head towards Costitx on the Ma-3121. There, we have to option to visit the Observatorio Astronómico (Astronomic Observatory) located 2.5 Km. from the village, following the road signs that we find along the way. We exit the village by taking a right towards Lloret by means of the street: carrer de la Garriga. After we have travelled around 5 km, we reach the Palma- Sineu motorway, (Ma-3141), we turn right and after about 300 metres, we turn to the left towards Lloret End of the route. Lloret de Vistalegre >> Pina >> Algaida >> Santa Eugènia >> Biniali >> Sencelles >> Costitx >> Lloret de Vistalegre. 36/40 km approx. Sineu >> Lloret de Vistalegre >> Ruberts >> Sencelles >> Biniali >> Ses Alqueries >> Santa Eugènia >> Algaida >> Pina >> Lloret de Vistalegre >> Sineu. 45 km approx. Routes >> Routes_Bicycle Tourist 61 Pla de Mallorca_Rutas We depart from Lloret de Vistalegre towards Algaida on the motorway Ma-3130. We pass through Pina and arrive in Algaida. We then take a left on the Vial de Servei (Service Road) of the Manacor- Palma motorway until a roundabout, where we pass under the motorway in the direction of Sta. Eugènia and continue on the Ma- 3100. When we reach the Palma- Sineu motorway, we exit on the left, and in the first exit on the right we take the motorway towards Santa Eugènia (Ma-3040). We pass through the entire town and continue in the direction of Santa Maria (on We depart from Sineu in the direction of Lloret (Ma-3130). We cross the village and at the cemetery, we turn right. We arrive at a junction, where we turn left, and shortly after 1 km, we take the bypass to the left towards Ruberts and continue straight. We cross Ruberts and upon reaching the junction with the old Sineu motorway, we turn to the right. At 200 metres, we turn right towards Sencelles (Ma-3140). We pass by Cas Canar and continue on to Sencelles. In the village, we follow the signs to exit from the Pla de Mallorca >> village in the direction of Santa Maria (Ma-3020). We arrive at Biniali and at the roundabout, we take the second exit towards Santa Eugènia. We continue straight, and at the next roundabout, we take the third exit in the direction of Ses Alqueries on the road: Camí de Muntanya At the junction that is in the village, we turn left (following the road: Camí de Muntanya). At the cemetery, we continue on the left until the junction with the Palma-Sineu motorway, where we cross in a straight line in the direction of Algaida on the Ma-3100. When the Ma-3100 motorway ends, we take the old Palma-Manacor motorway (parallel to the motorway) and at the roundabout of los Hostals, we take the third exit towards Pina. We follow the motorway (Ma-3131), pass underneath the motorway and at the second junction, we turn to the left onto the Ma-3130 motorway in the direction of Pina. After travelling 4 km, we arrive to the village on the street: carrer de Sineu and we follow it towards Lloret (it is the same motorway). In Lloret, we also cross the village and continue on the same motorway towards Sineu. End of the route. Llubí >> Sineu >> Sant Joan >> Montuïri >> Randa >> Cura >> Randa >> Algaida. 40 km approx. We depart from Llubí in the direction of Inca (Ma-3440), and at 500 metres, we turn left at the junction towards Sineu (Ma-3511). At the end of this motorway, we arrive at the junction with the Inca-Sineu motorway (Ma-3240), we cross it in a straight line and continue towards Sineu. We arrive at the junction with train tracks, and turn left on the street: carrer de la Tramuntana. We continue straight on the street: carrer de la Estació, we pass the bypass to the Ma-3300 motorway and continue on the road until we find a bypass to the left in the direction of Sant Joan (Ma3232). At the end of the motorway, we arrive at a roundabout next to Sant Joan. Optionally at this point, we can ascend to the Hermitage Nostra Senyora de la Consolació, located 2 km from the village. To do this, we take the third exit at the roundabout in the direction of Sant Joan, when we arrive at the village, we take the first street on the right and follow the signs. In order to continue the route, at the aforementioned roundabout and take the second exit in the direction of Montuïri on the Ma-3230. When we arrive to Montuïri, we turn left at the first street and follow it to a roundabout where we exit towards the Vial de Servei (Service Road), which will take us (on a winding road) to another large roundabout. Here, we take the second exit towards Randa. At 500 metres, we turn to the right in the direction of Randa and follow the Ma-5017. In the village, at the first junction that we encounter, we turn left and ascend in the direction of Cura (4 km), where we may visit the Monastery and Church. We then descend towards Randa and cross the village heading towards Algaida. At 500 metres from the exit of the village, we descend on a narrow road located on the right. At the end of this road, we turn right towards Algaida on the main motorway (Ma5010). End of the route. Routes >> Routes_Bicycle Tourist 63 Pla de Mallorca_Routes Pla de Mallorca >> Pla de Mallorca_Routes 2 3 4 5 6 7 Bodega can Majoral Bodega Son Dagueta Bodegues Jaume Mesquida Bodegues Miquel Oliver Bodegues can Coleto Bodegues Galmés i Ferrer Bodega Vinya Taujana >> Cellers (Wine- Cellars) Route 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Celler de Randa Es Celler de Petra Celler Es Palau Celler de can Font Celler Es Grop Celler Son Torelló Celler Sa Bòveda >> Restaurants 8 9 S’Hostal d’Algaida Cal Dimoni Gastronomic Routes 11 Binicomprat 12 Cas Beato 18 13 Es Recó de Randa 17 14 Ses Torres 15 Es Pou 16 Finca Son Bauló 17 Can Pericó 18 Sa Taparera 19 Cas Metge Monjo 7 26 25 16 20 Cas Padrí Toni 21 S’Hostal 22 Son Bascos 23 Es Molí de’n Perons 24 Sa Creu 28 7 6 5 29 3 4 27 8 9 10 11 1 27 Sa Cuina de n’Aina 28 Molí den Pau 29 Can Joan Capó 30 S’Estanc Vell 31 Es Cruce 1 12 13 14 6 2 5 24 4 15 21 22 23 30 25 Can Puceta 26 Sa Torre de Santa Eugènia Wine Route 19 20 2 3 31 The zone comprised within the Denomination of Origin: Pla i Llevant de Mallorca, created in 1999, is the region with the most extensive viticulture tradition which dates back to the Roman age: Algaida, Ariany, Artà, Campos, Capdepera, Felanitx, Llucmajor, Manacor, Maria de la Salut, Montuïri, Muro, Petra, Porreres, Sant Joan, Sant Llorenç des Cardassar, Santa Margalida, Sineu and Vilafranca. Its elaboration combines traditional practices with modern technology which is permanently designed to improve the quality of the wines. Thus, we start the route in Algaida, in the Winery: can Majoral (C/ Campanar, s/n), a family winery which began 20 years ago and they have been pioneers in ecological agriculture. They use cutting-edge technology to make their wines and they offer two trademarks: can Majoral and Butibalausí. Among their wines, we recommend the red wine: can Majoral Son Roig and the white wine: Butibalausí. We now move on to Porreres to visit the winery: Jaume Mesquida (C/ Vileta, 7), a family winery founded in 1945 by Jaume Mesquida Barceló (great-grandparents of the current owners), although there are documents which link this family to wine-making since the beginning of the 16th Century. Don’t miss the opportunity to sample the Cabernet Sauvignon. We also highlight the winery: Son Dagueta (C/ Parientes, 4), which was documented at the end of the 18th Century and resumed its activity in 2004. In 2007, one of its wines, “Alè de cabernet 2005” obtained the Gold medal in the International Brussels Competition. Finally, we travel to Petra, where we can explore three more wineries. First, we visit the winery: Miquel Oliver (C/ Font, 26, www. miqueloliver.com), which was founded approximately a century ago. This was the first Island company in Mallorca to win major prizes at the national level. It produces the Island’s most prestigious wines and names such as Ses Ferritges, Original Muskat, or Aia can be found in the wine cellars of the leading wine experts. We now visit Ca’n Coleto (C/ Convent, 10 and Camí de Son Reixach, first road on the left), a family company founded in 2000 which elaborates an ecological wine. Several of its fine wines include: Negre Virat, el Llàgrimes Blanques or el Summum. We conclude our visit at the winery: Galmés i Ferrer (C/ Ordines 19 and C/ del Barracar Alt, 56), which began to produce wine in 1940. Since 1993, they have elaborated a single product line with red, white and rose wines. These three wines are young wines and are commercialized in the same year of their production. Santa Eugènia also has several wineries which elaborate wines, however in this case, they are registered within the Denomination of Origin: D.O. Binissalem. We highlight the winery: Vinya Taujana (C/ Balanguera, 40), a Family Business which elaborates wines which are almost entirely from their own vinyards and provides arranged visits to its wine-cellar. Routes 1 10 Es 4 vents 65 >> Wine Route >> Routes_Gastronomic Pla de Mallorca >> Pla de Mallorca_Routes >> Routes_Gastronomic Several examples may be: >> Jaume Mesquida Winery >> Can Majoral Winery Celler de Randa (C/ Església, 24. Randa – Algaida) Es Celler de Petra (C/ Hospital, 46. Petra) Celler Es Palau (C/ Esperança, 28. Sineu) Celler de can Font (C/ Rosa, 1. Sineu) Celler Es Grop (C/ Major,14. Sineu) Celler Son Torelló (C/ Son Torelló, 1. Sineu) Celler Sa Bòveda (C/ Bous, 129. Sineu) On the other hand, we highlight the major presence of numerous restaurants in the district, where you may sample a wide range of traditional Mallorcan dishes as well as a major variety of cuisine options: Gourmet chefs, creative dishes, specialities or other cultures. We highlight this small selection: >> Miquel Oliver Winery >> Can Coleto Winery >> Vinya Taujana Winery S’Hostal d’Algaida (Ctra. de Manacor km. 20,5. Algaida) Ca’l Dimoni (Ctra. Manacor km. 21. Algaida) Es 4 vents (Cra. De Manacor Km.21,7. Algaida) Binicomprat (Ctra. de Manacor km. 22,7. Algaida) Ca’s Beato (C/ Tanqueta, 1. Randa – Algaida) Es Recó de Randa (C/ Font, 21. Randa - Algaida) Ses Torres (Ctra. Petra – Maria de la Salut s/n. Ariany) Es Pou (Ctra. Ciutat, 1. Lloret de Vistalegre) Restaurante Son Bauló (Camí de Son Bauló, 1. Lloret de Vistalegre) Can Pericó (C/ Farinera, 7. Llubí) Sa Taperera (C/ Dr. Fleming, 5-7. Llubí) Ca’s Metge Monjo (C/ Antoni Monjo, 18. Maria de la Salut) Cas Padrí Toni (C/ Villalonga, 9. Maria de la Salut) S’Hostal (C/ Contitució,59. Montuïri) Son Bascos (Ctra. Manacor, km. 29. Montuïri) Es Molí de’n Perons (C/ Es molinar, 51. Montuïri) Sa Creu (Ctra. Manacor-Inca km. 9. Petra) Ca’n Puceta (Ctra. Palma-Sineu km. 15,300. Santa Eugènia) Sa Torre de Santa Eugènia (C/ Ctra. Sta. Eugènia-Sencelles. Sta. Eugènia) Sa Cuina de n’Aina (C/ Rafal, 31. Sencelles) Molí d’en Pau (C/ Santa Margalida, 25. Sineu) Can Joan Capó (C/ Degà Joan Rotger, 4. Sineu) S’Estanc Vell (Ctra. Palma, 29. Vilafranca de Bonany) Es Cruce (Ctra. Palma-Manacor km 40. Vilafranca de Bonany). Routes The cellers (name inspired by the “wine-cellars”) restaurants represent the most typical gastronomy in the Pla de Mallorca zone and they are an excellent option to enjoy typical dishes of Mallorcan cuisine (both “racions” [individual servings] and “variats” [assorted dishes]). These cellers usually have rural decoration and it is common to find old objects related to agricultural life or the elaboration of wine, such as cart wheels or wine vats. Restaurants 67 Cellers (Wine-Cellars) Route Pla de Mallorca >> >> Pla de Mallorca_Algaida Algaida >> Scenic Overview of Algaida The Royal Property Distribution Book (“Llibre del Repartiment”) of 1232 provides the first reference to two farmhouses with the name of Algaida, whose etymological meaning is “forest”. Likewise, we also find a reference to three farmhouses with the name of Pina. According to Coromines, this place name probably originates from the Roman term “Pinna” (“penya”or “crag”), or “Pinella” (“water tank”). Both meanings are possible and correspond to the geomorphologic reality of the land. “Randa” is also mentioned in this same book, with the name of “Arrenda”, which is an Arab word which means “laurel”. In the Muslim Age, Algaida consisted of two farmhouses which approximately occupied the location which today comprises the urban city centre and its surroundings. It seems that each Municipality had its own Castle and the Juz’ de Muntuy Castle was located on the hill, Puig de Randa, where the buildings of the Sanctuary of Nostra Senyora de Cura now stand. In the land distribution subsequent to the Catalonian conquest, the Castle corresponded to the Order of the Templar Knights. The pre-Talayotic tombs of the Puig de Son Reus (Puig) are the first archaeological ruins which indicate man’s existence in the Renowned as great hydraulic engineers, the Muslims placed major emphasis on this task and created major irrigation zones, which were vitally important for the development of the local agriculture. In this sense, Algaida is the zone with the 69 Algaida municipality. The Archaeological sites of the Talayotic Age (1400 – 123 B.C.) are relatively numerous and important, where we highlight Sa Serra – Punxuat, sa Casa Nova de Pina, can Felet, and Son Coll. Pla de Mallorca The Municipality of Algaida, with an extension of 87.61 km2 and a population of 4.943 inhabitants (2008 census data), is bordered by Palma, Santa Eugènia, Sencelles, Lloret, and Montuïri. Algaida Historical References >> Pla de Mallorca_Algaida >> Parish Church of St. Peter and St. Paul >> Algaida_Points of Interest >> The Sanctuary of Nostra Senyora de Cura During the 16th – 17th Centuries, the population basically consisted of day labourers who worked other people’s lands. The most valuable possessions were Rafalet, Albenya, Punxuat, Castellitx, Formiguera (Son Mesquida), etc. The segregation process of these large land possessions was very important because this facilitated the creation of many small land-owners. Since the end of the 18th Century to date, the municipality has undergone a profound transformation in reference to its demographic structure, property, economy, political power, mentality, and the urban layout. >> Gordiolas Glass >> Glass-Making Process 71 Pla de Mallorca As a result of the Catalonian conquest, the new settlers quickly built a church, which in 1249, is already mentioned as the Church of Castellitx in the Papal Bull by Pope Innocence IV; today it is one of the three Churches of the repopulation which is conserved in Mallorca. Since the end of the 13th Century, the municipality’s scattered population began to concentrate in diverse points and Algaida became the main city centre. While some locations such as Pina and Randa maintained concentrated populations others such as Castellitx and es Rafalet disappeared. Algaida greatest density of “qanats” (irrigation tunnels) and this is due to the shallow water capture depth in the solid rock zone of Randa. With its subterranean route of 299.89 metres, the tunnel of Son Reus de Randa is the longest Qanat in Mallorca. a Bisbe r Ca tir e ód rer ig M 2 2 5 6 n 7 Cavalle rs 78 8 9 1 8 Ron Nou 9 da de 7 Mig er d carr jorn el S 6 ol 017 a maj s Bas Lluc a it i s’Er Ma-5 de r Cab or 5 del Sol ura Ma 1 er atge Colom t pe m Ca de 3 1 1 t Pass 1 a M 2 Ro 3 pe m Ca rs or nd ni to An lle j ig Migd ura l mp Ca C va ia a arg Am r ana Re des et p am Ca di a ata Be Unió Sa Placeta me rto Ba Sa Plaça 4 i Re Aigua eri nt ra be sia o uP ver lco jar glè lo 2 Sit L ta i Cos Ca Es nA u re Pa 4 Joa lm ta rrin Algaida r Pa a Roc La b Palma 10 11 1 3 1 2 Església parroquial de Sant Pere i Sant Pau Creu del Colomer Pou del Colomer Molí d’en Xina Molí d’en Pau Molí d’en Bosso Molí d’en Falconer Molí d’en Boi Molí de n’Andreu Molí de s’Aljub Antiga Parròquia de Castellitx Bodega can Majoral S’Hostal d’Algaida Restaurant Ca’l Dimoni Restaurant Es 4 vents Restaurant Binicomprat Agroturisme Binicomprat Finca Raïms Hotel de interior Museu de Vidre de Gordiola Points of Interest Parish Church of St. Peter and St. Paul (Església Parroquial de Sant Pere i Sant Pau) The origins of the Parish Church are due to the transfer of the administrative and religious capital which was carried out around 1435, from Catellitx to the old farmhouse of Algaida. The current temple with its Gothic style and Baroque touches was built on a previous site in the 16th and 17th centuries. In the 18th Century, other major works were executed such as the construction of the chapel, Capella del Roser, promoted by the Rector of Algaida, Francesc Togores (1742 – 1771). The main façade has a wall divided by three lines of voussoir; the large Gothic doorway has an Ogive arch with two archivolts which enclose the tympanum and it contains an image of the Virgin Mary. Higher up, there is a rectangular window and a Rose window. The façade’s crown is a multi-lined church wall in a Baroque style topped with a Cross. The belfry ascends on the façade’s right side, with a square shape, five sections, and crown; the fifth section has two semi-circular arches on each side. The interior has a single nave divided into six sections, with groined vault roof and gallery in the access zone, with a segmental arch and groined vault roof, with the coat of arms of Algaida (a tower) in the keystone. There are six chapels on the sides with semi-circular arch and groined vault ceiling. The transversal arch which separates the nave’s presbytery is a round vault and has two coats of arms. The lower section of the nave’s vertical wall has a baseboard with floor tiles which dates back to the refurbishment in 1788 and the upper section has six Gothic semi-circular arch windows, the third and fourth on the right with stained glass. The major altarpiece is a large scale Baroque work with five levels and three sections, four paintings in the predella and thirteen images in the remainder. The image of the Mare de Déu de la Mamella (in the centre of the second section) is a Gothic marble sculpture and she is the Patron Saint of stone masons. There is an image of Christ in the attic. The chapels on the left (or the Gospel) side are: dedicated respectively to Santa Catalina Tomás, to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, the deep Chapel (dedicated to the Mare de Déu del Roser), Sant Crist de la Sang, and l’Assumpta. The chapels on the right (or the Epistles) side are: the first Chapel contains a large entrance door with segmental arch which is connected to the belfry and has a Baptism font. It is followed by the chapels of the Immaculate Virgin Mary, Sant Sebastián, the fourth space corresponds to the side doorway, the chapels of Sant Antoni Abat and Sant Joan Bautista. Since recent years, it conserves the Gothic Altarpiece of Sant Pere and Sant Pau from the Church of Castellitx. Algaida 15 da r Can ra be Ri Roca Quartera ada a uet anq Sa T 10 e erg eV aM Quarter 3 Pla de Mallorca 11 73 ueta Sa Tan q ets ort sH del Ca 1 tg Me via ós Arb >> Algaida_Points of Interest m to Son e íd ió ac st s’E Pla de Mallorca 2 Au í de Cam 9 9 8 >> Algaida_Points of Interest The windmill, molí d’en Xina, was built in 1738 and is a typical flour windmill. It has a base with barrel vault roof and circular tower with a conical canopy and antennas, and has a lintel doorway. >> The Colomer Cross Other flour windmills include: Molí de s’Aljub (C/ de la Tanqueta), Molí de n’Andreu (C/ dels Cavallers), Molí d’en Boi (C/ Nou), Molí d’en Bosso (C/ de Cabrit i Bassa – C/ del Sol), and Molí d’en Falconer or can Mulet (C/ de Colomar). The Colomer Cross (Creu del Colomer) (C/ del Colomer, 3) This cross was built in 1578 and 1579 and has a Renaissance style. It is made of sandstone and has an octagonal base with five steps. The stem is cylindrical and two sections can be distinguished in the capital: There is floral decoration in the lower section, and it is possible to distinguish images of different Saints and the town’s Coat of Arms in the upper octagonal section. On one side, the Cross displays the relief sculpture of a crucified Christ with the representation of Mary Magdalena at his feet, two Saints at the ends of his arms, and a pelican, a Eucharistic symbol in the column head; on the other side, there is a relief sculpture of the Virgin Mary. >> Parish Church of la Immaculada i del Beat Ramon Llull >> The Xina Windmill The well, Pou del Colomer, is next to the Cross; it is also made of sandstone with a rectangular curbstone and four square sections which support a pyramidal roof. Randa Parish Church of la Inmaculada Ramon Llull (Església Parroquial de la Immaculada i del Beat Ramon Llull) It was built in the years from 1765 to 1770 and became a Parish Church in 1913. The façade has a lintel doorway and a niche with the image of the Beatified Ramon Llull in the entablature and a Rose window with multi-coloured stained glass. The Belfry is on the right, with five sections, balcony, and tower with windows and a dome crown. The interior with a barrel vault roof has four chapels on the left side and three chapels on the right. Note the splendid Sant Josep chapel with its late Baroque altarpiece thanks to the patronage of the Sastre d’Estahacar family. The Capella del Sagrari (Tabernacle Chapel) with the Morell d’Albenya coat of arms has an image of the Inmaculada (Immaculate Virgin Mary) from the 16th Century. The main altar with its Baroque style is presided by the image of Ramon Llull. The Sacristy, a groined vault ceiling, conserves the canvass which formerly presided the main altar with scenes from the life of Ramon Llull as well as the portrait of the chronicler and provost, Guillem Terrassa. Algaida The Xina Windmill (Molí d’en Xina) The Algaida town conserves a total of seventeen flour windmills; they represent the village’s typical image as expressed by the Archduke Luis Salvador: «Algaida se’ns mostra envoltada de molins (Algaida is enclosed by windmills)». These buildings normally have a base which serves as the windmill terrace and the antennas have been lost. 75 Pla de Mallorca_Algaida Pla de Mallorca >> >> Algaida_Points of Interest r Majo lP de are Mu r na de M a id 30 31 a- u ne Si A a lg 12 2 13 4 2 3 32 4 31 1 uïri ïri de M de l’ 1 Esg lésia 12 de 2 de sa amon Ll ull de R a31 3 de 1 The Cross of Randa, in this same street, also known as “Coremer” (Lent Preacher) dates back to 1846. The obverse upper section of the cross portrays a sculpted Christ facing Southwest, while the reverse side, facing Northeast, is a relief of the Immaculate Virgin Mary with the figure of Ramon Llull who worships her; there are also reliefs that depict the Passion of Christ. It has a base in the form of four steps which enclose the stem. reu n era sp l’E 5 C sa t de eu n Si 3 ça 0 Fo nt 13 2 3 4 31 3 32 4 2 des Puig Sa Plaça ontu mo Ra de sa Fon d de sc ors dad e nc Fra e M nt ança sper l’E 3 4 1 5 The Sanctuary of Our Lady of Cura (Santuari de la Nostra Senyora de Cura) In 1449, the Catalonian Llull follower, Pere Joan Llobet, restored the Chapel of the Mare de Déu de Randa, established by Ramon Llull, and founded the Llullian Art School which disappeared in 1460 following his death. Around 1502 within the environment created based on General Study, which founded the School of Mt. Randa, subsequently the School of Cura (which was active until 1826), jointly with the ancient Chapel of the Mare de Déu de Randa (due to its fame for healing diseases which the image had acquired, which was known as the Mare de Déu de Cura or the “Virgin of Healing” since the 16th Century). At the beginning of the 20th Century, the Bishop Pere Joan Campins restored the old Sanctuary and in 1913, it was occupied by the Franciscan Tertiary order. In 1955, the image of the Virgin was officially crowned by the Pope. A large lintel doorway provides access to the Sanctuary premises. The lintel head has an inscription of a verse from Ramon Llull’s work, Blanquerna. “Amable fill, saluda Nostra Dona, qui és salut e benedicció nostra”(Beloved son, greet our Holy Virgin, who is our health and blessing.). The portal arch displays the initials IHS (Jesus, the Saviour of Men) and the inscription, “Omnia in nomine Dni Iesus Chisti facite”(Do everything in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ). Inside the temple, we find a large platform. Monk cells enclose the patio on the left side, while the religious buildings have been erected on the right: Church, Monastery, and School; there is a barrestaurant further inside. The Grammar classroom is located beyond the Monastery doorway, which now serves as the Sanctuary Museum. Several floor tiles indicate that it dates back to the beginning of the 17th century and housed the Grammar School which was called the Cura School. At present, it contains the Sanctuary’s bibliographic collection with manuscript works, valuable museum objects which include paintings, Algaida s Mont l lul nL id àc n à mi Sa Nou 2 del sG erm 2 ans Fun 1 ic a Da de nt Sa or de d’en Ribes Església parroquial de s de la Immaculada da a ai Llull i del beat Ramon g l -A Font de Randa or Creu de aj Randa de cm 8 Cova l’Es lu 5del glé 4 01 LBeat sia Llull aRamon M El Cocó del Corb Celler de Randa Restaurant Cas Beato Hotel restaurant Es Recó de Randa Santuari de Gràcia Santuari de Sant Honorat Santuari de Nostra Senyora de Cura Museu del Santuari de Cura br Fà Sa aj Pl de M s ibe 4 ta à d nR rre Vile mi e es Pa Randa res sE g d’e Cura sa Da o Randa Montuiri del C nt at ss Pa Algaida eme u e Sa jor Algaida ntiri Palma de Ma G or r 4 The Randa Fountain and the Municipal Cross (Font de Randa i Creu de Terme) The fountain consists of a qanat from the Islamic era. It is found on the road which ascends to Cura (with sections of the old stone path), with the village washing places on the side. These washing places have a porch with three semi-circular arches and the washer’s slabs enclose the entire perimeter. Outside the porch, a large basin collects the water from the fountain. A document dated 1551 has been conserved about it, signed by the Deputy Lieutenant of the Kingdom of Mallorca which regulates the water distribution turns among the Randa residents. Pla de Mallorca u 3 B 2 Església parroquial de Sant Cosme i Sant Damià Convent de les Franciscanes Creu de Pina Font de Pina So n 1 77 Pina Pina Pla de Mallorca Pla de Mallorca_Algaida e >> The Church has a façade with an angular church wall, crowned by a steeple with a semi-circular arch and three buttresses crowned by a cross on the South side. Located to the right of the presbytery, there is the entrance to the chapel of the Mare de Déu de Cura, where the first room houses the Christ image, from the Sant Domingo Monastery of Palma dated in the 17th Century; it was conserved in the Albenya housing estates until 1861, when Josep Morell i Esteva, owner of the possession, donated it to the Sanctuary of Cura. The image of the Virgin Mary has a late Gothic style which has been dated in early 16th century, made of Santanyí stone and she is shown with the Baby Jesus in one hand and a flower in the other. >> The Sanctuary of Nostra Senyora de Cura >> Ramon Llull Statue >> The Randa Fountain and Wash-basins >> The Sanctuary of St. Honoratus The Corb Summit (Cocó del Corb) Since 1491 (when it was first documented) and until 1616, the blessing of the Mallorquin agricultural fields was performed on this mountain summit, a site locally known as “Cocó del Corb” (currently next to the telecommunication installations). This ceremony was carried out in accordance with the Jurats de la Ciutat (Sworn Oaths of the City) and the Kingdom of Mallorca with the Capítol de la Seu, on the third Easter Sunday with the aim to assure that all the fruit and vegetable crops planted in Mallorca would have a good harvest. The Beatified Ramon Llull Cave (Cova del Beat Ramon Llull) is located nearby the Sanctuary doorway. According to tradition, Ramon Llull spent his spiritual retreats in this humble cave. This is how the “Mata Escrita” (Writing Bush) legend was created, according to which the Illuminated Doctor’s philosophical system was supernaturally revealed to him by means of a bush with written characters on its leaves. Another tradition has recorded the appearance of a crucified Jesus in this site. In 1275, Ramon Llull placed an altar dedicated to the Virgin Mary in this cave which was later named Nostra Senyora de Randa (Our Lady of Randa). The cave was partially destroyed in the 18th century. A stone marker and the image of Ramon Llull were placed here in 1933, but it was savagely mutilated a few years ago. The Sanctuary of St. Honoratus (Santuari de Sant Honorat) This Sanctuary was founded by the hermit and priest, Arnau Desbrull, in 1394 and three years later, its hermitage chapel had already been blessed. In 1763, its ownership was transferred to the Hermitages of Sant Pau and Sant Antoni. In 1890, the priest, Joaquim Rosselló, retired there, who a few months later founded the congregation of the Missioners dels Sagrats Cors (Sacred Heart Missionaries). Since 1915, this congregation has established its novitiates there. The platform which configures the entrance is spacious and asphalted. On the Western side, there is a vertical façade which seals the Sanctuary, dated in 1888, with two doorways with semi-circular vaulted arches, a small water-break moulding as an archivolt and a cross which crowns the two doorways. The left doorway leads to 79 furniture, and liturgical items, as well as a collection of “goigs” (religious Couplets) dedicated to Ramon Llull. Algaida >> Algaida_Points of Interest Pla de Mallorca_Algaida Pla de Mallorca >> >> Algaida_Points of Interest The Church was concluded in 1661. The main façade has a moulded lintel doorway crowned by a niche with the image of Sant Honorat, two lateral Coats of Arms of the Tagamanent and Amar families, and a Gothic inscription, recovered from the Early Christian Church dated in 1397. The Temple has a rectangular floor plan with three sections, barrel vault ceiling with half-moon windows, three lateral chapels, and a gallery with a groined vault ceiling in the entry zone, as well as a Presbytery with square floor plan. To the left, there is the confessional, the Mare de Déu del Roser and the image of the Christ of the Hermits, from the 14th century, while on the right, there is the Mare de Déu de Lorda, the chapel of Santa Margalida Maria d’Alacoque and the Chapel of the Sacred Hearts. The main altarpiece, dated in 1928, has disappeared and currently a stone wall houses three niches with the images of Sant Honorat, Ramon Llull, and the Beatified Francesc Palau. To the left of the Presbytery, there is a small chapel with a segmental arch which contains the image of the Mare de Déu de Lluc. Its interior contains the congregation rooms and the “oratori” (oratory) of the Beatified Francesc Palau, a small chapel with the >> Franciscan Convent >> Parish Church of St. Cosmas and St. Damian image of the Mare de Déu del Carmen and the Mare de Déu de la Empanada, a work from the mid 20th Century. Higher up, there is an impressive viewpoint, with spectacular panoramic scenery. Pina Parish Church of St. Cosmas and St. Damian (Església Parroquial de Sant Cosme i Sant Damià) The works began in 1853 with the collaboration of the property developer and the citizens of Pina, the “piners”. The new Church was blessed in 1858, and placed under the divine protection of the Holy Doctors: Sant Cosme and Sant Damián and the Mare de Déu de la Salut (Virgin of Health). From 1859 to 1875, the Temple’s interior was decorated according to the iconographic program designed and supervised by the Priest Gabriel Mariano Ribes de Pina. The Temple has had the category of Parish Church since 1935. The façade has a lintel doorway with a triangular pediment, a Rose window above, and as church wall, a pediment topped with a cross; on the sides, two belfries have been erected, respectively crowned by Sant Cosme and Sant Damián. The Classic style interior, inspired by Italian models, is a single nave with three sections, and a barrel vault ceiling with half-moon windows. It has two interconnected lateral chapels, a transept with Algaida the Church and the right doorway provides access to the Sanctuary Caretaker office, with the image of Ramon Llull in the tympanum. We can also observe four small windows with semi-circular arch and a blind arcade with semi-circular arches in the upper section. Between the doorways, there is a ceramic ceiling dated in 1976, which represents the Church’s Patron Saint. 81 Pla de Mallorca_Algaida Pla de Mallorca >> A lintel doorway connects to a small foyer where there are three doorways; the left one provides access to the Entrance Hall, with an outstanding pictorial decoration, such as a portrait of the Founder, Monsignor Gabriel M. Ribes. On the right, a rectangular patio contains the sculpture of Sant Francesc blessing Friar Lleó. >> The Pina Fountain The Pina Fountain (Font de Pina) (C/ de Sineu) This fountain was probably excavated during the Islamic period and played a major role in the creation of this city centre. Next to it, under a porch with arches, there are several washing places with ten stone basins. The fountain is a “qanat” or irrigation tunnel, which still fully conserves a dry stone gallery and the flat slab roof which shelters the route. Following the Catalonian conquest, a direct access was made to the mother well with a large stairway which reaches the two basins into which the well water flows. The excess water from the basins spills through a lateral conduit until it rejoins the original drainage canal of the qanat. Outside, the system is completed by a series of basins, which must have served as a trough and several ponds. The surplus water flows along a semi-circular 83 Franciscan Convent (Convent de les Franciscanes) (C/ Germans Fundadors, 1) In 1856, the Priest Marià Ribes de Pina and his sister, Josepa Maria, founded the Congregation: Filles de la Misericòrdia (Sisters of Mercy), which quickly spread to other locations in Mallorca. The Early Christian Convent was located inside the islet of the Church and in 1891, a new building was built which was connected to the old convent by means of a bridge. The Chapel was inaugurated in 1924; it was designed by the architect, Francesc Ferrer Moragues. The Convent is considered to be the Congregation’s headquarters and was a novitiate’s house from 1862 until the 1980’s decade. The chapel has a façade with an Ogive arch doorway, with the Franciscan Coat of Arms in the typanum, a Rose window, three small windows, and crowned with a steeple. The interior defines a nave with a rectangular floor plan, with a coffered wood ceiling in the nave, and extending beams in the Presbytery and gallery buttressed by a skene arch. The Presbytery has an entrance by means of a semicircular transversal arch, and in the background, a niche contains the “Sagrari” (Tabernacle), with a sculptured relief of the “Sagrada Familia” (Holy Family) and Sant Francesc by the sculptor, Oliver. To the right, there is a sculpture of the Mare de Déu de la Inmaculada, and on two sides, Ogive arch stained glass windows; to the left, the Sacristy doorway opens with a NeoGothic convex moulding. Below the gallery, there is a sculpture of Sant Francesc. Pla de Mallorca dome and quadrangular Apse in the Presbytery. The pictorial decoration is primarily inspired by the Virgin Mary, with a clearly didactic intention, with paintings on the walls, the vault, the dome, and the arms of the transept, where the chapels also portray monographic subjects (Christ, Sant Francesc, Santa Catalina Tomás, Sant Antoni Abad, Sant Josep, and the Puríssima). The majority of the frescos are works by Vicenç Mates, although other artists also collaborated such as Salvador Torres, Melcior Umbert, and Bartomeu Bordoy. Algaida >> Algaida_Points of Interest >> Algaida_Points of Interest Next to the entrance to the fountain premises, there is the “Creu de Terme” or Pina Municipal Border Cross, dated in 1903 with a NeoGothic Style made of sandstone and limestone. There are two inscriptions of Christ (IHS and PX) and the Coat of Arms of Pina (a pine tree and the letters, “NA”); beside it, there is a hackberry tree and the entrance to the gardens has a segmental arch and an ornamental homage to Dr. W. Mendel dated 1988; a path with a pergola provides access to this patio. Castellitx The Latin origin with the Mozarabic suffix with the place name “Castellitx” suggests a city centre or defense fortification (castellum) in the age of Roman domination. During the Muslim period, a farmhouse was established and in the distribution of the island lands, it corresponded to the Knight, Ferran Peris de Pina. In 1300, Castellitx was proclaimed a village by the Ordinances of King Jaume II, however, during the 15th Century, the better geographic location of the neighbouring town, Algaida, determined the population’s migration to Algaida, as well as its category of a municipality. In the 17th Century, we have documented records that the Pujol de >> Castellitx >> Oratory of Castellitx Castellitx family were the main land-owners in this village. At the end of the 19th century, the Coll family, from can Barra d’Or, acquired the majority of its area, and gave their name to this possession, which is currently known by its traditional name and its nickname, Castellitx d’en Barra d’Or. Oratory of Castellitx (Oratori de Castellitx) The Church of the Mare de Déu de la Pau of Castellitx dates back to the 13th Century and it appears as a Parish Church in the Papal Bull by Pope Innocence IV in 1248, although its patron Saint is Sant Pere (St. Peter). Upon the population’s migration to Algaida, it lost the category of Parish Church, and in 1466, it appears as a Suffragan Church of the Parish Church of Algaida. The Oratory has a segmental doorway which provides access to a rectangular porch with a wood roof supported by a polygonal pillar. The access to the interior is carried out by a semi-circular vaulted arch with a diamond-point archivolt in the Romanic tradition. The Temple has nave with a rectangular floor plan divided into two sections by a diaphragm arch and transversal wood beam roof supported by a large longitudinal main beam. The third section houses the presbytery built in the 18th century, with a barrel vault ceiling. The old Gothic Altarpiece dedicated to Sant Pere and Sant Pau from the 14th-15th Century is conserved in the Parish Church of Algaida. Currently, the Presbytery is presided by the seated image of the Mare de Déu de la Pau dated approx. 1430, with a Baby Jesus in her arms. A steeple with a bell extends from the exterior roof with its two layers of roof tiles. Algaida vaulted sewer made of fitted stone which also drains the floods from the Torrentera (rainwater) channel. The entire complex conserves the stone road. The moisture from this fountain has populated the environment of this village with lush vegetation. 85 Pla de Mallorca_Algaida Pla de Mallorca >> >> Pla de Mallorca_Ariany Pla de Mallorca 87 Ariany Ariany Historical References >> Scenic overview of Ariany The Municipality of Ariany has an extension of 24 km2 and a population of 810 inhabitants (2008 census data). It is bordered by the Municipalities of Maria de la Salut, Santa Margalida, Petra, and Sineu. Book (“Llibre del Repartiment”) of Mallorca (1232), with the name of Arian. The origin of the place name is unknown, nevertheless, the philologist, Joan Coromines, defends the theory that it involves some Pre-Roman name. Ariany adopted the name of an Arabic farmhouse which appeared documented in the Royal Property Distribution Agriculture and cattle have practically been the only main economic activities of the village. This secular dedication is the The Municipality has catalogued approximately thirty archaeological sites, which were declared Assets of Cultural Interest in 1966. Among others, we highlight the Cave of Sa Canova, discovered after the detonation of an explosive charge. Dated in the Bronze Age, the Talayotic village of Calderitx was used as a place of residence and defence and the funeral cave of Son Nivorra from the PreTalayotic Age. Likewise in Son Bacs, we can also mention the existence of series of archaeological ruins as well as a set of caves from the PreTalayotic Age and in ses Comunes, there is a manmade funeral cave from the same period as the others. >> Windmill: Molí d’en Marinero There are no building ruins from the Roman period, despite the fact that ceramic fragments have been found in the Talayot sites. There are also no ruins or buildings from the Muslim age, but there is evidence of their population in these locations due to the numerous ceramic artefacts discovered, above all in Calderitx. The plot divisions began in the 14th Century. Due to the ownership changes, the recognized rights of the settlers of Ariany were eliminated and they initiated persistent demands. The references to Ariany in the 15th Century continue to mention establishments, sales, executions of wills, etc. Here, >> The Good Well we can highlight the grant which King Alfons from Barcelona granted to his loyal subject, Jordi de Sant Joan, who awarded him with the civil jurisdiction of honour over Ariany, which he already possessed in an Allodial Title. In 1518, the Knights of Ariany were the Magnificent Berenguer Vivot and his wife, Joana de Sant Joan. In 1647, the Knights were Lady Francisca Sureda i Vivot, the wife of Jeroni de Sant Joan. It subsequently passed to Jordi de Sant Joan and in 1669, to Magdalena Sureda by cession from Lady Francesca de Sant Joan i Fuster, the wife of Jordi de Sant Joan. From her, it passed to the Contoner family due to her marriage with Francesc Cotoner. In 1717, King Felip V de Borbó (King Philip V) granted the title of Marquis of Ariany to Marc Antoni Cotoner i Sureda, the successor of his mother, who brought the image of the Mare de Déu de Atotxa from Madrid (1744) which became the Patron Saint of the temple upon its arrival. On 12th of August 1980, an enactment proposal was submitted concerning the potential segregation of the Petra Municipality in relation to Ariany. The response from the Town Council was favourable and it requested the Town Council of Petra to create a mixed commission to establish the grounds of an agreement. The project was approved in the Town Council of Petra on the 7th of July 1981. The definitive approval of the independence was published in the Boletín Oficial del Estado (Official Gazette of the Spanish State) on the date of 30th of July 1982. 89 key to this landscape and the life of this village, with large cultivated areas, wells, and windmills. Ariany >> Ariany_Historical References Pla de Mallorca_Ariany Pla de Mallorca >> Be re eg rn nt Be nt Po n Porve ir tí Molins ar al Lluna Molins el Gu Miqu Pare Menorca Menorca M ol in s l Gual Pare Miq ue Plaça l a nir Plaça d e s'Au berg Sol Unió Porve - Petra at lM 41 de h Ma-33 2 3 d’Ariany sa p Jose os Sineu m t loc M eu Cr Plaça Major Sant ajo Bil dó Lla r ta rn yo o et ia 4 Sol Parish Church of the Virgin Mary of Atocha (Església Parroquial de la Mare de Déu d’Atotxa) The first Oratory of Ariany, which was already built in 1570 in the possession of Pere de Vivot, Lord of Ariany, was dedicated to the Mare de Déu de les Neus (Virgin of Snow). In 1717, following the appointment of Marc Antoni Cotoner as Marquis of Ariany, he arranged the construction of a new church which was completed in 1737. They had to destroy the old chapel in order to build the new temple in the same plot. This new Church was an imitation of the San Antonio de los Portugueses Church in Madrid with an oval floor plan. The image which presides the temple is dedicated to the Mare de Déu de Atotxa from Madrid, which arrived in the village 1744, as a gift from the Marquis. However, the building had many defects as witnessed by Jeroni de Berard in 1789 and shortly after was in danger of falling into ruins. The current temple was built in the beginning of the 19th Century and consecrated in 1818. The transept, presbytery, and belfry were added between 1908 and 1911. The Choir and Atrium were built in 1917. For decades, the church had the category of a Vicarage, Suffragan Church of the Parish of Petra, until it obtained the category of Parish Church in 1935. The Façade has a portico with three Ogive arches and above them, a Rose window and balustrade. There is a main lintel doorway with grooved doorposts at the end of the Atrium. On the left, a 14 5 The interior has a Latin Cross floor plan, with three lateral chapels and a transept with two transversal arms, as well as the Presbytery. It has a barrel vault ceiling in the nave, arms, and presbytery, and we can also see an unlit solid dome in the centre of the transept. The main altarpiece is located in the Presbytery; it was brought from the old Church of Manacor and modified for its new location with three levels and two sections. The image of the Mare de Déu de Atotxa presides in the centre, flanked by the image of Sant Joan Baptista (St. John the Baptist) and Sant Sebastià (St. Sebastian). In the upper section, the most modern, there is an image of Sant Gaietà (St. Cajetan), one of the town’s Patron Saints. The main altar is not located in the Presbytery but in the vertical wall of the dome, where a large forged iron lamp is hung. The doorway of the Sacristy is located on the right of the Presbytery. On the right of the transept, an image of Christ has been conserved, a wood sculpture by the sculptor, Gayà (in 1985), with stairs for the veneration of the image and a stained glass window of the Ascension. To the left, we see a lateral doorway and a stained glass which represents the Carpentry of Sant Josep (St. Joseph). The three chapels on the right are respectively dedicated to the Mare de Déu Ariany Po Tru m ar Pie Esperança Unió Da rà Fo 1 r ajo M Lla s M dó Lla dó a tx o At sú Je es 14 a qu ar 21 lid M 20 F tle 5 à or Be 4 o un Br 3 Lla re 2 Església parroquial de la Mare de Déu d’Atotxa La Rectoría L’Alberg S’Aljub El pou Bo Molí d’en Marinero Molí d’en Rigo Restaurant Ses Torres dó ot At o et 20 ar xa r M Pa a ús s Je ga 1 F m Da nt ne to Co Sa à or stone marker records Monsignor Martí Truyols, the Parish vicar and ecclesiastical administrator (1905-1942). On the left, there is a small undecorated lintel doorway, and a belfry with five square sections, the last one with two semi-circular arches per side. 91 at 21 í art Ariany l ga Re Palma s sú Je rd No re eg al st Vi Points of Interest dó Lla rà Fo lM yo Tru Pla de Mallorca >> Ariany_Points of Interest rà Fo Pla de Mallorca al st Vi with one floor, a large semi-circular vaulted arch doorway opens. To the left of it, there is a wall with a doorway which connects to the interior in the form of a corral. On the left of the corral, there are the ruins of an old winepress and a wine cellar with a barrel vault ceiling. The main doorway with stone doorjambs is connected to an old patio space, which practically no longer exists with a small house that was subsequently added The Rectory and the Church Square (Rectoria i Plaça de l’Església) The Rectory located on the right of the Temple has a façade with two floors and a lintel doorway. On the right, at the beginning of the street: carrer de la Pietat, there is vaulted arch doorway with an image of the Virgin in the upper doorway. Part of the Camí dels Marquessos d’Ariany (Marchioness Road) crosses in front of the house, which, according to tradition, extended to Son Sureda de Manacor; it now connects the Son Gibert road or the Petra motorway. In front of the Rectory and the Temple, there is a beautiful Plaça in the form of a landscaped platform with a splendid view over the Pla area to the mountain of Randa. It is called the Mirador de Sa Creu (viewpoint) due to the Neo-Romanic type Cross that was built here with a sculpted relief of Christ and capitals decorated with Angels. The cross was donated by Gabriel Mateu in 1970. In front of it, there is a rebuilt semi-circular arch doorway. >> L’Alberg Farm House >> The Rectory and the Church Square L’Alberg This house, which today has been heavily modified, was the centre of the old farmhouse of Ariany. The main façade, located near the Church Plaça, has one section on the right with two floors with a lintel doorway, a small buttress on the left of the doorway, and two windows with sills on the first floor. Further to the left, in the section The Cistern (S’Aljub) Located in the Village square, it is a 19th Century building which collected the water from the majority of the village streets. It is made of sandstone with a rectangular floor plan and a large vault roof. The troughs for cattle were conserved until the mid 20th Century and a curbstone where the water was extracted for human consumption. It has an 80,000 litre capacity. The Good Well (Pou Bo) This is a perfect example of the traditional hydraulic system, located on the right of the Petra Motorway, when departing from Ariany. Built in the middle of a small platform, the curbstone is made of sandstone and has a rectangular section with doorjambs that form a design with four semi-circular arches, one on each side. It has a deep interior with masonry walls. 93 >> Parish Church of the Virgin Mary of Atocha del Roser, the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Puríssima Concepció. On the left, there is the Mare de Déu del Carme, Sant Josep, and Sant Antoni Abat. In the angle located between the last chapel and the left side of the transept, there is a stone pulpit. The Baptism font is located to the left of the main doorway and there is an organ built in the section above the atrium in the choir which was built by Antoni Cardell in 1927. Ariany >> Ariany_Points of Interest Pla de Mallorca_Ariany Pla de Mallorca >> >> Pla de Mallorca_Costitx The place name of Costitx was already documented in the Royal Property Distribution Book (“Llibre del Repartiment”) of Mallorca (1232): it is derived from the Latin word: “costa” and the suffix: “-icium” (pronounced “ic” by the Arabs), and indicated the geographical location of the ancient farmhouse, attached to the mountainside. The Costitx Municipality has always been devoted to agriculture on a practically exclusive basis. There are many >> Scenic overview of Costitx valuable architectural ruins from this activity, such as the buildings used to collect or use water, windmills, or possessions’ estate houses On the other hand, Costitx is also famous due to the bull head sculptures discovered over one hundred years ago in Son Corró. These bronze sculptures, which represent the maximum expression of bull worship in Mallorca during the final Talayotic period, were subsequently transferred to the Archaeological Museum of Madrid. Nevertheless, the “costitxers” citizens have demanded these archaeological jewels to be returned to their place of origin. Additional archaeological ruins have also been found, since proportionally, it is one of the villages of Mallorca with the greatest number of archaeological sites per square kilometre. 95 Costitx is one of the smallest Municipalities of Pla de Mallorca; it has an extension of 15.4 km2 and a population of 1,035 inhabitants (2008 census data). It is bordered by the Municipalities of Inca, Sineu, Lloret de Vistalegre, and Sencelles. Pla de Mallorca Historical References Costitx Costitx >> Costitx_Historical Costitx_Points of Interest References Pla de Mallorca_Costitx There is a lack of information about the Muslim age, but we can highlight the discoveries of ceramic artefacts, the construction of wells, as well as extensive cultivation and cattle-raising lands. In the Repartiment (Royal Property Distribution) following the Conquest, it corresponded to Viscount of Bearn, Gastó de Montcada, who ceded the farmhouse of Costitx to the Knight, Arnau de Santacília. In the 17th Century, the urban development of the town was perfectly defined. In 1789, Jeroni de Berard mentions that it had more than 13 streets, several of them discontinuous, and two large Plaças with a total of 219 houses. Based on the Constitution of Cadiz in 1812, the village achieved its first independence in relation to Sencelles and Joan Vallespir –Dalmau- was the first Constitutional mayor. However, upon the Constitution’s abolition in 1814, Costitx lost its independence and again depended on Sencelles. On 4th of February 1858, Queen Isabel II dictated a Royal Order in which she granted municipal independence to the town of Costitx. In the religious sphere, the full independence of Costitx took place in 1913, when the old vicarage became a Parish church. >> Costitx Square 97 >> Windmill: Molí d’en Romaguera Costitx They are scattered in different sites and surround the current city centre and permit the study of different typologies. We highlight the Sanctuary of Son Corró, the navetes (megalithic stone monuments) of Turassot des Metge or the Talayot ruins of Son Vispó. Pla de Mallorca >> >> Costitx_Points of Interest ans d e la C aritat iró Plaça del Jardí 1 8 Portell ada Marg Rec o alida 5 Ramon Bo Seba stià 1 2 3 a rig r Ga 4 5 Església parroquial de la Nativitat de Nostra Senyora Casa de na Margalida Cativa Antiga casa d’Arnau de Santacília Posada de Son Vispó Son Jordi 6 7 8 9 10 11 iga l INCA - SINEU Ma-3241 2 e Sant Penya Plaça de la Mare de Déu Ca ses Monges Can Alenyar Ca s’Hereu Casa Consistorial S’Aljub Capelleta de la Mare de Déu 2 3 10 11 3 4 Poblat d’Es Turassot Santuari de Son Corró Molí d’en Bubó Molí d’en Romaguera L’Observatori Astronòmic de Mallorca Museu de Ciències Naturals Parish Church of the Nativity of Our Lady (Església Parroquial de la Nativitat de Nostra Senyora) In 1236, the Parish Church of Santa Maria de Canarrossa was built in the farmhouse of Costitx, next to the houses of Arnau de Santacília. However, since it was located in the Northeast end of the district, in 1238, it lost the Parish category in benefit of the Sant Pere Church of Sencelles. Even so, Arnau de Santacília managed to maintain the temple of Costitx as an Oratory with religious services twice a week. In 1672, the Vicarage in capite of Costitx was created. The current temple was begun in 1696 and finished in 1772. Between 1775 and 1779, the sculptor Bartomeu Picornell created the old major altarpiece. In 1913, the Vicarage achieved the category of Parish church. The façade is a smooth wall with large lintel doorway and doorjambs in the form of grooved pilasters. In the arcade, there is a niche which houses an image of the Virgin Mary. Higher up, we see a sundial and a bell-shaped skylight. The Church wall has no decoration and marks the drop of the corridors. The belfry extends in the top on the left or Gospel (Evangeli) side in two square sections as well as a crown with a lancet arch on each side and finished with three pyramidal sections. The interior has a nave with a rectangular floor plan divided into five sections with barrel vault ceiling with sealed half-moon windows. The Presbytery has a barrel vault ceiling in the first section and a quarter sphere ceiling in the second section. The main altarpiece, dated 1961, has a classical style and four Mallorcan Jasp columns and a pediment on a semi-circular arch which opens into a chapel which contains the image of the Mare de Déu de Costitx, a seated multi-coloured Gothic sculpture. On the left of the Presbytery, there is also the tomb of Margalida Amengual Campaner (1888-1919). Above, there is a canvas of the Flight to Egypt and on the right wall, another painting of Santa Rosa and the Virgin. In the upper section of the transversal arch which separates the nave’s presbytery, there is a cornice with a sculptured relief of the Virgin and the date 1701, the arch’s construction date. The Sacristy is located on the right of the Presbytery; it has two sections of groin vaulted ceiling and helicoidal ribs, while on the left, a room serves as the entry for the chapel stairway. It contains a small Mannerist altarpiece of the Mare de Déu del Roser by Francesc Vallespir, with a painting of the Patron Saint Virgin delivering the Rosary to Sant Domingo and Santa Catalina de Sena; surrounding this scene, there are twelve medallions with the Costitx Pau 9 6 7 a Llun Ga rr u 4 Joan M Germ Sor Maria de 4 Sol na Ca ps d 2 10 a cíli nta Sa Cativa 3 jor Ma Rafel Horrach Ma-3121 11 Ar 3 e ud Camí de sa Sínia s Sencelle Ponent Son Ramón 3 11 Estrella Vent ns Points of Interest 99 cre Costitx u Llull Moli Palma Pla de Mallorca La 10 Re i Ja um eI Pla de Mallorca >> Costitx_Points of Interest >> Margalida Cativa House The Choir contains an organ from the Church of Sant Jaume (St. James) de Palma which was installed in this location in 1835 and restored in 1987. The chapels on the left or the Gospel (Evangeli) side are: The Baptism chapel, with the stone baptism font with pyramidal wood font-cover; the Sacred Heart of Jesus chapel; the third space contains the lateral doorway, with an altarpiece relocated in the upper section, and a medallion of a Bishop Saint; the Sant Llop chapel with a reused altarpiece with an anagram of the Virgin Mary and symbols of Immaculada (Immaculate Conception); the Sant Josep Chapel, in a Baroque altarpiece with an image of the Assumption of the Virgin, from the 18th Century in the predella and a scene from Sant Jaume in the Battle of Clavijo in the attic. The chapels on the right or Epistles side are: the first contains the Choir stairway; the Sant Antoni Abat chapel; the Sant Crist chapel without altarpiece and a Rose window with the date 1967; the Sant Sebastià chapel with an image of the Patron Saint in a niche; and the Mare de Déu del Roser chapel with its image. >> Old Arnau de Santacília House >> Parish Church of the Nativity of Our Lady Margalida Cativa House (Casa de na Margalida Cativa) Behind the church, in the street with the same name, there is the house where Margalida Amengual Campaner –Cativa- (18881919), where this venerable woman of Costitx lived and died. The Town Council declared her to be an Illustrious Daughter of the Town in 1988. (To visit this house, contact Ca ses Monges). C/ Sol, 3. Tel. 971 513 142). Through the one-piece lintel gate, one enters a small patio where we find the main façade with two floors and lintel doorway. In the small scale interior, we view a room where keepsakes and photographs of Margalida are conserved. To the left, there is the stairway to the first floor and a small doorway which leads to her room, with a bed with marquetry inlay work and a small niche in the wall which conserves the image of the Immaculate Conception. To the left of the door, there is stone marker with the following inscription: “Aquí visqué la servent de Déu Margalida Amengual Cativa de l’edat de cinc anys (1893) fins a morir (1919)” [Here lived God’s Servant, Margalida Amengual Cativa from the age of five (1893) until her death (1919)]. There is also a bust of Margalida Cativa, who died with the fame of sainthood. Old Arnau de Santacília House (Antiga casa d’Arnau de Santacília) (C/ d’Arnau de Santacilia, 23) This house is located at num. 23 of the street dedicated to this person and the neighbouring houses. The centre of the Farmhouse Costitx mysteries of the Rosary, completed with three from the predella. It also conserves a Baroque canvass with the episode from the Trobada de la Mare de Déu (Encounter with the Virgin), which formerly covered the rotation of the niche with the Virgin Mary image. 101 Pla de Mallorca_Costitx Pla de Mallorca >> >> Costitx_Points of Interest >> Can Alenyar House >> Son Jordi Possession >> The Cistern: S’Aljub Can Alenyar (Plaça des Jardí, 21) This house has a height of two floors and a main lintel door, with two windows on each side. On the first floor, there is a total of five arches with a balcony over the doorway. In the upper section, there is a large entrance door with an upper balustrade. Son Vispó Inn (Posada de Son Vispó) (C/ de Jaume I, 8) This inn has a façade with three floors and main door has a semicircular arch with three spans on each floor. In 1865, it was the property of Miquel Amengual; Son Vispó, a possession in which this house was an inn, it had a surface area of 98 “quarterades”, the largest possession of the Municipality. Ca s’Hereu (Plaça des Jardí, 23) The house has a height of three floors with three lintel doorways on the ground floor. In the first floor, there are also three arches, two balcony windows on the sides and a balcony in the centre, and in the attic on the second floor, there are three rectangular windows. Son Jordi Son Jordi was originally a house from a possession located South of the village and which is now integrated in the urban city centre, near the Inca and Sineu motorway. Jordi was the nickname of the property owners, the Ferragut family. The Estims (Property Estimates) of 1685 recognized the possessió (possession) of Son Jordi, property of Bartomeu Ferragut and was valued at 2,200 sterling pounds. In 1865, it was the property of Francesc Cabot and the property had a surface area of 42 “quarterades”. Town Council Building (Casa Consistorial) Built in the Plaça de la Mare de Déu, it has three floors and a lintel doorway. It was purchased by the Town Council by María Gil for a price of 1,000 sterling pounds in 1866. The Cistern (S’Aljub) (C/ Major) This water tank with rectangular section and barrel vault roof dates back to 1886. It served as the water supply for human consumption and also as a trough for animals. In the upper section, Costitx >> Town Council Building 103 The façade with two floors has a platform in front of it decorated with a mulberry tree. There are two modern lintel doorways in it, with a curbstone attached to a wall with semi-circular section and a niche on top, between them. There is a balcony with two doors on the first floor. The interior, recently refurbished, has a patio with another square curbstone, with a cornice with the date 1642. Convent (Ca ses Monges) (C/ del Sol, 3) It is located at the end of the street near the Convent alley. The façade has three floors, a doorway with segmental arch, quadrangular windows, and a steeple. Pla de Mallorca of Costitx was located here during the Islamic Age, and was purchased in 1458 by Bernat de Berga. >> Costitx_Points of Interest The chapel, built in 1913, has a square section with a stone pedestal which contains the inscription: “Arrom alcalde, Vidal vicario, 1913” (Arrom was Mayor, Vidal was Vicar, 1913). The upper section made of sandstone contains a niche with an image of the Virgin Mary. The church wall is a moulding with two slopes crowned by a cross. The “Processó de la Trobada” (The Procession of the Encounter), which celebrates the “Diumenge de l’Àngel” (Sunday after Easter), takes place at night and consists in transferring the image of the Mare de Déu de Costitx from the Parish temple to the location where tradition states that the appearance took place in the 13th >> Astronomical Observatory of Mallorca According to Víctor Guerrero: “The Sanctuary is one of the typical buildings of religious architecture from the Talayotic culture (Late Bronze /Iron Age) of Mallorca. It involves a building with a square or slightly rectangular floor plan, with slightly differentiated axis, without internal subdivisions, which means it was a single room”. The rear wall can be of diverse types, which may be an apse or straight wall. It involved isolated buildings without additions, which were located in the villages or near their ceremonial areas. The sanctuaries may seem isolated, “without the company of other prestigious buildings, although naturally, they are territorially related with the nearby inhabited population centres. This was the case of Son Mas and the neighbouring village of Son Ferrandell Based on the re-excavation, new bronze artefacts have been discovered and they have consolidated the walls that comprised the rectangular floor plan in the North/Northeast zone. Six columns in two parallel rows of three each have been rebuilt; this was one of the main points of controversy, since the archaelogists failed to agree as to whether the site was a roofed or unroofed structure and whether the columns where distributed in a regular or irregular way (as shown in the sketch by B. Ferro in 1895). The interior space of the Sanctuary has a surface area of 84.5 m2. The Astronomical Observatory of Mallorca (Observatori Astronòmic de Mallorca) The Astronomical Observatory of Mallorca (OAM), located in the street: Carrer de l’Observatori s/n, was inaugurated in 1991 and aims to promote astronomic research. This Centre is integrated within the network of observatories of the Astrophysicist Studies Group and follows the guidelines of the observation processes of the Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias (Astrophysics Institute of the Canary Islands). It also has the objectives of communication and education of Astronomy among students and interested people. Costitx Talayotic Sanctuary of Son Corró (Santuari Talaiòtic de Son Corró) The sanctuary is located at the height of Km 2.800 of the Sencelles motorway to Costitx. In 1894, Joan Vallespir de can Pere Pina, the owner of the Son Corró property, discovered two bronze bull heads. The Societat Arqueològica Lul·liana (Llullian Archaeological Society) attempted to excavate the site and requested the purchase of these artefacts by the local institutions, however they were acquired and taken to the National Archaeological Museum of Madrid. In 1995, the monument was excavated again and the central pillars were rebuilt; a very controversial operation. (Valldemossa), or Son Corró… which was assuredly related to the nearby village of Pujol… The Holy Places were not arbitrarily selected. Man was limited to ‘discovering them’ based on revealing signs or omens, which according to different cultures, could adopt many diverse forms” (Guerrero, V.: Revista de Arqueología (Archaeology Magazine), num. 178. February 1996). 105 >> Chapel of the Virgin Mary Chapel of the Virgin Mary (Capelleta de la Mare de Déu) (C/ Major) Located at the end of the street, there is the place which tradition records as the site where the image of the Virgin was discovered. According to this legend, several boys with a priest discovered the image in a pomegranate tree shortly after 1229. The Costitxer citizens decided to build a chapel which later became the first Parish Church of Canarrossa. Several years later, due to the Parish’s transfer to Sencelles, the image was also transferred, but like all Virgin Mary legends in Mallorca, it disappeared to return to its original chapel in Costitx. Century. The image is carried by the young men who will get married during that year. Pla de Mallorca there are two square curbstones and sandstone branches. Two stone channels exit from the lower zone of the doorjambs which convey water to a corresponding basin, also made of stone. Pla de Mallorca_Lloret de Vistalegre Lloret de Vistalegre Lloret de Vistalegre The Municipality of Lloret de Vistalegre, located in the central part of the Pla district, has an extension of 17.4 km2 and a population of 1,366 inhabitants (2008 census data). It is bordered by Costitx, Sineu, Sant Joan, Montuïri, Algaida, and Sencelles. The Municipality’s place name is the result of an evolution and substitution process of names which were already documented in the 13th Century. After the Catalonian conquest (1229), the Islamic name of the Benigalip farmhouse was replaced by the Catalan name of Manresa. Between 1578 and 1600, this name was substituted by the name of “Llorito” (derived from the Italian “Loreto”), implanted by the >> Scenic overview of Lloret de Vistalegre 107 Historical References founding of a Franciscan Monastery with a Chapel dedicated to the Mare de Déu de Loreto, and its official place name until 1924. In 1925, with the definitive municipal segregation of Sineu, it adopted the name of Lloret de Vista Alegre and in 2000, it approved its official name of Vistalegre. Although even nowadays, the name of Llorito is still alive among the local population. The dedication to agriculture has historically been Lloret’s primary activity, although it is currently undergoing the same recession in this sector as other locations. In homage to the people who work the fields and the most abundant fruit from the Lloret lands, the Festa del Sequer (Fig-Drying Festival) is Pla de Mallorca >> >> Pla de Mallorca_Lloret de Vistalegre >> Lloret de Vistalegre_Historical References In the 18th century, the population was approximately 500 inhabitants. In 1924, the long process of the municipal separation from Sineu, which had begun the previous century, finally concluded. This coincided with the maximum population period of Llorito (1,200 inhabitants). >> Parish Church of the Virgin Mary of Loreto 109 The different Arabic farmhouses which were located inside the current Municipality of Lloret were distributed by King Jaume I among his collaborators, conserving the allodial titles. One of them was Benigalip, which corresponded to Ponç Olzet and to five knights from Manresa, which has been called Manresa since then. In the 14th Century, it began to be divided and to stand out among the neighbouring farmhouses. In the 16th Century, it consisted of 20 families and the city centre continued to grow with the establishment of the Monastery, Nostra Senyora de Loreto (Our Lady of Loreto). Pla de Mallorca In Lloret, a continual occupation has been documented since the ancient Bronze Age (1700 – 1300 B.C.), with evidence of occupation in funeral caves such as the ones in d’en Deinat, can Brines or the forest of Son Joan Arnau. During the Talayotic period (1300 – 123 B.C.), the enduring structural ruins allow us to consider an intense occupation. We highlight the following sites: sa Pleta de Son Gelabert d’Alt, ses Talaies, and es Clapers. Lloret de Vistalegre celebrated (first Saturday of September). The figs and the ethnological elements which encompass the agricultural production are the star components of this holiday. 4 Ctr sa Riba 5 6 Plaça de Jaume I 7 des Vent 9 4 señora de Manresa 4 7 1 Ma-3 30 9 Pina 8 15 16 5 Points of Interest Camí de sa Font Ctra. de Sineu Josep Maria Jordà 15 3 de s'Arracó Paradís 5 8 2 Ramon Llull Plaça de la Esglèsia e sV de 6 1 Ctra. de Sineu nt 16 5 Lloret de Vistalegre 3 111 eS ine u Lloret de Vistalegre Església parroquial de la Mare de Déu de Loreto Casa Consistorial (antic Convent dels Dominics) Creu des Pou Es Pou Pou de Jurà Son Joan Arnau Molí d’en Nina Molí d’en Beato Molí d’en Poleo Restaurant Es Pou Restaurant Finca Son Bauló Agroturisme Sa Rota d’en Palerm Parish Church of the Virgin Mary of Loreto (Esglèsia Parroquial de la Mare de Déu de Loreto) The origin of the current temple comes from the Franciscan Monastery which was founded in the old farmhouse of Manresa in 1551, who initiated the worship of the Mare de Déu de Loreto. The Franciscan Monastery was consolidated and in 1566, it passed to the Dominican Order, who placed the first stone of the current church in the year 1591. In 1757, work began on the present-day belfry. As a result of the “Desamortizació” (seizure and sale of church property) of 1835, the Dominican Order was expelled and abandoned the Monastery; the Monastery premises became State property, and starting from 1924, they became Town Council Buildings. The Church passed to the Bishopric and in 1913, it became a Parish church. The façade is located in front of an elevated embankment in relation to the street level. It is divided into three sections based on two lines of horizontal voussoir. The doorway has a large semi-circular arch, which contains the insertion properly speaking of the lintel with entablature joined with the cornice and the branches in the form of grooved pilasters; the tympanum shows the Coat of Arms of the Dominicans, and there are pyramids with balls on the sides. In the upper section, there is a circular skylight and further left, a mechanical clock. The church wall is a straight-lined moulding. Pla de Mallorca Sin eu - 2 a. d Palma 1 Ma -3 de Son Pere Pla de Mallorca >> Lloret de Vistalegre_Points of Interest Mo 130 ntu ïri 4 The interior consists of one floor with a single nave with four sections of barrel vault ceiling and four lateral chapels. The core galley is at the foot of the temple, buttressed by a segmental arch and groined vault, which contains the organ, enlarged by the Cardell brothers in 1892. The Presbytery has a rectangular floor plan, with the Mesquida Coat of Arms in the middle of the vault. The main altarpiece is Baroque from the beginning of the 17th Century, with three levels, centralized by the image of the Mare de Déu de Loreto, and a sculpture of Sant Domingo in the upper section. The lateral levels display canvasses with various saints. The predella features paintings of Sant Tomàs and Sant Robert. The chapels on the left or the Gospel side are: The Chapel of Sant Sebastià, under the gallery, with an altarpiece without gold finish with the image of the Patron Saint and the Coat of Arms of Font i Roig in the vault keystone; Chapel of Sant Antoni, within a Baroque altarpiece; the third space houses the lateral doorway; the Chapel of Crist, with the image of a small Baroque altarpiece, with a little open chapel in the right wall, where there is a helicoidal moulding and an octagonal baptism font, with a very prominent pyramidal cover. >> Windmill: Molí d’en Beato The chapels on the right or Epistles side are: Chapel of Sant Josep, with a profusely decorated Baroque altarpiece; Chapel of the Mare de Déu del Roser, with a Baroque image of the Patron Saint, created by Gregori Herrera Mateu; the deep chapel, dedicated to the Puríssima Concepció within a Neo-Rococo altarpiece expanded in the year 1900, with the first section of barrel vault roof and the second section of dome roof with lantern; Chapel of Sacred Heart of Jesus, with the Predella of the old altarpiece of Sant Joan. The Sacristy, on the right of the Presbytery, has a rectangular antechamber with a barrel vault ceiling and lintel doorway on the right which connects to a patio, which contains two segmental arches with traditional Ionic style columns which are the ruins of an old Dominican cloister. The Sacristy specifically speaking has an intersecting barrel vault roof, whose vault keystone has the Dominican Coat of Arms; it contains diverse objects such as the remains of a Gothic altarpiece and basin for washing hands. Town Council Building (Old Dominican Monastery) [Casa Consistorial] (Antic Convent dels Dominics) On the right side of the Church, there is the building which is the current Town Council; it originates from a section of the former Dominican Monastery buildings, which were seized and sold in 1835. This intensively refurbished building has a façade with four floors. The main lintel doorway opens on the left side into a small space located next to the Church Belfry. 113 Located on the right of the façade, the belfry has a square design and five sections, two of which extend from the Temple façade. The fourth section has a sealed semi-circular arch on each side and the fifth has a terrace with balustrade and an opening with a semicircular arch on each side. The finish has the form of a Baroque canopy, with mouldings and skylights. Lloret de Vistalegre >> Lloret de Vistalegre_Points of Interest Pla de Mallorca _Lloret de Vistalegre Pla de Mallorca >> Pla de Mallorca_Lloret de Vistalegre >> Lloret de Vistalegre_Points of Interest The cross built in 1884 was rebuilt with the remains of a previous cross from the 16th Century. The arms of the cross and the zone between them have floral decorations. Beside it, there is a sculpture relief of the Crucifixion, while the Mare de Déu de Loreto is visible on the reverse side. The Windmill (Es Molins) Like many of the villages in the Pla district, the flour windmills represent one of the most important elements in the surroundings of the city centre. The zone called Es Molins contain the village’s two major windmills: can Beato and the can Poleo or can Gomila. Both date back to the 17th Century, they have a tower; there is not a base-residence but there is a platform, and they conserve a >> The Well Lower Well (Pou de Jurà) It is located in the old road of Inca or Son Gelabert, next to the intersection with the Son Joan Arnau road. Its name is derived from the word: “jussà”, which means “inferior or lower”. The interior is an elliptic section with wall. The curbstone is a rectangular section with sandstone and solid stone, and the doorjambs are two sandstone pillars. On the side, there is a total of six basins which were formerly used as a water trough for animals. Son Joan Arnau This possessió (possession) was the former Benidurri farmhouse, documented in the Royal Property Distribution Book, Llibre del Repartiment, (1232), and corresponded to Guillem Arnau, whose descendant gave the property its name. A Joan Arnau appears in 1451, during the Revolt called “Aixecament Forà” as a Government delegate in Sineu. According to J.M. Bover, the first member of the Arnau family to establish residence in the Sineu town was Ponç Arnau, who participated in the Conquest of 1229. In the 5th generation, Pere Arnau executed his will in 1473 and founded a feudal estate on the Son Marrón property. At the beginning of the 16th Century, the Arnau estate was divided into three parts: One part of Son Joan Arnau, a property which passed to the Despuig family in the 17th Century; one part of Arnau de Binitareg, which was passed on to Joan Arnau de Pacs (succeeded by the Costa family and Joan Trujols del Mercat family); and the part of the Arnau de Son Marrón, which passed to the Figueres family and the Ferrer de Sant Jordi family. In the first half of the 17th Century, Joan Despuig i Despuig purchased the property of Son Joan Arnau from the last land-owner of the Arnau lineage. In 1656, this new owner left the property as a dowry to the Dominican Nuns Convent of Santa Catalina de Sena, founded in Palma in 1658. Shortly before in 1652, the houses were used as a “llatzaret” (Leper’s Hospital) for the plague victims. In 1818, it belonged to the Convent of Santa Catalina de Sena; it then had large houses, with chapel, wine cellar, and animal-driven mill. The seizure and sale laws of Mendizábal expelled the nuns from the Convent and expropriated their property, which included the possession of Son Joan Arnau. In 1862, it belonged to the Shipowner and Merchant, Ignasi Fuster. The Fuster estate was inherited by the Aguiló “Cera” (Wax) family. In 1900, it belonged to Joan Aguiló Valentí and in 1953, it was owned by Joan Aguiló Aguiló. At present, it belongs to the Coll family which was purchased by Josep Coll in 1987. In the houses of Son Joan Arnau in 1706, Jacint Montserrat Fontanet Llabrés was born when his parents were tenants of the property; he was an exemplary “payés” (peasant), author of a work titled Lloret de Vistalegre >> Town Council Building The Well and the Well Cross (Pou and Creu des Pou) They are located in the confluence of the Sineu and the Costa des Pou motorways. Es Pou (Public Well in the centre of the village) possibly dates back to the Islamic Age, although it was documented for the first time in 1581. It has a square curbstone and a roof in the form of a small tiled porch buttressed by four pillars. An inscription records its restoration in 1999: “In medio majoricae adestis. Anno Sancto MXCXCIX”. sandstone spiral staircase. The first was documented in 1627; it has a lintel doorway with the cross of Sant Antoni and the date 1797. The can Poleo windmill is documented in 1675 and was the property of Pere Picornell. There was a third windmill, can Company (C/ Major, 58), but it was demolished. 115 The Monastery building dates back to the second half of the 17th Century, when the Dominicans expanded the existing premises; a cloister was added in the 18th Century. In 1835, the building was sold except for one wing and the hallway adjacent to the cloister. Pla de Mallorca >> Pla de Mallorca_Lloret de Vistalegre >> Lloret de Vistalegre_Points of Interest The main doorway connects to the entrance hall, with beam roof; on the right, there is a moulded lintel doorway which connects to the Chapel with a groined vault roof, which contains a metal image of the Immaculada (Virgin of Immaculate Conception), a reliquary of Sant Josep and a painting of the Sagrada Familia (Holy Family). From the Entrance Hall, a segmental arch provides entry to the patio or “clastra” with square floor plan, enclosed by segmental arches buttressed by rectangular pillars and slab floor; in the first floor, >> Lower Well To the left of the houses, there is a curious Casa de les Nines (Doll House) with miniatures, built in 1884. Lloret de Vistalegre The façade of the houses were built in front of a platform and have three floors, with two different construction blocks, the highest on the right, which constitutes an authentic fortified tower. In the block on the left, a visitor’s doorway opens with segmental arch, with the Despuig Coat of Arms on the right, which was transferred from the sleeping quarters. The right block, the tower has a square floor plan; it has a front vertical wall grooved by three lines of voussoir and a crown in the form of a balustrade. In its ground floor, there is a doorway with semi-circular arch, enclosed by a dust-cover, which was formerly the entrance to the Chapel. In the first floor, above the doorway, there is the Arnau Coat of Arms, a boat or ship, with an inscription which displays the monogram for Jesus (IHS). In the first and second floor, there is a restored mullioned window, protected by a small cornice. there are rows of windows with semi-circular arches. The centre is occupied by two octagonal well curbstones, once which bears an iron plaque with the date 1873, with the initials: IF (Ignasi Fuster). On the right, a semi-circular arch provides access to the grain-barn, divided in six sections, the last of which is located under the tower, with entry by a diaphragm arch. 117 L’art de Conró (1747), designer of the Massanella channel (1750) and according to tradition, the inventor of the “carretó de batre”, a threshing machine. He died in Mancor in 1762. Pla de Mallorca >> >> Pla de Mallorca_Llubí Llubí Based on the interpretations of Joan Coromines and Josep Mascaró Passarius, the place name of Castell-Llubí (which subsequently evolved into Llubí), arose from the abbreviation of rahal Aben-Lubi, which is mentioned in the Royal Property Distribution Book, Llibre del Repartiment de Mallorca (1232). Consequently, it involves a place name with a Mozarabic or Arabic place name. In the Islamic Age, it formed a part of the Muruh district and the current village occupied the lands of the Aben-Lubi farmhouse. In the Royal Distribution or Repartiment, it corresponded to Count Hugo de Ampurias, who ceded the current Llubí territory to the Sant Feliu Abbey of Guíxols, Bernat de Riparia. The place >> Scenic overview of Llubí In 1836, Llubí obtained its definitive separation from Muro. The “Arxiduc” (Archduke Luis Salvador of Austria) briefly described the village around 1885: “Llubí has 1,676 inhabitants and 511 houses, 18 of them deserted, 18 with two floors and the remainder with one, all modest, with semi-circular arch and small windows with sills. In the small Plaça de la Constitució (Constitution Square), note the presence of a new building with two floors which is attached to the Church”. 119 name, Castel Llubí, was documented for the first time in 1389. In reference to this name, tradition records the existence of an Islamic castle in the village, however, the word, aben, can also be confused with the term hasn or hisn which means castle. In 1789, Jeroni de Berard says: “The Muro village, 3000 steps to the West, has a suffragan location called Castell Llubí, divided into two portions of population which is only divided by a small valley, and the other village is distinguished with the name of Son Ramis which contains 122 houses”. Pla de Mallorca The Municipality of Llubí has an 35 km2 extension and a population of 2,356 inhabitants (2008 census data). It is bordered by the Municipalities of Sa Pobla, Muro, Santa Margalida, Maria de la Salut, Sineu, and Inca. Llubí Historical References >> Llubí_Points of Interest n or sF de M ar rid sta rica Co ga al Vid u ne 2 Si c lan nB de 8 8 16 17 11 6 Plaça de Son Ramis 18 al í rn Bo Sta Margalida 5 ol M 6 8 7 Arrav m Ca o in 5 15 a 3 eter Carr 7 Roca Llisa ó rer a. la Pes de 6 de la 17 6 7 8 7 Església parroquial de Sant Feliu de Llubí Can Bò Creu de Son Ramis Creu de Son Rafal Son Torrens Vinagrella Son Ramon Molí d’en Blanc Molí de Son Rafal Molí de can Suau Molí des Cós Ermita del Sant Crist del Remei Poblat talaiòtic des Racons Restaurant Sa Taparera Can Pericó Restaurant i Petit Hotel Hotel can Bagot Agroturisme Sa Casa Rotja Points of Interest Parish Church of St. Felix of Llubí (Església Parroquial de Sant Feliu de Llubí) The first news of a Chapel in Llubí date back to 1297, under the jurisdiction of the Benedictine Abbey of Sant Feliu de Guíxols and with Sant Feliu and Sant Pere as the Patron Saints. Starting from the 14th Century, Sant Feliu became its sole Patron Saint. The current temple was built between 1570 and 1650, and expanded between 1870 and 1896. In 1629, the Oratory was built in the Vicarage in capite, the Suffragan Church of the Muro Parish. The Eucharistic reserve was installed in 1660. Around 1885, according to the “Arxiduc” (Archduke Luis Salvador of Austria), expansion works were executed with the addition of the Presbytery and the two chapels near it. They were concluded in 1895, when the Sacristy was finished. In 1913, it achieved the category of Parish, with Monsignor Gabriel Tomàs Siquier as the first rector. In 1934, the Chapel Capella del Roser was expanded. The façade has an undecorated wall, with lintel doorway and upper skylight. The gable has a flat finish with straight-lined moulding. We observe a Coat of Arms of the Descatlar, Alvarez de Zamudio, and Pont i Campfullós families, which were located in the interior in the transversal arch of the Presbytery until the end of the 19th Century. To the left of the façade, there is a belfry with square section and six floors, the fifth with a semi-circular arch on each side, and the sixth with a lancet arch window on each side and a pinnacle in each angle. It is crowned by a pyramidal structure with a NeoGothic style from the early 20th Century. The interior has a floor plan with a single nave with barrel vault roof with seven lateral chapels. At the foot, the choir gallery is located with segmental arch, groined vault ceiling, and balustrade. The Baroque main altarpiece is located in the Presbytery with three levels separated by Corinthian columns with the image of the Patron Saint, Sant Feliu, in the central level, the image of Sant Pau on the left and Sant Antoni on the right, both dated in 1790. In the upper section, there is a painting of Sant Pere. The chapels on the left or the Gospel side are: the Baptism chapel, under the gallery; the chapel of Mare de Déu de l’Amor Diví, with an image of Sant Andreu in the attic (Patron Saint of this chapel in 1789) and the Virgin of Assumption in a lower urn which can be dated in the 18th Century; the deep chapel with hexagonal floor plan and dome, without lantern dedicated to the Mare de Déu del Roser, with four small altarpieces and San Dominguito de Val (a Boy crucified by the Jews, with a Holy Trinity Cross) to the right of the entrance; the Chapel of Sant Josep, in a classical style; Chapel of the Mare de Déu de la Salut, with the Coat of Arms of Sureda (or the Moragues, according to Berard) in the ceiling; the Chapel of the Llubí a Roca Llisa a l Pes eria 4 a St d aig Des Camino de sa Pov 3 C ar ret er Car eD de 17 ua aig es Fàb tre Mes de ll era ua de la 1 2 doi Bor Co t Plaça de la cartretera rret de la Ca Son nat l de s Cò u Ferrer 17 Son doi Bor No s relló Maria Pe Ber Traginer u 15 de la Farinera ca 18 Traginers I - In 4 Jaume ma iquel Sber Pal Metge M Av. de Son Marget 6 ing r Flem Carreró Docto No Plaça de Molí de Son Rafal Tomás Rector 16 1 reu 6 Roc a Lli s San la C de Plaça de de la esglèsia Creu 121 ple Am rer de la liu t Fe 440 Ma-3441 reu de la C Llubí Palma Inca Muro Pla de Mallorca C ar Pla de Mallorca Ma-3 Torrente de Son Marget o de Vinagrella 11 >> Llubí_Points of Interest The chapels on the right or Epistles (or Epístola) side are: Chapel of Sant Antoni de Padua, under the gallery; Chapel de les Ànimes, with a Christ figure; Chapel of the Mare de Déu del Carme, a classical work with a painting of Sant Bonaventura (1221-74); the Chapel of the Mare de Déu dels Àngels, with the Ramis Coat of Arms in the vault keystone and two lateral paintings; the Chapel de la Immaculada, with a Neo-Baroque style; the lateral doorway; and the last chapel is Sant Marçal in a Baroque style with the image of the Patron Saint, a Solomonic column on each side with a medallion with the Presentation in the attic. >> Can Suau Windmill On the right of the Presbytery, a lintel doorway leads to the Sacristy with a square floor plan, with two sections of segmental groined vault ceiling and a central arch with the date of 1895. In its interior, we can observe different elements such as a wash basin, a monstrance, and diverse bowls, or several paintings. The organ located in the choir gallery dates back to the 17th Century and is indistinctly attributed to the organists, Sebastià Caimari and Gabriel Tomàs. >> Son Rafal Windmill Son Rafal Cross and Windmill (Creu i molí de Son Rafal) (Plaça de Son Rafal) The Cross has a Baroque style made of sandstone with an octagonal stem, and we can still observe the date 1680. The capital, also >> l’Arraval Street >> Parish Church of St. Felix of Llubí octagonal, has eight figures of Saints in a poorly conserved state. In ancient times, this site was used for the blessing of the crops and fruits; its site was changed in 1957. The flour windmill of Son Rafal has a base-residence, which is still in use and a circular-section tower. It has been used most recently as a mill for noodles. Can Suau Windmill (Molí de can Suau) (C/ de la Creu) The windmill of can Suau (or d’en Suau) is a flour windmill type, with a square base-residence, with two floors, an interior spiral stairway, and the main doorway with a semi-circular vaulted arch. In the façade above the doorway, there is a stairway with 27 steps fitted with completely irregular stones, which served as access to the windmill terrace. The tower has a lintel doorway and sandstone doorjambs; old machinery has been conserved in its interior. In December 2000, the Govern de les Illes Balears (Regional Government of the Balearic Islands) purchased the windmill from Antoni Perelló and recently refurbished it to host cultural activities, tourist information office, and indigenous local products. Other flour windmills in the Llubí municipality are the windmills of can Corbera (in the Son Barquet road), the windmill: des Cós, located on the Inca motorway, and the windmills: can Ferragut, d’en Moronell, can Serra, can Jovet, can Riera, and can Mareu. Llubí Sacred Heart; and the Chapel of the Mare de Déu dels Dolors, with Sant Miquel in the attic. 123 Pla de Mallorca_Llubí Pla de Mallorca >> >> Llubí_Points of Interest In the house known as can Bo (C/de sa Costa, 80), it conserves the Ramis family Coat of Arms. This may have been the Family’s Ancestral Home which has given its name to the neighbourhood. In Carrer des Born street, we also highlight the house called Son Esquerrà. The house known as can Ramis, is located in the street: carrer des Born; it has two floors and a doorway with semi-circular arch. >> Son Ramis Cross Son Torrens Behind Son Ramis, the s’Arraval neighbourhood is located, and on the right, there are the Houses of Son Torrens which have now been integrated in the city centre. In 1865, Son Torrens was the property of the Isabel and Margalida Torrens sisters, and it had a surface area of 211 “quarterades”. The houses of this possession had a façade with two floors, a semi-circular vaulted doorway and a large entry doorway to the left. We can highlight the sundial on the left side of the second floor and the curbstone >> Son Torrens Possession >> Des Racons Talayot of the well. In the interior with two corridors separated by a segmental arch, it conserves a niche with an image of the Virgin Mary of August. Racons Talayot Site (Talaiot des Racons) By the carrer de Sineu, we reach the old road from Llubí to Sineu. Just over a kilometre outside the village, we can perfectly see on the right, a Talayot site behind a hill, partially covered by a holm-oak wood, and crowned by Indian Fig Opuntia cactus and wild olive trees. This talayot represents one of the island’s most fascinating sites. It has a doorway in good condition which faces 160º Southeast, with an enormous lintel and interior corridor. In the holm-oak wood zone, the exterior vertical wall extends to a height of 5 metres with large stone blocks which create a magnificent effect viewed from the shade of the forest. Its interior is full of small stones. Another talayot can be seen on the left of the road, which in this case is also covered by wild olive trees and only partially visible. Approximately 100 metres, there is the windmill house: d’en Blanc, with its windmill tower. Shortly prior to arriving, one can see another set of ruins in a small depression which extends to the right. In the stone walls, you can view several Talayotic walls and further to the rear and covered by vegetation, the ruins of two other Talayots, one with a circular floor plan and the other with a square floor plan. The latter has a perfectly square fitted stones, which are highly uniform. It is possible that this complex and the first two Talayots formed part of the same city, which consisted of a village and its religious temple. Llubí Son Ramis The Son Ramis neighbourhood represents the oldest city centre of Llubí, with narrow streets and traditional houses. From the historical city centre, we highlight the streets: Arraval and de sa Costa. In the streets: carrer del Born and passeig de la Riba, we highlight the Cross of Son Ramis, dated in 1686, with a circular conical-trunk base, octagonal stem, and the Ramis Coat of Arms. The capital, also octagonal, has little chapels with Saints. The Cross itself has images of Christ on the Cross and the Virgin Mary. 125 Pla de Mallorca_Llubí Pla de Mallorca >> >> Llubí_Points of Interest >> Holy Christ Hermitage Holy Christ Hermitage (Ermita del Sant Crist del Remei) The Oratory’s complete name is Sant Crist de la Salut i del Remei and it is located 1 kilometer from the Llubí city centre, near the road to the Station and the Municipality of Inca. It was built in 1896 at the initiative of the Priest Antoni Cladera Fornés, and supervised by the Master of Work, Gaspar Reynés Coll (1845-1911). It was blessed in September of that same year and sheltered hermits between 1897 and 1900. In the mid 20th Century, the dome was refurbished and the Sacristy became a Chapel with a Christ image. Architecturally, the building has a Neo-Gothic style with hexagonal floor plan and quadrangular apse. The roof is a dome with ribs, crowned by a lantern, also hexagonal; the roof exterior is tile and the lantern is crowned by a stone cross. The main doorway is a segmental arch, with a NeoGothic dust-cover crowed by a Cross and a circular skylight above it. This scheme is repeated in the two lateral segments. >> Vinagrella Possession The Patron Saint of the Oratory is well represented in a sculpture by Guillem Galmés. An image of Nostra Senyora dels Àngels is also venerated; it was sculpted in the 1970’s decade and replaced the Mare de Déu del Sagrari image which disappeared in the 1950’s. The Chapel is located in a landscaped space where the Pan-caridad (Charity Bread) ritual is celebrated on Easter Tuesday. Vinagrella The possession road starts from km 2 of the Llubí motorway to Muro. It is a wide road between stone walls. The entrance of the houses has a pyramidal-shaped crown with a ball on top, the one on the left with the Coat of Arms of the Safortesa Family and on the right, the Berga Coat of Arms, behind them, the date 1838 is visible. The Vinagrella possession was originally an Islamic farmhouse. The Vinagrella road was documented in 1247. At the end of the 13th Century, the property belonged to the Cerdà family. In 1435, Antoni Cerdà –de Vinagrella- ceded it to his son-in-law, Ramon Sot; at that time, in addition to the cultivation of cereal, grain, and pulse crops, it had also extensive holm-oak woods. In 1582, it was inheirited by Rafel de Olesa: It had houses, a wine cellar, three wine presses, and seven wine vats; it had fig, almond, and mulberry trees, vineyards, cereal, grain, and pulse crops. It also had 500 sheep and other work animals. In 1651, it belonged to the Lord Tomàs Zaforteza, a knight of the Sant Jaume de Spata Order; it had houses and an animal driven mill. Llubí The “Arxiduc” (Archduke Luis Salvador of Austria), who described the old Llubí road from Sineu, states the following: “On the right of the road, beside the house of Miquel Ramis alias Roig, there are another two talayots in bad condition. A little beyond this location, there is a fertile plain called “es Racons”, in one of its hills, sa Tanca Nova, the remains of a large amount of bones and fire fragments were discovered; and next to the aforementioned house, there are again two large burial mounds, one with large volume stone blocks with a rectangular section...Two of their sides remain in a well-conserved condition. A short distance away, there is a solitary windmill”. 127 Pla de Mallorca_Llubí Pla de Mallorca >> The façade is located in front of a large platform with a very large holmoak. It faces Southeast and has three floors. The main doorway has semi-circular stone arch, with spandrels and crowned by a shield with the Coat of Arms of Zaforteza, Olesa, Verí and Sureda families, with a lien of arms, in the middle of the Burgues and Olesa family. Above it, there is a sundial. On the left, there is a large tower with square floor plan and a hip roof; in each floor of the tower, there is a balcony window. On the left of the doorway, there is a circular skylight and two windows; there are also three windows on the right. The six windows of the first floor are balcony windows and the porch has rectangular windows. >> Son Ramon Possession The foyer has a first section with groined vault roof, with the chapel doorway on the left; its doorjambs have a floral decoration and the Zaforteza Coat of Arms; the interior has a groined vaulted ceiling and another Zaforteza Coat of Arms. Following the stairway, we ascend to the main floor. Starting with a segmental arch, there is a second section with two groined vault segments; two segmental arches buttressed by a Tuscan column, with angular base, they connect to the rectangular stone patio. In the centre, there is an octagonal curbstone crowned with forged iron. In front of the entrance, two doorways with semi-circular arch provide access to the house of the Peasant Farm-Owners, located in the North wing and dated in 1844. The wine cellar is semi-subterranean; it has a large nave with a roof buttressed by semi-circular diaphragm arches. Above it, there are several large rooms which were used to store grain. In the Northeast wing, we can see a sundial with the date of 1812. In the rear, there are two stables with segmental arches and the date of 1846. Son Ramon The possession road starts approximately from km 8.700 of the Inca motorway to Muro, on the right coming from Inca. In the main floor, we highlight the “Sala dels Tomassos” (Hall), in honour of the first Marquis: Marqués del Verger, Tomàs Zaforteza, and his successors with the same name; it conserves his portrait and his riding saddle. Other portraits include Pere de Santacília, leader of the Canamunt faction and Gabriel de Berga i Santacília, a Bourbon Monarchy supporter who died in the Port: porta del Moll de Ciutat in 1706 when fighting against the Austrian Monarchy supporters. The façade has two floors. It has a main lintel doorway and above it, there is a window with balustrade with five isolated columns and two attached pillars. The Coat of Arms has the date of 1649. Several door knockers are on four Mallorcan tiles. In its interior, we highlight the wine cellar, with five slightly buttressed diaphragm arches. It also conserves a chapel. Son Ramon was documented as Son Genovard in the 16th and 17th centuries. In the 18th Century, it also appears as Son Ramon Martorell. In 1648, Nicolau Güells bought the possession, jointly with es Caülls for the Cúria del batle de Ciutat (Curia of the Mayor of the City). En 1670, it belonged to Joan Güells and in 1720, it appears under the allodial title of Lord Francesc Gual Desmur. En 1725, it belonged to Ramon Güells Muntaner, who established one section of the property into plots with two and four “quarterades”. In 1731, the field called “Camp d’en Ramon” was segregated, which was subsequently known as Son Ramonet. En 1762, it belonged to Ramon Güells Mir and in 1792, his widow, Eufrasina Dameto Gual, sold the possession to Claudi Marcel Ripoll, who proceeded to restore the houses, in which there was a large wine cellar. In 1995, it was the property of Claudi Ferrer Marcel. 129 >> Son Mulet Possession It had olive and fig trees, vineyards, cereal/grain crops, and a garden dedicated to alfalfa, pulse, and vegetable production. It 1685, jointly with Son Sastre, its value was estimated at 16,400 sterling pounds. In 1722, it belonged to Lord Tomàs Burgues Zaforteza, Knight of the Alcàntara Order. The houses had a chapel and animal driven mill. It had a wine cellar with 11 vats and three wine presses, two made of stone and another made of wood. They had mulberry trees which fed the silk worms which were raised in the houses. As novelties in the production, we highlight the introduction of almond and caper. In 1862, it belonged to Josep Zaforteza Orlandis and with its 436 “quarterades”, it was the municipality’s most extensive possession. In 1891, Pere de Alcántara Peña made this observation: “This rural land property is notable for its country house and the crops of its various parts which make it one of the model rural land properties of the island” (Peña: Guía de la Baleares (Guide of the Balearic Islands, 293). In 1997, it belonged to the Zaforteza family. Llubí >> Llubí_Points of Interest Pla de Mallorca_Llubí Pla de Mallorca >> Maria de la Salut >> Scenic overview of Maria de la Salut 131 Historical References Maria de la Salut Pla de Mallorca_Maria de la Salut The Municipality of Maria de la Salut has a surface area of 30 km2 and a population of 2,174 inhabitants (2008 Census data). It is located between the municipalities of Santa Margalida, Muro, Llubí, Sineu, and Ariany. The Municipal’s economy like the rest of Pla de Mallorca, has evolved from an exclusively agricultural activity (until the 1960’s) to a dependence on other sectors, such as construction and services. The original place name, Maria, comes from an Arab Farmhouse which appears documented as a Knight’s estate in 1259. In reference to its etymology, the most accepted theory is from Joan Coromines, according to whom, it is derived from an Arab word which means “see, look”. The oldest archaeological sites discovered in Maria de la Salut date from the PreTalayotic Age. They include the Funeral Cave of Set Pilars and the cave of Caseta des Garriguer, both in Montblanc. On the other hand, the best conserved ruins are located in es Pujolet, which is the complex of Velar and ses Rotes Noves. Pla de Mallorca >> Between 1813 and 1836, a legislative upheaval caused María to become an independent Municipality and then it was annexed yet again to Santa Margalida, depending on the different changes in Government. Finally, it was definitively constituted as a Municipality in 1836. By Royal Decree on the date of 27th of June 1916, the words “de la Salut” were added to the name of Maria to differentiate this village from other Spanish towns. >> >> Parish Church of Maria 133 Following the Conquesta (Conquest), the María Municipality was marked by the importance of two Knights –Maria i Roqueta-, by the Barony of the conde de Ampúrias (Count of Ampurias), the Ecclesiastical portion of Bisbal and the Allodial Lord’s Estate: d’en Figuera. Pla de Mallorca From the Roman Age, we highlight the discovery of ruins from a rural settlement in sa Torre de na Gil. The ceramic artefacts from the Islamic Age is evidence of its subsequent reoccupation. Although there is not a lot of documentation about the settlements from the Muslim period, the abundant mine wells or irrigation tunnels (qanats), such as sa Gruta de Roqueta, s’hort d’en Vico or the mine spring of Son Roig, are also testimony of their presence. Maria de la Salut >> Maria de la Salut_Historical References u Ta n sa ó sell Alexandre Ros ed ’Em era pu lob sta i N Sa Es nt ra P Deulosal Co 1 3 5 342 Petra Ma-3 6 18 Església parroquial de Maria La capella fonda La Rectoria Ca l’Amo en Gaspar Escola de baix o escola de nines Molí de can Nepto 19 20 4 19 9 7 10 8 11 Points of Interest lana Alo nso at es se s Maria de la Salut a r Serr rb l de ípe 19 Co l va So s iL na Ra a l co Jun arre 6 FerrerÍa rie 2 Pla de Mallorca Maria de la Salut mt a Llu Ros ses Est rel l sa Petra Palma Co es Tem al d'en Petra Ram s ne de sa C rtà es sa Raval lull on L Plaça del Pou 19 4 Jaume Bergas M d'A Ve n dre a. St Antoni Monjó ar Molí d’en Cotó Restaurant Cas Padrí Toni Restaurant Cas Metge Monjo Petit Hotel Son Fogueró Finca Roqueta Son Roig. Hotel Casa Girasol Parish Church of Maria (Església Parroquial de Maria) The first news about the Church of Maria is dated in 1592, when an Oratory was built in the property of Son Puig; it appears that this Chapel was located in the current Rectory building. Located on the side of the temple, its cemetery or Fossar was blessed in 1677; it was active until the mid 19th Century, and its Eucharistic Reserve and Baptism font were installed in 1696. In 1740, the Church became vicarage in capite (Vicarage status), Suffragan Church of the Parish of Santa Margalida. The building of the current temple began in the second half of the 18th Century and it was concluded in 1786. Between 1856 and 1881, major expansion works were executed, based on the project by Antoni Sureda Villalonga. The Church was elevated into a Parish Church in 1913. The Virgin’s Chapel was built in 1928. The façade is a smooth wall with large lintel doorway on five steps. In the lintel, there is a niche which contains an image of the Virgin Mary by Marc Llinàs, with a sculptured relief of a cross above it and an inscription from 1876:”Nom est hic aliud ince Domini Deus Porta Coeli”. Higher up, there is a Rose Window and a smooth horizontal cornice. There is an octagonal curbstone and a rectangular basin in front of the façade platform. The lateral doorway has a moulded lintel and plant motifs, with a triangular pediment crowned by a cross; above it, there is a mechanical clock also with triangular pediment dated in 1878. Located on the left of the lintel, there is a square section Belfry and it has a crown in the shape of a bulb with an octagonal section, with an Oriental inspired style. 135 t An Q eV ega Pla de Mallorca San ana uint a lid ga ed s Nou Lop 11 Font i Ro ig lin Església ció ió ata stitu M Un 8 Sta .C Con 5 Sant Miquel eu de D Plaça de Dalt Mare Plaça des Mercat 3 1 ca Vene s 18 eu 20 Escolà de Nins r Mercat a long Villa Pina r el or Sin d'es Cuco Rota Majo a d To l 2 mà Son Puig Ge r Nou i sd u Majo Son Negre c re ne Si Major s ne cio ho Ponent eI ne ral We yle r Jaum aT 7 10 u Sine 5 Ma-3 10 >> Maria de la Salut_Points of Interest 9 >> Maria de la Salut_Points of Interest The chapels on the left or the Gospel side are: the first, under the gallery, contains an empty niche, located between two access doors to the choir; Chapel of the Mare de Déu del Carme; the >> Son Roig Possession (can Fontirroig) The chapels on the right or Epistles (or Epístola) side are: The Baptism Chapel, under the gallery with the Baptism Font and at the end, a canvass which depicts the Baptism of Christ; Chapel of Sant Antoni Abat; Chapel of the Mare de Déu dels Dolors, with an image of the Virgin Mary at the foot of the Cross in a Neo-Classical altarpiece; Chapel of the Mare de Déu del Roser, presided by an image of the Patron Saint Virgin Mary; Chapel de la Puríssima, included in a Neo-Classical altarpiece, with the Fontirroig Coat of Arms in the entablature; Chapel of Sant Josep, with a Baroque altarpiece with an image of the Patron Saint. On the left wall of this chapel, there is a lintel doorway to the Virgin Mary Chapel with a medallion of Sant Faust above it, where a small inscription reads: “patrón de los casados que desean tener hijos” (The Patron Saint of those who desire to have children). The doorway leads to a spacious foyer at the end of which there is the Chapel stairway; on the left, there is a painting of the Nativity and on the right, another painting of Sant Josep, as well as the image of a Friar which could be Sant Domingo, which was previously in the Chapel of the Puríssima. On the stairway landing, there is a painting of Sant Bernat with the Virgin’s milk. The Sacristy is a rectangular space with a section of barrel vault ceiling. The Deep Chapel (Capella Fonda) Originally it was the deep chapel of the Parish temple to which it was attached, however since 1990, it has been separate from the church and serves as a Meeting Room and Exhibition Hall. It was built in 1898 with a square floor plan, dome and lantern; the exterior has a circular section and appears crowned by a cross. The entrance from the outside is by means of a semi-circular arch doorway located beside the lateral door of the church, which was reopened in the refurbishment of 1990. There are two windows higher up. The Rectory (Rectoria) The Rectory is located on the right of the temple in a small Plaça. It has two floors with lintel doorway which has an anagram of Maria with the inscription “Añy 1760” (Year 1760). A small stone platform frames the exterior entrance in front of the doorway. The ground floor has a window on each side, while the first floor also has two windows with sill. The title of Rectory dates back to 1913, when the Church was elevated to a Parish, previously, it had the title of Vicarage Ca l’Amo en Gaspar (Plaça de Dalt, 11) Located near the Church, Ca l’Amo en Gaspar has a façade with two floors. The ground floor has a semi-circular vaulted arch doorway on three steps and a flared window on the right; on the first floor, there are two windows with sills. On the right, a wood grille connects Maria de la Salut The Presbytery, restored in 1952, is built on four steps and contains the Baroque style main altarpiece from the end of the 18th Century. It has three levels separated by four Corinthian columns, the central section presided by the image of the Mare de Déu de la Salut, installed in a rotating niche which allows her veneration in the rear chapel. The image is a multi-coloured wood sculpture from the first half of the 17th Century. On the left, we can see a painting of Sant Pere and on the right a painting of Sant Jaume. In the attic, there is canvass of Santa Margalida, crowned by the dates of 1788 and 1952, the year of its conclusion and restoration respectively. In the left wall, we highlight the ornamental tombstone of Antoni Desbrull i Sureda, who died in 1780, with its multi-coloured Coat of arms. The chapel is spacious with three windows and hand-crafted wood ceiling. On the side, there is a canvas which represents the revelation to Sant Josep. On the right wall, another painting depicts the death of Sant Josep, and there is also the ornamental tombstone of Joaquim Font de Roqueta Desbrull, previously Villalonga, Truyols i Boïl d’Arenós, who died in 1860. lateral door; Christ Chapel, without altarpiece, with a portrait of the Dominican Julià Fontiroig (1545-1613), honoured citizen of the village and co-founder of the Dominican Convent of Manacor, on the left; the pulpit is between the fourth and fifth chapel; the fifth chapel has no patron saint, only an ancient access to the deep chapel, currently separated from the nave; the Chapel del Sagrari. The Sacristy doorway is on the right with a medallion of Sant Mateu above it. 137 The Temple interior has a nave with six lateral chapels, barrel vault ceiling with lunettes and choir gallery at the foot of the temple, buttressed by a segmental arch which contains the 19th Century organ, in the middle of the balustrade. Pla de Mallorca >> Ca l’Amo en Gaspar House Pla de Mallorca_Maria de la salut >> Maria de la Salut_Points of Interest The main façade with two floors has been built at the end of an open patio. The main doorway is a semi-circular arch, with the Fontirroig Family Coat of Arms (the curbstone of a well and a fish) above it; on the first floor there is a balcony over the door, a window on the right and two windows on the right. On the left, >> Cas Metge Monjo House Cas Metge Monjo (C/ Doctor Antoni Monjo) This house, which is now a restaurant, was the residence of the famous doctor, Antoni Lluc Monjo Bunyola, who was appointed illustrious citizen of Maria de la Salut. Among other achievements, in 1928, he promoted the construction of the Public School which bears his name. The main façade has two floors, lintel doorway, and three windows on the first floor. The interior conserves traditional elements and other innovative items such as a narrow stairway. The nearby Public School, which bears the name of Antoni Lluc Monjo, and also known as s’Escola de Baix or Escola de Nines, was built in 1928, based on the project by Guillem Forteza. It has one floor and a semi-circular arch doorway sheltered by a porch buttressed by two columns and two Ionic pilasters. At the end of the foyer, there is a circular well curbstone. Cotó Windmill (Molí d’en Cotó) (C/ de ses Corbates, 27) This is a flour windmill located in the West zone of the city centre. It has a base-residence with rectangular floor plan, with embankment, masonry, and sandstone arches. The main doorway is a semi-circular arch on two steps with vaults split by a water channel. The tower has a circular section and a slightly conical-trunk vertical wall. It has Maria de la Salut Son Roig (can Fontirroig) (C/ del Venerable Font i Roig) This house was formerly the centre of a property called Son Roig, owned by a wealthy Peasant family with the Roig surname, which is a branch of the “Font” family which joined the two surnames: “Fontirroig”. The Dominican Julià Fontirroig Gibert, was born in 1545 and died in the Convent of Sant Domingo de Palma in 1613, with the fame of sainthood. In 1677, the property belonged to Joan Fontirroig i Riera de Conilles, who was appointed as a military citizen. In 1714, the house possessed a large wine cellar with stone wine vat, animal driven mill, patio, and garden. The property passed to the son, Mateu Fontirroig Sureda-Sanglada; in the next generation, it belonged to Joaquim Fontirroig i Vila del Pujol (17231781) who later passed it on to his son, Mateu Fontirroig i Nebot del Puig. The Fontirroig family subsequently vanished. At present, Son Roig belongs to the German family, Fels, who has refurbished it for its new use as an interior rural hotel. The works concluded in 2005. there is one block with two floors and a lintel doorway. The interior conserves a private chapel. 139 to the house patio. The refurbished interior conserves traditional items such as the stable mangers. It is designated for municipal use to celebrate cultural events. Pla de Mallorca >> >> Maria de la Salut_Points of Interest At the beginning of the 19th Century, major construction works were executed. At that time, it added its current doorway and the large stairway to the patio in a Palladian style. Subsequently, the property suffered from the effects of segregation. The first >> Roqueta Possession The third block of the façade further to the right has two floors and a flat layout; it houses the main lintel doorway, with austere mouldings, crowned by a NeoClassical triangular pediment from the early 19th Century. The fourth volume of the façade on the right end is separated from the previous ones by a wall, which The main doorway connects to a foyer which has a stone floor and a refurbished wood roof as well as a segmental arch which provides access to the patio. Inside it, we highlight the monumental stairway which is partially conserved with two sections of balustrade which occupies the entire left wing; the stairway space has a segmental arch with two small groined vault sections, at the end of which there is a lintel doorway and a flared window above it. In front of the foyer arch on the other side of the patio, there is a segmental arch and in the right angle, a small stairway ascends to another lintel doorway. The house conserves a private chapel with entrance from a semicircular arch doorway located on the left of the façade. The interior has two groined vault ceiling sections and a vertical wall with six pilasters in a Corinthian style; the altar piece is Baroque presided by a painting of the Mare de Déu del Roser in the process of delivering a robe to Sant Domingo and Santa Catalina de Sena; on the left, we can see Sant Francesc and Santa Bàrbara on the right. At the end of the garden, there is an interesting scenic viewpoint with a spiral road which provides the access to it. Part of the houses are currently used as a zone of holiday residences dedicated to rural tourism. Maria de la Salut The façade is in front of a platform which directly joins the road which originates from the village. It has a complex irregular wall with a block to the left with three floors and a roof with two longitudinal slopes; the first volume contains a segmental doorway erected on a landing with an access from several steps. On the right, there is a window, and there are two large-sized windows on the first floor; in the upper left angle, we highlight the exceptional belfry, with a semi-circular arch and a pyramidal crown with a cross. The second volume of the façade further to the right and lower than the first, there is one floor and a flat crown, with a semicircular vaulted arch doorway, currently sealed, with a Medieval origin; on the lintel there is a very ancient and highly deteriorated Coat of Arms, perhaps from the Font de Roqueta family; on the right, there is a flared window, the same as the one in the side wall which seals the doorway. marks another property; it has a vertical wall with three floors and flat crown; it has a lintel doorway with a window on the first floor. 141 >> Windmill: Molí d’en Cotó The Roqueta Houses (Casas de Roqueta) Les casas de Roqueta (Roqueta houses) probably constitute the most important architectural element of the María Municipality. They have a structural foundation from the 16th Century and from this period; it conserves a Gothic style semi-circular arch doorway. In 1234, there is record of the Roqueta farmhouse, where the Count of Ampurias granted it to Pere Esteve. In 1323, it became a Knight Estate centre with its name, where King Sanç granted the minor jurisdiction of Knight’s Estate to Berenguer de Sant Joan. In 1464, Pere Font purchased the property and Knight’s estate of Roqueta from Práxedis, the wife of the young Nobleman, Simó de Sant Joan. Consequently the Font family, the landowners of Roqueta acquired the surname of Font de Roqueta. This surname concluded with Margalida Font de Roqueta i Gual, who was married to Francesc Desbrull i Villalonga in 1637, and whose heirs owned the land possession with the lien of arms and surname. landowner of the Jordà family was the Priest Bartomeu Jordà, in the 19th Century, who bequeathed it to a nephew (oral information from Guillem Jordà). In 1929, Arthur Byne and Mildred Stapley visited the house and they were still able to describe and photograph the monumental stairway which today is only partially conserved. Pla de Mallorca three floors and a sandstone spiral stairway. The windmill terrace is accessed from the tower interior. To the right of the doorway, there are three basins and on the other side of the platform, a square section curbstone with flat roof. >> Pla de Mallorca_Montuïri Montuïri Jointly with agriculture and cattle raising, other artisan activities have also played a major role: (ceramics craftsmen, “margers” (stone masons), “selleters” (saddle-makers), weavers, embroidery workers, or paper-makers among other artisans). >> Scenic overview of Montuïri Towards the end of the 18th Century, famine, diseases, and debts were the main problems that were handled by the Sworn officers and Councillors of the Town. The predominant crops were dryland farming and the vineyards became increasingly important at the end of the century. In 1867, the Monges de la Caritat (Sisters of Charity) arrived in Montuïri and worked in the education field until their departure in 1984. 143 The place name of Montuïri, which was documented in the Llibre del Repartiment de Mallorca (Royal Property Distribution Book) (1232), has a vaguely defined origin and has been interpreted by diverse authors. The first authors, Joan Binimelis, Jeroni de Berard, and Gabriel Llabrés believed it was derived from Montecatano, Mons Ire, and Mont Thiberi, respectively. The most recent interpretations are by Joan Coromines (it comes from the Mozarabic term: montorium, derivative of promontorium “land elevation”) and Joan Miralles (it is derived from montuari “little mountain”). It was a heavily populated territory in the Talayotic age, as shown by the settlement of Son Fornés and the archaeological ruins called Campanar des Moros. In the Islamic period, it belonged to the juz’ (district) of Muntuy. Following the Conquest in 1229, it corresponded to the Royal part. Between 1236 and 1244, the Parish Church of Montuïri was founded and in 1300, it was constituted as a Royal city. Pla de Mallorca The Municipality of Montuïri has a surface area of 41 km2 and a population of 2,780 inhabitants (2008 census data). It is bordered by the Municipalities of Lloret de Vistalegre, Sant Joan, Porreres, Llucmajor, and Algaida. Montuïri Historical References ia -15 Ma Pou d el Re i 5 6 e Av. d Dau 16 32 To 33 rre lla Cape Pla de Mallorca Palma Montuïri Can C anal 20 t í Pelu Cam Montuïri Points of Interest Parish Church of St. Bartholomew (Església Parroquial de Sant Bartomeu) The old Parish Church of Montuïri, as mentioned in the Papal Bull of Innocence IV in 1248, was dedicated to Santa Maria and Sant Pere, jointly mentioned along with Castellitx. The first building from the 13th Century was located beside can Millordies, in the windmill district: el Molinar. The current temple dates from the 14th Century and was dedicated to Sant Bartomeu (St. Bartholomew). In 1515, the roof was rebuilt and in 1552, work began to refurbish the Belfry. At the end of the 16th Century, the temple was expanded and between 1750 and 1773, the presbytery’s vault ceiling was refurbished. In 1813, the stairway called “es Graons” was built. A refurbishment in the 1950’s made it possible to recover the Gothic 145 s ull Vent Pere 7 Sa Dau 10 a í e Av. d 11 15 n Rub rs n Ma-3220 Escole Pou d uig a ober Llo Plaza Cossie Ramón Ll del R ei Plaça 7 de les tres Creus 4 Baix oron ós Sant Joa Se Tro 8 12 Vinyeta na Baix rcat e Me 23 n Basc de So Joan Alcover elements that had been concealed behind the Baroque repair works. The temple was built in front of an elevated stone-paved platform which was accessed by the “es Graons” stairway with twelve steps. The main façade is very simple: There is the main lintel doorway with a Baroque pediment which contains the image of a female Saint; a tile roof protects it and higher above, there is a Rose window. The lateral doorway in front of the “es Graons” stairway, has doorjambs with spirals and a pediment with the Town Coat of Arms and the date 1643; higher up, note the modern clock. The belfry to the left of the façade has a square section with five floors and a crown (the fifth with two lancet arches on each side). To the left of the belfry, a Pla de Mallorca Bonavist a toni Sol ll e Vanr r Majo 3 1 Major Sa C Camí Plaça 2 tana 12 13 Ma-3220 n Llull tov 22 Pujol n ant A S30 us Tres Cre 14 de So Calvari ol Puj 21 14 Ramó Au Camí Sant om Bart Plaza de Vella II Quin P Ses Pujol Lluna eu ume Rei Ja ai Cost Pujol Ribas Pou Nou Joanot Colom a-3 M a Peny Palma des Mig 33 Forn 32 ar 10 31 oli n 15 9 30 Sta. Cata lina Tomás aM 8 16 M a 7 15 >> Montuïri_Points of Interest 1 22 7 s’Hostal Son Bascos Santuari de la Mare 31 9 de Déu de la Bona Pau Bonavista Poblat talaiòtic de Son Fornés Hotel rural Es Figueral Nou Alexandre Hotel rural Puig Moltó Rosselló Hotel rural Son Manera Emili Po u Museu Arqueològic Posada a a lm s a ïs P de Son Fornés Pa Garrover vi to Au 6 14 Garrover 5 23 13 21 Molí de can Serra 22 Molí de can Ferrando 20 Molí de can Perons Molí de ca n’Andreu 7 Molí de can Tevet o de can Ros 12 Molí de can Rigo 13 Molí de can Vermell 14 Can Tamos Molí d’en Gospet 7 Molí des Fraret Molí de sa Torre cor 4 12 na Ctra. de Ma 3 11 01 2 Església parroquial de Sant Bartomeu La Rectoria Can Socies de Tagamanent Can Manera de la Costa Can Vermell Can Marc Creu del Calvari Creu de Son Rafel Mas El pou del Rei Molí de can Nofre Palma 2 MA-3 1 Ma-3200 13 The interior has a nave with a barrel vault roof divided in six sections with lunettes and six lateral chapels on each side, with entry by a lancet arch. The nave roof is decorated with six pictorial medallions, one in each section, beside them, the different dates of the roof’s construction can also be seen. The lunettes contain an oculus in each section, with 20th Century stained glass windows which represent the Saints. The foot of the temple has a gallery buttressed by a segmental arch with a groined vault roof centralized by the vault keystone with the village Coat of arms; it contains an organ from the 17th Century, several paintings of Prophets by Jaume Martorell in 1775. The Presbytery with a quarter sphere apse roof contains the main altarpiece by Josep Sastre Tamorer in 1789, divided in three levels and two floors. In the central level in the first section, there is an expository and higher up in the second, an image of the Temple’s Patron Saint, Sant Bartomeu. The lateral levels are occupied by various images of Saints. On the left wall of the Presbytery, there is a painting of the Mare de Déu del Pilar, while on the right, there is the Sacristy door which contains a rectangular room with two sections of groined vault roof, and a stone washbasin with the Montuïri Coat of Arms from 1642. The chapels on the left or the Gospel side are: Baptismal Chapel, under the gallery, with Baptism font in a Renaissance style and hexagonal section, with wood pyramidal font-covers and a stained glass window which represents the Baptism of Jesus; Chapel of Sant Antoni, with a Baroque altarpiece presided by an image of the Patron Saint; the deep Chapel (or del Roser), dated in 1698, with a cruciform floor plan, divided in two sections, transept with two lateral Chapels and Presbytery, the first roof section is groined vault, the second is barrel vault, a transept centralized by a dome, an apse and a main altarpiece dated 1805 with the image of the Mare de Déu del Roser in the centre; Chapel of Sant Crist; Chapel of Sant Josep, with an early Baroque altarpiece by the Blanquer school; Chapel de la Immaculada. The chapels on the right or Epistles side are: The first Chapel under the gallery, has two Baroque arches, the one on the right serves as the start of the gallery stairway; Chapel of Nom de Jesús, with a Mannerist style altarpiece from the early 17th Century, and the Villalonga family Coat of Arms on the vault keystone; the lateral doorway with vaulted ceiling with two lunettes; Chapel of the Sacred Hearts, with a NeoBaroque altar piece and Images of Jesus and Maria; the fifth Chapel contains fragments of the Renaissance altar of Sant Bartomeu by Mateu Llopis from the 16th Century and the sculptured relief of a soul from Purgatory in the keystone of the roof; Chapel of Santa Catalina de Sena, with a painting of the Patron Saint. The Rectory (Rectoria) (Plaça Major, 14) It is a building with Gothic Construction elements with two floors and a two-slope roof. The ground floor has semi-circular vaulted arch 147 skene arch leads to the Carreró del Campanari (Belfry alley), and has descending steps. Montuïri >> Montuïri_Points of Interest Pla de Mallorca >> Parish Church of St. Bartholomew >> Montuïri_Points of Interest >> Montuïri Fair The interior has a Medieval Ogive arch which separates two corridors; in the first on the left, there is a Skene arch discovered in a recent repair; on the right, there is a Baroque canvass which represents the Nazareth Workshop. In the second corridor under the stair, there is well curbstone with octagonal section; it includes a coat of arms with a bull and the date 1630; this space conserves an old coffered wood ceiling with beams and interlacing sections. Further right, there is a Baroque washbasin dated 1754. A lintel doorway leads to the room, which conserves an interesting library. The building conserves paintings and liturgical objects from the Parish temple. The corral contains a well with a pyramidal roof. >> Can Socies de Tagamanent House In front of the main façade of the church, on the other side of the platform, there is a house known as Ca s’Escolà; it is currently used as the central office of the Senior Citizen’s Association. Its austere façade has two floors and a main doorway with semi-circular arch. This was the former funeral home, since the platform was the old “fossar” (cemetery). Can Socies de Tagamanent (C/ Major) This was an old inn from the possession with the same name. The façade has an irregular vertical wall, since the left has three floors and the right only has two. The main door is a semi-circular vaulted arch doorway, with sandstone spandrels and doorjambs and in the base, there is a stone step and border. The doorway is crowned with the Coat of Arms of Socies de Tagamanent, with the date 1817, possibly of Miquel Socies de Tagamanent Miralles (i Bosch i Fiol) (1761- 19th Century). On Easter Sunday, the image of the Virgin Mary departs from this house to participate in the Encounter Procession. Medieval urban development Montuïri has an old city centre which is typical of villages from the 14th and 15th Centuries. The “pobla reial” or royal city of Montuïri, founded by the Ordinances of King Jaume II in 1300, has a rectangle design which comprised the Main street (Carrer Major) as the central axis, and narrow alleys with houses that have semi-circular arch doorways. As a whole, the city’s historical centre represents an excellent example of Medieval urban development. Characteristic elements of this urban design are the three Plaças which house public buildings: the Plaça Major (Main Square), location of the Church and the Cort Reial (Royal Court) or Universitat local (University), it is now the Casa Consistorial (Town Council building); the Plaça del Molinar (Windmill square) or Plaça de las Tres Creus (Square of the Three Crosses), previously, the Plaça de la “Quartera” (Grain storeroom) where grain was sold and the Plaça Vella, where the Carnisseria (Butcher shop) was located. Among the old Municipality Crosses, we highlight the remarkable Cross: Creu de Son Rafel Mas from the 15th Century. As complementary data, we mention that the urban planning of the “pobles reials” (royal cities) was set up for 100 settlers with their respective families. A portion of land corresponded to each family in order to build a house and corral, a tiny section was also ceded to leave space for the carreres comunes or common streets, which were each 6.32 m wide. The settlers also had to contribute to the construction of the public buildings: The Church, Royal Court, the Grain market, the Bakery, Butcher Shop, wells and water tanks. Can Manera de la Costa (C/ Sant Antoni, 1) This was the Ancestral Home of the Manera de la Costa family, pagesos (peasant land-owners) of the “mà major” (major estate) of Montuïri. It is a 15th Century building; it has a façade with two floors and the main doorway with a semi-circular vaulted arch; on the first floor to the left of the door, we highlight the Renaissance window from the 16th Century with the Manera Coat of Arms. Montuïri doorway with two windows on the right, the first, a balcony window and a Coat of Arms which represents a hand, symbol of the Rector Manera, with the inscription “als 24 maig 1693” (24th of May 1693). To the left of the Coat of Arms, there are multi-colour floor tiles of the twelfth station of Vía Crucis (12th Station of the Cross). In the first floor, above the doorway, there is a small balcony with a small tile porch, while on the right there is a balcony window and another two quadrangular windows. The right side, located above the Plaça Major (Main Square) has a crown with an Ogee arch niche, which contains a sundial. 149 Pla de Mallorca_Montuïri Pla de Mallorca >> >> Montuïri_Points of Interest >> Windmill: Molí de can Vermell This is the highest and oldest part of the town, where the first Church was built as documented in 1248. Its urban structure is from the 13th Century, but subsequently, taking advantage of the hill, this area became a typical flour windmill district; a total of eight were built and several date back to the 16th Century. This area starts in the Plaça de les Tres Creus (Plaça of Three Crosses), which has been named for the three wood crosses that were integrated in a niche in a house wall and which represent the Calvary (they are currently missing). In the middle of the Plaça, there is a Municipal cross, called the Creu del Calvari (Calvary Cross), made of stone and built on a base of circular steps. The stem is octagonal and crowned by a capital and cross, without decoration. Beside the Plaça, we find the windmill: can Vermell (C/ del Calvari), documented in 1644, when it belonged to Socies -Vermell, with a residential base with lintel doorway on three steps and the exterior stairway which continues to the windmill terrace. The tower was lowered around 1928. On the street: carrer del Molinar, to the right, we see the house called can Marc, built in front of a triangular platform; it has a façade with two floors and the main semi-circular vaulted arch doorway. The Early Christian Church from the 13th century was located in this site; today, only a holy water basin has been conserved. Next, on the left side of the street, there are four windmills: can Nofre, can Serra, can Ferrando, and can Perons. >> Windmill: Molí de can Nofre The can Nofre windmill consists of two floors and forms a complex with three naves. The floor in the upper section has a sandstone vault roof and the lower floor has a wood beam roof. The tower was trimmed and rebuilt with sandstone pieces. The tower has a doorway with semi-circular arch. It was the property of the Gomila -Nofre- family. The can Serra windmill has a base with two floors, which remain unfinished. The tower conserves a stone spiral stairway. In 1922, the millstones were sold to the paper factory of Esporles. The can Ferrando windmill has a tower without a base or central arch. It was restored in 1999, however, a subsequent storm destroyed the antennas. The can Perons windmill does not have a base or central arch and it was not restored; until 1994, it had an attached building which was demolished. Behind this windmill on an unpaved road, we reach the ca n’Andreu windmill (or Ca na Molinares). It formerly consisted of a circular tower, built with irregular stones and a central arch. According to Bernat Rabassa, in 1997, when the houses were refurbished, other buildings were added which have distorted the windmill’s original structure. Next, the last windmills appear on the left: can Tevet (or can Ros) and can Rigo. The site also provides a great view of the surrounding area. Montuïri El molinar 151 Pla de Mallorca_Montuïri Pla de Mallorca >> >> The King’s Well The King’s Well (El Pou del Rei) This well for community use is the oldest one in the village. Located at the end of the street for which it has been named, it was documented in the early 14th Century, when the road which connects this zone to the village was widened. It is an isolated well made of sandstone with square curbstone and a pillar on each corner which buttress two crossbeams that support the pulleys. The basins attached to the sides have been conserved, which were used to water animals. Right beside it, there are the old public washing places, with a rectangular floor plan with portico façade with pillars, semi-circular arches, and a very simple roof of the corridor. A washing basin is conserved in its interior. >> Windmill: Molí des Fraret Sanctuary of the Virgin Mary of Peace (Santuari de la Mare de Déu de la Bona Pau) This Sanctuary was documented in 1396, when two houses in the Puig d’en Romanyà were adjudicated to the Monk Bartomeu Aguilar subsequently called Sant Miquel, by the Universitat (University). In 1525 in his will, Pere Mas left an annual sum of 10 sterling pounds to the Church of Sant Miquel, which had already converted into a Sanctuary, under the Patronage of this Saint. In 1646, the Oratory was refurbished and in 1647, a sculpture of the Virgin Mary was installed which had been acquired by the Municipal Council; it was refurbished in 1845 and restored in 1987. In 1682, the Confraria de la Mare de Déu (Brotherhood of the Virgin) was founded, although in 1724, this was the first time that the Sancturary appears documented under the Patronage of the Mare de Déu de la Bona Pau (Holy Mother of Peace). During the 18th Century and part of the next century, it continued under the jurisdiction of the Parish and the Town Council commissioned its protection to a Councillor popularly known as the batle del Puig (Mayor of the Hill). These lands were sold in a public auction for 7,500 pesetas to Lluís Pou Bonet and the Sanctuary properties were reduced to the Oratory, the attached house, and Plaça. The Monks, deprived of their portion of cultivated land, were dismissed although the hermits did return to reside here during a short period. In 1909, it was effectively ceded to the Filles de la Sagrada Familia (Daughters of the Holy 153 Fraret Windmill (Molí des Fraret) It is located in the outskirts of the village, in the motorway of Sant Joan. Jointly with the windmill, molí de sa Torre, d’en Xigala, and d’en Fidueder, they comprise the windmill district in the North of town -the latter two missing-. From the 18th Century to the second half of the 19th Century, it belonged to the Verger family, alias Fraret. In 1990, it was acquired by the Town Council and recently refurbished, the time when its antennas and canopy were installed. It has a circular tower, base with two barrel vault ceilings, with an exterior stairway, and it is built next to the house with two floors and two-slope roof. Since 2001, it houses the Archaeological Museum of the Son Fornés Talayotic Village. >> The Sanctuary of the Virgin Mary of Peace Montuïri >> Montuïri_Points of Interest Pla de Mallorca_Montuïri Pla de Mallorca >> >> Montuïri_Points of Interest The Oratory façade has two pilasters in the ends and two more on the sides of the doorway; it is a lintel door with semi-circular pediment which contains a niche, currently empty, with the date 1941 on the lintel. Above the doorway, there is a very deteriorated sundial, a circular skylight, and a scaled church wall as crown with four hydrias on the upper section of each pilaster, and a steeple in the centre. The Oratory interior is a rural type; it has a rectangular floor plan with only one nave, two lateral chapels, barrel vault ceiling, an apse with a quarter sphere roof, and choir gallery. The main altar piece has three levels, in the centre, there is the image of the Virgin Mary: Mare de Déu de la Bona Pau, on the right, the Arcangel Sant Miquel, dated in 1587 and Sant Joan on the left. The pulpit is dated 1855 and the choir gallery, buttressed by three segmental arches, is dated 1869. To the left of the Oratory, there is the building occupied by the Convent, and next to the Church, a block with an exterior Imperial >> Son Fornés Talayotic Village type stairway with balustrade. In the sector dedicated to the Restaurant, we highlight the raised platform in the highest part on eleven steps and a well curbstone with octagonal section and lancet arch. Son Fornés Talayotic Village (Poblat talaiòtic de Son Fornés) The village is located 2.4 kilometers from Montuïri on the Ma-3200 motorway which leads to Pina, approximately 400 metres from transversal junction of Algaida - Sant Joan. The first excavation took place in 1975 and three field campaigns have been carried out until 2008, which have made it possible to discover the social transformations of this Pla de Mallorca Balearic community over the last 2,000 years. Consequently, the archaeological site facilitates knowledge about the urban modifications of this village and the architectural changes in the buildings throughout the first Millennium of our age. During this time, we differentiate three periods or ages: The Talayotic Age (850-550 B.C.), the Post-Talayotic Age (550-250 B.C.) and the Classic-Roman Age (from 250 B.C. until the military conquest by the Roman State in the year 123 B.C with the arrival of the Roman Cónsul, Quintus Caecilius Metellus). From the Talayotic age, we can see three circular Talayot buildings, cyclopean buildings with a collective nature which characterizes a community based on relations of reciprocity and solidarity. One of these Talayots is the largest in Mallorca, with a total diameter of 17 metres and a conserved height of over 4 metres. In relation to the residences of these ancient inhabitants of the Pla district, seven of these sites have been excavated up to now. The violent destruction of this village inaugurated a new period of changes, the Post-Talayotic period, where new social relations arose which were based on inequality. Six residences have been documented in this new stage as well as the reuse of a third Talayot as a potential religious sanctuary. The progressive intensification of the relations with the Phoenician civilization and the consolidation of the Roman civilization throughout the 1st Century B.C. led to even more extensive differences in social levels. New necessities gave rise to the construction of new premises with rooms, of which 18 are known, which at the same time, could also have served as workshops and a sanctuary in the form of a horseshoe in a magnificent conservation condition. The Interpretation centre of this archaeological site, the Archaeology Museum (Museu Arqueològic de Son Fornés), is located in the windmill: Molí d’en Fraret, in the Montuïri exit in the direction to Sant Joan by the Ma-3220 motorway. Montuïri Family religious order) by Mariano Gual de Togores, although the cession had to be ratified (1900) by the Countess of Aiamans. The Nuns refurbished the rural house as a summer house for the children of the Temple households. With the remaining sum from the closing of the Savings and Loan Association, Caixa Rural de Montuïri, in 1946, the Oratory and the attached house were refurbished, which was again restored (1960). Since 1974, a restaurant is now located there. 155 Pla de Mallorca_Montuïri Pla de Mallorca >> >> Pla de Mallorca_Petra Petra Over 40 Archaeological ruins from different historical ages have been catalogued in the Municipality, a fact which demonstrates the major intensity of the human presence in the zone in very ancient times. We highlight the Caves: de ses Cabanasses, ses Comunes Noves, and de Son Monserrat, etc.; the Talayotic sites of Son Homar, Termenor, es Castellots, etc.; the Burial Caves of Son Maimó, les restes des Bosc Vell, es Cabanells Nous, sa Font, etc. Significant artefacts such as amphoras, various ceramic objects, and burial urns have been recovered from the Roman Age. >> Scenic overview of Petra During the Islamic Age, Petra belonged to the juz or district of Yiynaw-Bitra. Following the Catalonian Conquest, this district corresponded to King Jaume I. In 1607, it obtained the canonical approval to found a Franciscan Monastery and at the end of that year, the first Monks of the Congregation arrived. Shortly afterwards, construction began for the Monastery’s living quarters and a Church. Between 1949 and 1952, the first attempts to segregate from the city centre of Ariany took place, and in 1982, this Municipality finally separated from Petra. Pla de Mallorca The Municipality of Petra has an extension of approximately 70 km2 extension and a population of 3,073 inhabitants (2008 census data). It is bordered by the Municipalities of Sant Joan, Sineu, Ariany, Santa Margalida, Artà, Sant Llorenç des Cardassar, Manacor, and Vilafranca de Bonany. 157 Petra Historical References id a ga l ar a33 30 M M a. St over Petra 159 Villasota ya à Pen Capell iego D San olta es oragu Rev M mis i el Ra Pare Sta. oni Ant a bar Bár lló Pere ana For Manacor lorca I de Mal Av. del Rei Jaume I Ma-3320 St. Bernard Monastery and Monastery Church (Convent i església conventual de Sant Bernardí) The Franciscan Monastery by the devoted followers of Sant Bernadí de Sena was founded in 1607, at the initiative of Father Pere Santandreu, the guardian of the Monastery of Sant Francesc de Palma and native of Petra. He immediately began to build the first temple, the space which currently corresponds to the chapel: Capella de Betlem. In 1657, works began to build the Church, which was supervised by the Master or Works, Francesc Oliver, which concluded in 1677. At the end of the 17th Century, the Cloister and the majority of the Monastery buildings were completed. Friar Juníper Serra studied here in the first half of the 18th Century. The religious community was expelled in the “Desamortització” (seizure and sale of Church property) of 1835 and the majority of the Monastery buildings were sold. In 1969, the Franciscan Order of Friars Minor returned to the Monastery in a significantly reduced space. The Monastery Church with its Renaissance style has a large semicircular arch doorway in the main façade, an apse with converging walls and a lierne vault. On the sides, we see niches which were occupied by images of Franciscan Saints, which have now disappeared. A square section bell tower ascends on the façade‘s Pla de Mallorca riel s sion Mis Gab 24 Miqu esia Sol ós i orda ra G Sier San Mon Points of Interest sC ines ple Am Ord Forà tat Ciu Sol Font í de at 6 Pag us Fide 2 5 etra Restaurant Sa Creu de P uel Miq Son Torrat Casa Rural e r a P ció Esta Hotel d’interior de l’ eig Pass Sa Plaça de Petra és alm mG Agroturisme Son Santandreu uille Plaça de la or G lt u Santuari de Nostra Senyora Esc a an Constitució pit de Bonany a C Na ners Casa MuseuCde anto Fra Juníper Serra llers Bote 6 Pou u rà Fo Fogó 5 Ciut icola siN 4 d'en 4 7 terre Son 13 a 6 23 Font Forà a cor Mana Cam Pou rren Ma e um 5 9 22 d'en nig 24 Can Oliver Fonteta de la Mare de Déu 15 16 Son Santandreu Molí d’en Tromper 17 Molí d’en Font Creu de Fra Juníper Serra 7 34 Bodegues Miquel Oliver 5 Bodegues can Coleto Bodegues Galmes y Ferrer Es celler de Petra r be lo 4 8 iL 3 7 sta 2 Església parroquial de Sant Pere La Rectoria Convent i església conventual de Sant Bernardí Casa pairal de Fra Juníper Serra i Museu i Centre d’Estudis Fra Juníper Serra Can Torrella Can Lloveta Co 1 e Plç. d ll lu ón L Ram c a or Man d . Alc ni M Ho s rie rre Ge es el ms n'O o sc T nce es Parr la n d'e et ll Co t Ja Sa a lin ta Ca San a nt Fra Ses ornia Calif erra er S er À t lle y e Fra ra Plç. d ero Ser Juníp l 16 spita o nC d'e ard 22 Rut íD ls e ng 2 5 Ca t de arro Cap ines Ord r Majo ub àR val sti ba Arra Se ta Cas r Majo Juníp lla lins Can 1 Fra r 2 Recto sia glè oria Majo Plaça de sa Rectoria Creu ria R ect sco 23 Creu >> Petra_Points of Interest Es ió 3 6 nci Ma Petra nt ve Con Torre Fra Mo Palma rge Ba d'en r s’E Pla de Mallorca Un San a ell aV lt de sa de sa 5 4 rA ca rra Deu Mare de ny de Bona 5 17 ella ria V da 15 a-1 uc u de Ll lt Da de Plaça de les co s sa Creu E Be llav ista la aM de De Pe ovi Recto Mare na Aut 0 Barracar Baix ny ona u No 322 B de mí Ca 9 asses s Port de se Sol 34 Anto Camí des Puput 7 t San n Joa 13 M a- 8 >> Petra_Points of Interest >> Friar Juníper Serra Museum The interior has a barrel vault roof and six lateral chapels with open semi-circular arches. The Presbytery with converging walls houses the main altarpiece from 1721, presided by a sculpted figure of the Virgin de la Immaculada, with Sant Joan de Capistrano and Sant Jaume de la Marca on the sides, and Sant Bernadí, the Patron Saint of the Temple in the attic. The chapels on the right or Epistles side are: the Chapel de les Ànimes (Souls Chapel) or Sant Crist (Christ Chapel); the Chapel of Santa Clara; the lateral doorway; chapel of Sant Antoni de Pàdua; the chapel of the Mare de Déu dels Àngels, and the chapel of Sant Bonaventura. On the left or Gospel side, there is the chapel: capella del Betlem, chapel of the Beatified Ramon Llull, the chapel of the old organ, the chapel of Sant Francesc (with an altarpiece created by Gaspar Oms Batle in 1723), the chapel of Sant Dídac or Sant Salvador d’Horta, and the chapel of Santa Rosa de Viterbo, with an image of Sant Miquel in the attic. All the altars are Baroque. The Sacristy contains a wash basin with imposing Baroque decoration and the date 1727. There is also a museum which exhibits objects of worship and commemorates the California missions of the Beatified Juníper Serra. From the cloister, only scattered remains have been conserved and several arches >> Ramon Llull Square >> Friar Juníper Serra Square >> Monastery and Monastery Church of Sant Bernardí corresponding to the partial reconstruction which was carried out by the architect, Gabriel Alomar. Very interesting mural paintings have been conserved in the old access corridor to the Monastery buildings. A monument has been built in front of the Monastery which commemorates the Bicentennial anniversary of the birth of Friar Juníper Serra. The four floor tiles which decorate the pedestal represent different themes from the life of the Franciscan monk: The first in the Monastery beside the family house, the second, the missionary in the act of preaching, the third, the moment he received the Communion prior his death, and the fourth, the Mission of San Carlos Borromeo, where he died. Friar Juníper Serra’s Birthplace House, Museum and Study Centre (Casa pairal de Fra Juníper Serra, Museu i Centre d’Estudis Fra Juníper Serra) This house is located at number 6 of the street: carrer del Barracar Alt. Miquel Serra, later known by the religious name of Friar Juníper, was born in 1713 in the house of his paternal grandparents, located in the country, and he moved to this house with his family at the age of five. The house was purchased by the local Rotary Club in 1930 for 22,000 pesetas and it was donated to the Town Council of the City of San Francisco. Since 1981, it has been managed by the Societat d’Amics del Pare Serra (The Friend’s Society of Father Serra). It is one of the most representative residences of the small Petra left side. The Monastery’s old lintel doorway is located on the left of the Temple façade. 161 Pla de Mallorca_Petra Pla de Mallorca >> >> Petra_Points of Interest It has a façade with a height of two floors with semi-circular vaulted arch doorway and it has a small window with sill on the first floor. A plaque on the left of the door commemorates the Evangelist of California: “Casa solariega del V P Fray Junípero Serra OFM Apóstol de California.( Birthplace house of V P Friar Junípero Serra OFM Apostle of California) 1713-1784. El Ayuntamiento y pueblo de Petra (The Town Council and People of Petra)”. The interior has a simple central stone floor with a geometric design. A small scale segmental arch opens in the master wall which separates the two slopes. The kitchen is located in the second corridor on the left. In the corral, there is a baker’s oven for bread. We highlight the very simple room on the first floor. Beside the Birthplace house, at the end of the platform, we find the Museum of Fra Juníper Serra, founded in 1959 by the “Amics de Fra Juníper Serra” (Friend’s Society of Friar Juníper Serra). The main doorway is a semi-circular arch with a doorjamb with the Serra Family Coat of Arms and a cross. There is a porch with two segmental arches as well as the well curbstone with quadrangular section. The bell comes from the Santa Barbara Mission of Camino Real (California). >> Friar Juníper Serra’s Birthplace House In the interior, the ground floor is dedicated to the museum about the life and works of the Beatified Saint, with several rooms which contain written documentation related to his life (sermons, letters, etc.), as well as graphic information about the American lands which he explored (maps, paintings, engravings, etc.). The scale model room at the left of the entrance contains wooden scale models of the Missions founded by Friar Juníper. A square stairway leads to the first floor, where we highlight the painting room, such as the Martyrdom of Friar Lluís Jaume. This floor also has a library which specialises in the figure of the Beatified Juníper. Friar Juníper Serra Square and Ramon Llull Square (Plaça de Fra Juníper Serra i Plaça de Ramon Llull) The two Plaças in the centre of Petra are dedicated to Friar Juníper Serra and Ramon Llull and they are tangentially located. The first Plaça has a monument dedicated to the Beatified monk with a sculpture created by Guillem Galmés in 1913, which was installed on the occasion of the second Centennial of the Missionary’s birth. It is made of Santanyí stone and has a pyramidal-trunk pedestal with the Coat of Arms of the Franciscan Order, the Serra family, and the village of Petra, as well as a commemorative inscription. The Plaça de Ramon Llull was the traditional Plaça de l’Abeurador and today is popularly called the Plaça del Brollador (Fountain Square). Estate Houses in the Ciutat Street In the street, carrer de Ciutat, we find different casals (estate houses), such as can Lloveta, located on the corner of the Carrer Petra peasant landowners of the Pla de Mallorca district from the 17th and 18th centuries. 163 Pla de Mallorca_Petra Pla de Mallorca >> >> Petra_Points of Interest >> The Rectory Can Torrella is located in front of can Lloveta. It dates from the 16th and 17 Centuries, although it was extensively refurbished in the 19th and 20th Centuries. The main doorway is an old semicircular arch which was converted into a lintel doorway. Observe the discharge arches built within the wall. In front of can Torrella, there is can Oliver, which was formerly used as the wine cellar of can Torrella; it passed to the Oliver family in 1912. The wine cellar is conserved and presents three naves separated by two rows of pillars which support the arches and the groined vault roof; it was refurbished in the second half of the 19th Century. It also conserves a wine vat. The upper floor of the building served as the village’s first cinema. Parish Church of St. Peter (Església Parroquial de Sant Pere) The first reference appears documented in the Papal Bull of Pope Innocence IV in 1248, with the name of Sancti Petri de Petra. The first building occupied the plot called Rectoria Vella (Old Rectory). Speaking of the current church, it appears to replace a second >> Can Lloveta House >> Parish Church of St. Peter temple; the first which occupied the current plot, which had four chapels in 1563. The building which we view today, with its late Gothic style, has had a long history of works, which began in 1583 and was not finished until 1766. The belfry was built in 1669 and its chapel: capella del Roser was inaugurated in 1689. The Church was blessed in 1730 however the works continued until 1766, with the 3-section roof nearest to the entrance. The Presbytery is dated 1797. The façade is a wall divided into five sections separated by mouldings, with a large upper Rose Window, crowned by a rail with interlaced panels; the sides have two volumes which simulate embedded towers with an octagonal section. The main doorway is unfinished. The upper section of the lateral vertical wall has seven large semicircular arches which join the buttresses. The lateral doorway built in 1911 was created by the sculptor, Guillem Galmés, and contains an image of the Santa Pràxedis. The Belfry is located beside the lintel, it has a 31 metre height and is divided into six sections separated by mouldings; in the three upper sections, there are mullioned windows, and a pyramidal crown in the upper section. The temple interior has a floor plan with a single nave which is divided into seven sections with groined vault ceiling. It has seven Petra d’en Font, which dates back to the 19th Century. Originally, it occupied the entire block, but it was later partially demolished. It has an old doorway with semi-circular stone arch, now converted into a window, and we also highlight its flared window. The first floor has three windows in the main façade and two additional ones on the side, all with sill. 165 Pla de Mallorca_Petra Pla de Mallorca >> from the end of the 18th Century with a dome divided into eight segments, pilasters with helicoidal mouldings and Baroque altar piece designed by Gaspar Ribas, and presided by the Image of the Mare de Déu del Roser, a work by Melcior Guasp; the Chapel of la Immaculada, with an image by Guillem Galmés; Chapel of Santa Aina, with a multi-coloured bas-relief from the 15th Century in the centre, lateral pictorial panels with the date 1611 and a painting of the Beatified Juníper Serra, with a relic in the lower section; and the Chapel of Heart of Jesus, with an image which was also a work by the Sculptor Galmés. doorway is a semi-circular vaulted arch and on the right, it has two windows with sills. On the right of the platform in front of the façade, there are several regional-style arches from the 20th century which comprise an arcade which belongs to another building. To the side, there is a monument to the “Pagesa” (Peasant woman), a sculpture created by Josep Gayà Font. On the left façade of the main doorway, we highlight the relief sculpture of Sant Vicenç Ferrer, who preached in Petra in 1413; on the side, there is the Coat of Arms of the Rector Riera Font, one of the people who promoted the building works. The chapels on the right or Epistles side are: Chapel of Sant Cosme and Sant Damià, with a Gothic painting on wood, with the representation of the Patron Saints; Chapel of Santa Bàrbara; Chapel of Sant Antoni Abat; the lateral doorway with the organ above it, which dates from 1608, a work by the Caimari brothers; Chapel de la Mare de Déu dels Dolors, with an image created by Guillem Galmés; Chapel of Santa Pràxedis, Patron Saint of the village; and the Chapel of Sant Sebastià, with a Mannerist altar piece dated 1603, which, in addition to the image of the Patron Saint, contains two paintings which represent Cabrit and Bassa, the defenders of the Alaró Castle. On the right of the main altar, with entrance by a Renaissance doorway, there is the Sacristy dated 1723. In addition to the frame of the wash basin and diverse paintings such as the one of Santa Bàrbara, it conserves an ornamental liturgical robe called a “tern” from the 15th Century, it is made of green velvet with embroidered ornaments of gold and silk. The Sanctuary of Our Lady of Bonany (Santuari de Nostra Senyora de Bonany) The Sanctuary is located on the summit of the Puig (hill) de Bonany, formerly called “puig d’en Burguès and puig de Maria”, a natural area with a surface area of 331 hectares. The tradition about the origin of the Virgin of Bonany is a typical narrative from the “Verge Trobada” (Encounter with the Virgin): The Christians concealed the image in a cave during the Islamic domination, and after the Catalonian Conquest, it was discovered by a shepherd in a cave in the surroundings of the spring of the Virgin. The first news about the Sanctuary date back to 1606, when the Rector of Petra promoted a small Oratory. The name of Bonany seems to date back to 1609, when a predictably bad year became a good harvest due to the intercession of the Virgin Mary after a procession to the Sanctuary, which subsequently caused abundant rain. The chapels on the left or Gospel side are: Chapel of Beatified Juníper Serra; Chapel of Sant Josep, with a Baroque altarpiece by Gaspar Homs; Chapel of Sant Crist de les Ànimes; the capella fonda (deep chapel) or Roser chapel, a Baroque work >> The Sanctuary of Our Lady of Bonany The Rectory (Rectoria) It is located in front of the main doorway of the Parish Church. In the Barracar neighbourhood, it conserves the place name of “Rectoria Vella”, which perhaps precedes the current one. Works began in 1570 and it has been intensively refurbished over time. The façade has one height, although the house estate has two floors, since the ground floor is in a lower sublevel. The main 167 >> The Sanctuary of Our Lady of Bonany lateral chapels, introduced by Ogive arches; the entrance or foot of the temple presents a gallery with groined vault ceiling. The Presbytery is polygonal with ribs and contains the main altar, with an altarpiece that dates from 1790, presided by an image of Sant Pere, which came from the Monastery of Sant Domingo in Palma. On both sides of the altarpiece, there are two small Renaissance doorways. Beside the Presbytery since 1980, there is the baptism font where Friar Juníper was baptized in 1713, it dates back to 1588; it is octagonal and was created by Joan Antic and Miquel Abraham. Petra >> Petra_Points of Interest Pla de Mallorca_Petra Pla de Mallorca >> >> Petra_Points of Interest Pla de Mallorca_Petra >> Son Santandreu Possession >> Juníper Serra Cross >> Virgin Mary Fountain In addition, the Sanctuary also has a space used as a guest quarters, built in 1917 with cells and other services for pilgrims. From 1896 until 1990, the Sanctuary was supervised by the Hermits of Sant Pau and Sant Antoni. At present, it is under the charge of several “donats” (religious order members). The interior has a Latin Cross floor plan, without lateral chapels and has a gallery at the foot. It has a barrel vault ceiling with lunettes, divided in three sections and a dome in the transept. In the vertical wall of the nave, we can see two pilasters with a composite order. In the transept, there are four thin grooved columns which connect to the corresponding penditives. In the Western zone of the Puig (hill), there is the Fonteta de la Mare de Déu (Virgin Mary Fountain). When the Hermits arrived in Bonany, the fountain was a simple inlet well; they channelled it and built a set of terraces which served to improve the gardens and orchards of the Monks. In 1915, they built a stone cave, where they placed a sandstone image of the Virgin, with stalactites from the Cave: Cova d’en Tugores. Venerated in the Presbytery, there is a seated image of Mare de Déu de Bonany, a Medieval wood sculpture, located in the centre of a chapel with a Baroque altarpiece. The main altarpiece comes from the Parish Church of Petra and was restored by Bartomeu Amorós in 1941. It displays the images of Sant Pau Ermità, Sant Antoni Abat and in the attic, Santa Catalina Tomàs. In the arms of the transept, there are images of Sant Josep on the right and Below the platform which is in front of the Sanctuary, there is the Cross: Creu de Fra Juníper Serra, which was built in memory of the Evangelist of California in 1949, in commemoration of the second Centennial of Friar Juníper’s farewell from the village. Tradition claims that it was here, in the place known as “penya del Calvari” (Calvary hill), where Father Serra addressed his last words to the inhabitants of Petra prior to his departure to America. The Petra Sant Crist on the left. In the right or Epistle side of the nave, there is Sant Sebastià and Sant Joan Baptista, while on the left or Gospel side, we can see Santa Bàrbara and Sant Miquel. Beneath the gallery, there is an altarpiece with Sant Gabriel and el Betlem (Navity scene). 169 The Church has a historicist style with Neo-Baroque roots, built between 1920 and 1925 on a Baroque temple which was expanded in 1697 and demolished in 1919, except the atrium façade which dates from 1789. This first façade, corresponding to the foyer or atrium of the temple has a doorway with a curved pediment, with the Petra Coat of Arms and the aforementioned date of 1789; this construction block is crowned by an interlaced rail which provides access to the roof where the upper section of the Oratory itself ascends, designed by Antoni Giménez Vidal, with a Rose Window crowned by the Coat of Arms of Bonany and two lateral towers. The author of the temple plans was the Hermit Agustí. Pla de Mallorca >> >> Petra_Points of Interest Windmills Records show that there were 19 flour windmills in Petra. 12 of them have survived to the present day: Eight were conserved inside the city centre, three in the surrounding area, and one in the outskirts. We highlight the group which has named the streets: dels Molíns and Costa dels Molíns (Windmill street and the Windmill slope) where we find six windmill structures: d’en Corba, d’en Penya, d’en Tromper, d’en Guillem Font, d’en Font, and molí d’en Xim, which already milled flour in 1748 and was the last one to cease operations. On the other side of the village beside the Son Serra motorway, there are two additional windmills, while the other four are located in the proximity of the city centre. Son Santandreu These cases de possessió (possession estate houses) are located in the meridian of the Municipality of Petra, below the Puig de Bonany (Bonany hill). In 1652, the property belonged to Miquel Miralles Eixeló, and it was dedicated to the cultivation of grain/cereals, although it also had a garden. In 1695, it was owned by Joan Mir Miralles and in 1737, it was transferred to the Genoese Merchant, Carlo Fonticelli Weimer. In 1767, it belonged to Josep Fonticelli >> Son Santandreu Possession Socies and it had a large wine cellar. In 1865, it was the property of Bartomeu Castelló and it had a surface area of 273 “quarterades”. The property was subsequently divided into two parts, Son Santandreu or Son Santandreu Vell and Son Santandreu Nou. In 1995, Son Santandreu Vell belonged to Bartomeu Barceló Pastor, while Son Santandreu Nou was owned by Isabel Roses Montis. The houses were built on an old Talayotic settlement, of which only a few ruins remain. The house’s façade has a height of three floors with a door with semi-circular arch on the left and two skene arches on the right; the one on the left contains a well curbstone and the one on the right, a lintel doorway, higher up, there is a balcony with balustrade. The porch houses six rectangular windows. It conserves the chapel with intersecting barrel vault roof and a small altarpiece from the 16th Century. On the left of the houses, there is a large wine cellar with square section pillars and an intersecting barrel vault roof. Petra cross’ style is a reminder of the crosses created with tree trunks and branches which Juníper Serra built in the spot where he decided to found a Mission. 171 Pla de Mallorca_Petra Pla de Mallorca >> >> Pla de Mallorca_Porreres Porreres The Municipality’s name dates back to 1231, when Nunó Sanç ceded the Farmhouse of Alquazor and the rafals (country estates) of Maffumet and Totzeta to Guillem de Porrera. Thus, all of these lands adopted the name of the new owner and were subsequently called the farmhouse of Porreres. In turn, the surname of the aforementioned Guillem originated from the village where he was born: “Porrera”, a village in the Priorat district (Tarragona). The numerous windmills and possessions are excellent proof of the main economic activity: agriculture and cattle, which have >> Scenic overview of Porreres The first evidence of human presence dates back to the prehistoric era as shown by over thirty archaeological sites. Caves have been conserved from the PreTalayotic period, which were used as dwellings and burial sites; and we have found Talayotic ruins from the Talayotic period, such as the Pou Salat and the necropolis such as Son Redó and s Pagos. From the Roman age, 173 characterised this Municipality throughout history, as well as the other Municipalities of the Pla de Mallorca. The predominating crops have always been grain/cereals, almonds, and vineyards. The Cardinal: Cardenal Despuig (1784) provides testimony of the wine-making tradition in a sketch which illustrates the map, which also provides information about the cultivation of saffron. More recently, Porreres has achieved fame for its outstanding apricot production, since it elaborates the majority of the dried apricots of Mallorca. Pla de Mallorca The Municipality of Porreres has an extension of 87 km2 extension and a population of 5,272 inhabitants (2008 census data). It is bordered by the Municipalities of Montuïri, Sant Joan, Vilafranca de Bonany, Felanitx, Campos, and Llucmajor. Porreres Historical References >> Porreres_Historical References Pla de Mallorca_Porreres we highlight a funeral tombstone, located in the territory of Son Cota. >> “Goig” Monument in the Mt. Zion Road During the 14th Century, a Jewish community resided in Porreres and it has documented the existence of a call (Jewish Quarter). Its economic activity was based on trade and money lending. The expulsions carried out starting in 1835 affected the religious communities of the village, and above all the patrimonial lands of Monti-sion (Mt. Zion). In the 20th Century, Porreres has achieved fame for its outstanding apricot production, since it elaborates the majority of the dried apricots of Mallorca. >> Windmill: Molí d’en Tòfol >> Windmill: Molí de Son Porquer 175 The Royal Property Distribution Book, Llibre del Repartiment, documents the concession of Porreres lands to Nunyo Sanç. Upon his death (1241), his possessions passed to his nearest relative, the King Jaume I. The Church of Porreres was first mentioned in 1242 and it appears as a Parish Church in the Papal Bull by Pope Innocence IV (1248). In 1300, Porreres was declared a “pobla reial” (Royal Village) according to the Ordinances of King Jaume II of Mallorca. Porreres In the Islamic period, Porreres belonged to the juz’ (district) of Manaqur. The Muslim presence can also be detected in several Arabic place names for farm houses and “rafals” (country estates) as well as Arabic coins. Pla de Mallorca >> Do Ro d un ns o ai lo nt A Sa Co la op e 28 29 at iva an sso la Ro ce sa sc M ol in 13 8 3 Ca 2 18 m mÌ ÌS sa a er dr Pe 30 12 Se rv 19 er a 20 21 de Ma-5040 20 Ca s 11 a de re r 30 ca de on sT er 13 'A l Fr er 12 um r de 28 Pa re Ja rd ad a ríg ue z 13 Ll Fe nt 22 5 33 6 11 8 Parish Church (Església Parroquial) The Parish Church of Porreres is dedicated to the Mare de Déu de la Consolación. The oldest references (a document from 1242, and the Papal Bull from Pope Innocence IV in 1248) mention the Church of Sant Joan de Porreres, as a suffragan church of Felanitx. In 1277, this Church already had the category of Parish, since its Priest, Monsignor Arnau Rossell is recorded with the title of Rector. It appears that the first temple was built in the plot of the current Oratory: Oratori de l’Hospitalet. The location in the current plot to the west of the old village area dates back to the end of the 14th Century, when the Gothic temple was built with six lateral chapels. The present building was started in 1667, based on a project by the Master N. Oliver, and by initiative of Rector Gaspar Llompart. The belfry was begun in 1705, the nave was completed in 1714, and the chapels and decoration were subsequently finished. The stucco works and refurbishment of the dome took place in 1797. The main façade has a quadrangular wall face, mainly undecorated, divided by four lines of voussoir, with a Rose window with helicoidal moulding in the upper tertiary level, and the upper crown is completely smooth. The main doorway has a lintel and moulded doorjambs, framed by Corinthian Style columns on plinths, and an The Belfry is on the right side of the temple. It has a square section with seven floors, the two upper ones with two lancet arches on each side, and a pyramidal pinnacle in the upper zone. The interior is a single nave with rectangular floor plan with an apse lintel, cambered barrel vault ceiling divided into eight sections and a quarter sphere shell-niche in the Presbytery. It has seven chapels on the sides and a choir gallery at the foot of the nave. The vertical wall has pilasters with Corinthian style capitals. The Presbytery contains a Baroque altarpiece dated around 1762, a work by Josep Sastre, which contains images of the Mare de Déu de la Consolación, Sant Joan Baptista, and Sant Joan Evangelista, as well as an attic with a painting of Sant Pere and it is crowned with the Village Coat of Arms. The chapels on the right or Epistles (or Epístola) side are: Chapel of Betlem, where we highlight several characters from popular life dated around 1790; Chapel of Nostra Senyora del Carme, with different artworks on the sides; Chapel de les Ànimes, presided by a Baroque Christ figure and an altarpiece from 1752; the lateral doorway, with an organ above it; Chapel of Sant Antoni Abat, with a very austere Baroque altarpiece, possibly from the former Church; Chapel of Sant Porreres Points of Interest 177 s oan ts J San la el nt Fe lip Plaça Molí de n'Amengual Sa So l 11 sta s 22 Be ive x at ar 9 nt Església parroquial La Rectoria Església de sant Felip Neri L’oratori de l’Hospitalet El Centre Catòlic Casa Bel·la La Quartera Creu des Pont Creu de la Marina Molins de ses Talaies Molí de Son Gornals Molí de Son Mora la n’Amengual MolíSade Molí d’en Tòfol Molí des Recó Sa Molí de Son Porquer la Oratori de la Creu d’en Nét Es Pagos Poblat talaiòtic F d’Es Pou Celat (Salat) ela n Bodegues Jaume Mesquida itx Can Feliu Ecoagroturisme y bodega Son Dagueta Finca Son Roig Sa Bassa Rotja Hotel Rural Finca Son Jorbo Agroturisme Son Mercadal Santuari de Monti-sion Museu i fons artístic de l’Ajuntament de Porreres entablature with a cornice crowned by a pediment which designs a medallion with a sculptured relief of the Virgin Mary. On the right of the doorway, we highlight the monument inaugurated in 1949, dedicated to the Bishop Pere Joan Campins (who died in 1915), who was Rector of Porreres. Pla de Mallorca O re ll Ga Ìs V I Campos Sa Sa lip rd à ss Pa me Ma-5030 it So l Sa Ce 9 10 Ro nd rt en au 5 or pa ct c Ro nt on Si tion M d' 8 la 3 iJ Re 33 Sa Llu ia 7 lla Re x I M Fl om Ll or sa 3 òr Gl 6 nz er ro v u ar sG de at ar me au n ló d olí t ts nt r ’en la nV eie p gre Ne Sa d'e Pa ce ín 3 rr 22 er a 4 Po Plaça Sta. St Catalina Tomàs Dus na Fe liu Ll L' A Jo lm oi an t sV en de s uí n re a ór de l'A Campos t or sV en de M aj rd à 2 a a Ce nd et en M ne Co Ma-5030 lm 1 Ro Tort ev Cr d' ss iJ Po Montuïri Nou Po 19 29 na lla 13 10 oi Ga Pa Re Plaça d'en Mora Pr 21 1 >> Porreres_Points of Interest 1 -510 Ma e íd m Ca II lço Do lu or aj cm ol la òf de ist Cr a M L r jo sa 2 2 d er iV e or s mp4in ll Ca m u Ja lin o M aj 8 Ca del Av. ll Ca s se l as Llu rt Po on m Ra or aj M s M 22 anç yo S 18 la u re aC nt Porreres at Ca Plaça d'Espanya Palma 6 rit 7 Nun Pla de Mallorca anca Villafr t Ì Fon gust 6 ere A Prev Sa Palma 11 Sa a lm Ctra. Pa Camí de Marina >> Porreres_Points of Interest >> Parish Church >> The Rectory The chapels on the left or the Gospel (Evangeli) side are: Chapel of the Baptistery, dated in 1894; Chapel of the Holy Family with a Baroque altarpiece; Chapel of Sant Sebastià with images of Sant Bartomeu and Sant Vicenç de Paül; Chapel of Sant Josep with an image of the Patron Saint by Adrià Ferran from the early 19th Century, and a Virgin Mary of Assumption image in the predella; the chapel del Roser, with octagonal floor plan with roof in the form of a rectangular dome base and two chapels on the sides; Chapel of Sant Roc, with a Baroque altarpiece which was elaborated in 1726; and the Chapel of Sant Vicenç Ferrer, which could date back to the 17th Century from the previous Church. There is also bell wheel from 1701. The Parish Treasury conserves various priceless liturgical objects: A small coffer from the Eucharistic Reserve from the end of the 14th Century, a Gothic Processional Cross (from the 15th Century), a work by Antoni Oliva, a Gothic Reliquary and NeoGothic Monstrance made by the Gold/Silversmith Fuster in 1864. We also highlight the Gothic Choir stalls from the Church of Sant Francesc de Palma, a work by Macià Bonafè (1447-55). The temple conserves a Gothic wood sculpture of the Virgin Mary by Gabriel Mòger II from the beginning of the 16th Century. >> The Catholic Centre >> Parish Church The Rectory (Rectoria) Dated from the 18th Century, the Rectory has a façade with a height of two floors. In the ground floor, there is the main doorway on four steps; it has a lintel with linear mouldings and vertical grooves in the doorjambs. This doorway appears inside the perimeter of a semi-circular doorway, which perhaps indicates a door prior to the 18th Century works. In addition to the rectangular windows, to the left of the doorway, we observe a small chapel with a wood cross. In the first floor, there is a gallery with three segmental arches, buttressed by two columns with entasis, isolated columns, and two pilasters embedded in the sides; in the centre of the protection wall, there is a medallion with the relief of Sant Francesc. In addition to the religious artworks, the interior also contains the Parish archives. The Catholic Centre (Centre Catòlic) (C/ Bisbe Campins, 13) This Regional-style building dated in 1935 has a height of two floors. The ground floor has three large semi-circular arches, in which the central one connects to the stairway access to the building. The first floor also has three arches arranged like balcony windows, the central one framed by a semi-circular arch which also houses a small semi-circular window. The sides are inscribed in a rectilinear space with lintel. The balcony which presides the floor displays a balustrade, except in the central section which is identified with the inscription “Centre d’Acció Catòlica” (Catholic Action Centre). The façade crown displays a decorative plant motif in the ends, with balustrades in the axis of the lateral arches and in the centre, a curved pediment which encompasses three small semi-circular arches. The Porreres Coat of Arms is shown in the ends of the crown. The interior currently serves a restaurant and it still conserves the scenic stage for theatre representations. The Hospital Oratory (Oratori de l’Hospitalet) This was the chapel for the village’s old hospital, which was first documented in 1457. However, before that according to one hypothesis, it was the Centre of the First Church of Porreres, recorded in 1242 (in the restoration works carried out in 1879, a Gothic tablet appeared which represented the village’s former Patron Saints, Sant Joan Baptista and Sant Joan Evangelista). The building was restored in 1655 and 1879. The façade has a lintel doorway with decoration and a circular skylight above it. The crown is a triangular undecorated gable topped with a Cross. A modern building has been attached on the left side. It has a rectangular floor plan with a barrel vault roof in the interior and a groined vault roof in the Sacristy. Bel·la House (Casa Bel·la) (C/ de l’Hospital, 9) This was the old clerk’s office of Porreres, documented in the 15th century. It has a very low vertical wall, with ground floor and porch (as evidenced by the window located on the right of the façade). It has a lintel doorway with a moulded lancet arch niche, currently Porreres Crist, in a Baroque style; and Chapel of the three Archangels, with the Baroque altarpiece from the beginning of the 18th Century by Domingo Ferrer. 179 Pla de Mallorca_Porreres Pla de Mallorca >> >> Porreres_Points of Interest The Quartera Building (La Quartera) (C/ de Nunó Sanç, 1) This building popularly known as sa Cortera is a house with a Medieval origin, with two floors and a lintel doorway, and the Coat of Arms of the Llompart family. On the left, there is a window and two wood crossbeams. Its name indicates that it was formerly used as a grain warehouse. Church of St. Philip Neri (Església de Sant Felip Neri) (C/ Sant Roc – C/ Passaratx) This is the Temple of the Oratory congregation built between 1886 and 1911 in the plots donated by Monsignor Joan Barceló Móra. The Virgin of Immaculada Concepció is the Patron Saint of the Church. The project was by Pere de Alcántara Peña, with the participation of Joan Sureda, who designed the façade. The chapel has a single nave, groined vault roof with lunnetes, and four lateral chapels with barrel vault ceiling. There is a dome in the crossing. The Christ is the same image which presided the Monastery of Sant Domingo de Palma. It conserves paintings by Vicenç Furió and Llorenç Cerdà. >> The Hospital Oratory >> Sanctuary of Mt. Zion Municipal Crosses There are a total of eleven crosses in the Porreres municipality, if we include the ones in the ascent to Monti-Sion (Mt. Zion). They all have a major historical and artistic value, but unfortunately, some of them have not been conserved in the most desirable condition. However, we can mention the following Crosses: Creu des Pont (15th Century), la Creu de la Marina (15th and 16th Century), or the different “Goigs· of the ascent to Monti-Sion (built between the 15th and 17th Centuries). Creu d’en Nét Oratory (Oratori de la Creu d’en Nét) The Oratory of Creu d’en Nét is a temple located next to the village cemetery of Porreres. Its interior conserves a cross which was built in memory of Mossèn Nét, the Rector of Porreres, from the 16th or 17th Century. The Church was built in 1772. Windmills A total of 36 windmill towers were located in the Porreres Municipality and there are also records of an additional four buildings which were demolished. Ten of these windmills are located in the city centre and almost half of the windmills are used a residence. Typologically, the majority are windmill towers with a base. Several of them such as the windmills: des Pont or Son Gornals still conserve some millstones, but in the majority of cases, there are no longer any traces of machinery. With regards to their construction dates, it appears that the oldest windmill is the molí d’en Recó, which belonged to the 17th century. The majority were built during the 16th and 17th Centuries and abandoned at the beginning of the 20th Century. Among the 36 buildings that we have mentioned, we highlight the following windmills: d’en Tòfol and d’en Amengual in the city centre, and the molí des Recó, molí de Son Mora, as well as ses Talaies, Son Gornals, and Son Porquer in the outskirts. Porreres empty, and a flared quadrangular window on the right. It has a stone cornice which supports two layers of roof tiles. >> Church of St. Philip Neri 181 Pla de Mallorca_Porreres Pla de Mallorca >> >> Porreres_Points of Interest >> Wine-Cellar of the Es Pagos Possession The Sanctuary is located on the peak of the hill with the same name at a height of 245 metres, which forms part of the Randa rock mass, specifically in the serra de sa Mesquida (sa Mesquida mountain range). A stairway leads from the exterior to the West façade, where the main door with segmental arch is located, which leads to the foyer with segmental vault. From the foyer, a lintel doorway, crowned by a niche with an image of the Virgin, connects to the interior porch and the cloister. It has a portico design and has an irregular pentagonal floor plan which is unique in Mallorca. In the centre of the patio, there is a platform which frames the well, with a hexagonal curbstone with a basin and corresponding iron scaffold. The temple is located in the North wing, and its façade has a lintel doorway, Rose window, and three semi-circular arches in the upper section, crowned with a steeple. The interior is a nave with two sections and Presbytery (on three steps) and two chapels on the Es Pagos It is located on the Porrers-Vilafranca motorway near the possession: possessió de Sant Martí on a hill. In 1564, it belonged to the The façade has three floors. The main doorway is a semi-circular arch crowned with a marble Coat of Arms of the Villalonga-Mir family. On both sides of the doorway, there is a set of doors, which alternate semi-circular arches and lintels with a roof over each one. On the second floor, there are seven arches, all balcony windows except the central one above the Coat of Arms. The porch also has six rectangular windows. The entrance or foyer with groined vault roof is laid out with different lintel doorways. A segmental arch leads to the patio. On the right, we highlight the well curbstone with octagonal section with the relief of a peacock in the ironworks. Towards the right, there is the wine cellar, a large room with vault ceiling with various wine vats. The peasant farm-owners house (casa dels amos) is located on the left. An old well is conserved in front of the entrance. The Chapel has a helicoidal groined vault roof with a keystone with the Villalonga-Mir Coat of Arms, and a segmental vault roof in the Presbytery. There is a small altarpiece dedicated to the Immaculada which presides the room. Porreres The old Grammar classroom is conserved on the East side. It has a lintel doorway with the Coat of Arms of Porreres above the lintel, and on the side, a sculptured relief of an inkwell and notebook with the inscription: Dilicit Dñs portas Sion dil. Dñs portas studiosorum. The interior is a rectangular room with barrel vault roof, with three arches with smooth pilasters and stone benches attached to the wall. On the right of the Church, behind the foyer with the kitchen on the right, there is the refectory (or Monk’s dining room) which conserves three sections of groined vault roof. On the left, we can see a water basin supported by a hand. According to the Arxiduc (Archduke Luis Salvador of Austria), “There are twelve rooms for students with a dividing wall and small kitchen, bathroom and clothes rack; above the room, there is a space to store wood: up to eight students sleep in each one of the rooms. The remaining lodgings are used for the professors and servants, with a total of 20 rooms”. Honourable Ramon Nicolau (des Pagos) and there were houses, with a wine cellar, and animal-driven mill; it had 275 sheep and around 30 peacocks; information which is undoubtedly related to the name of this possessió (possession) since these luxurious birds were subject to poachers. It is also known that there were two slaves. In 1661, it was owned by Margalida Nicolau. In 1863, it was the property of Felip Villalonga-Mir. 183 >> Interior of the Mt. Zion Sanctuary sides. It has a groined vault roof buttressed by key consoles and with sections separated by Ogive arches. The main altarpiece is a chapel altar with a NeoGothic altarpiece inscribed in the semi-circular arch which contains an image of the Mare de Déu de Monti-sion, sculpted in marble with a Coat of Arms in the lower section, possibly from the Dusai family who were benefactors of the temple. On the left, there is the Sacristy, which still conserves the ex-vots (votive offerings) or promises to the Virgin Mary. Pla de Mallorca Mt. Zion (Santuari de Monti-sion) The Sanctuary’s founding dates back to 1498, dedicated to the Mare de Déu de Monti-sion, with refurbishments throughout the 18th Century which affected the Church and its decoration. Latin Grammar was taught in the Grammar School, dated 1530, with the aim to be able to attend the Estudi General Lul·lià (Llull General Study Centre), subsequently, the Universitat Literària (Literary University). It was closed in 1835, due to the changes in the education system. There was a community of Missionaries supervised by Monsignor Cabrera between 1850-1855. There were new refurbishment works in 1892. Pla de Mallorca_Sant Joan Sant Joan Sant Joan The Municipality of Sant Joan has an extension of 38.5 km2 extension and a population of 1,847 inhabitants (2008 census data). It is bordered by the Municipalities of Montuïri, Sineu, Lloret de Vistalegre, Vilafranca de Bonany, Petra, and Porreres. This Municipality takes its name from the Church’s Patron Saint, Sant Joan Baptista; this temple was documented in 1249 as Sant Joan of Sineu. It has also been related to the owners of sa Bastida, who were surnamed Sant Joan. >> Scenic overview of Sant Joan 185 Historical References 42 Archaeological sites have been catalogued in Sant Joan, the majority in a very poor conservation state. From the PreTalayotic period, it has conserved the following caves: de la Bastida, del Camp Rafal, dels Calderers, and la coveta del Camp Vell, etc. From the Talayotic Age, we highlight the necropolis of Carrutxa and Son Gil, and the hydraulic systems of the well: Pou Vell de la Bastida and de la Baronia, etc. Ceramic artefacts have been found from the Roman Age in Son Munar, el Pujol, el turó de Pinyella (Pinyella Hill) and Puig de Sant Onofre (St. Onofre Hill). Pla de Mallorca >> >> Sant Joan_Historical References In the first half of the 19th Century, there were frequent droughts which caused significant losses in the agricultural sector. In 1850, the Town Council agreed to dig new wells and deepen other ones as a measure to solve this drastic situation. In 1870, the Congregation: Germanes de la Caritat de Sant Vicenç de Paül (Sisters of Charity) settled in Sant Joan. Until the mid 20th Century, the predominant economic activities were agriculture and cattle-raising. At the end of the 20th Century, we highlight the construction trades and their auxiliary industries such as carpenters, plumbers, and electricians, etc. >> Consolation Sanctuary 187 Pla de Mallorca Following the Conquesta (Conquest) in 1230, the outskirts of the Alhamar farmhouse was the centre where the current town arose. A short time later, the first Church of Sant Joan was built on Puig de Consolació (Consolation Hill), which depended on the Parish Church of Santa Maria de Sineu. However, in 1298, the Bishop Ponç de Jardí founded the Parish Church of Sant Joan, which was segregated from the Church of Santa Maria de Sineu. Sant Joan In the Islamic period, Sant Joan was located in the southern zone of the Jijnau-Bitra district. There was not a city centre and the population was scattered on farmhouses and country estates such as Alhamar, Carrutxa, Binifarda, les Algorfes, and Maham. Old Islamic ceramic artefacts have been found in the orchard: l’hort de Son Baró, el turó de Pinyella (Pinyella Hill), la Bastida, el Pujol, and Son Gual. ió ac a nc fra lla C. de M ig Ba ró jo r n ol l aja ns yC Co n mó Ra de de C. Vi C. C. r o ac an jo r Ma M C. de 25 de la u Pa 8 Remaining from this temple, there are the Gospel chapels on the left, the façade and lateral doorways as well as part of the belfry. Building on the current temple began in 1927. The works started on the right section, beside the fossar vell and a year later, the Epistle chapels were completed. The new Presbytery was begun in 1931 and the following year, the sculptor Bartomeu Amorós executed the The façade has a main Baroque doorway, a skylight, and a church wall, formed by a multi-lined crown. There is a lintel doorway with moulding, inscribed inside a semi-circular arch with doorjambs in the form of Corinthian pilasters with corresponding pyramids topped with balls. The Tympanum houses an image of the Patron Saint, Sant Joan, as he announces the arrival of the Saviour, a work by the sculptor Tomàs Vila in 1944. On the left of the façade, there is a belfry with square section and seven floors (the sixth and seventh levels have two lancet arches on each side). It has a pyramidal crown in a NeoGothic style from 1865. The lateral doorway is one of the church’s oldest elements, since it is a 189 coffered woodwork. The building structure was completed in 1935 and the interior in 1939, the year when the new Church was blessed. The coffered woodwork which was basically crafted by Joan Ginard was not finished until 1976, while the large entrance door, a work by the Master Llabrés which includes a sculpture by Tomàs Vila was concluded in 1944. Sant Joan n So e íd m Ca Petra Parish Church of St. John (Església Parroquial de Sant Joan) The first news of a Chapel in Sant Joan date back to 1249, under the name of Sant Joan de Sineu, located in the current Church, “Santuari de Consolació”. In 1298, the Bishop Ponç de Jardí constructed the chapel in the Parish Church. Due the consolidation of the city centre based on the founding of the town of Sant Joan, jointly with the inconvenience of climbing the hill where the temple was located, this motivated the construction of a new temple in its current site. The construction of this second church was underway in 1541 and the belfry was built in 1597. Between 1645 and 1700, the temple was expanded with the addition of new sections, and between 1768 and 1788, the roof was rebuilt in the form of a barrel vault. Pla de Mallorca mistat C. de l’A r do ira lM de C. Mates ja l an Más Ca 24 a and Mir ny e Jo e la o am gd C. d R C. de ià Ga er i iv i Ol ton ’An t van e Lle C. d C. sei a ant etra eP C. d Llev C. d C. Pas ces spir jor an 6 al Rav e C. d Jo C. d ió Prin alle is V Ma e la a rmit e l’E n C. l’U e la a Llu an Fr C. de Petra C. d a Llun e la C. d C. ca s ce M me C. d e Fr tra es M C. da an ol Sant Joan C. d a ll Llu on m Ra I eI de às C. m um Ja To de na C. ali at aC nt Sa C és alm G si cM es nc ra .F stori ció ari Belis 5 rt ista To lav C. Bal nio nto sé A e Jo ns C. d oli M ls de C. el 4 u o aC C. de C. de Consi u tit ns Co 1 alma No is ns S de C. Palma 6 C. de P ista lav de ad ç Pla jor Bal ri to C. C. S nio Montuïri - Sineu P alm No ás i Jau C. an Jo ant 2 C. C. de Palma Pla de Mallorca lS a de ol de C. C. 7 nto e C. d C. 25 ta ale sc la E p l am lul lC de nL C. mo Ra de I eI um Ja de C. 9 24 el M C. d Points of Interest ra gue ol el S sé A 8 or irad C. de Desert a C. d e Jo 7 e .d C let sca E la C. d 6 t Ma 5 lV en C. 4 de 9 espir 6 C. >> Sant Joan_Points of Interest C. de sa Bastida 2 Església parroquial de Sant Joan Convent de les monges de la Caritat de Sant Vicenç de Paül Santuari de Consolació Centre Catòlic Posada de Son Roig Casa pairal de Fra Lluís Jaume Posada dels Calderers Els Calderers Sa Bastida Molí d’en Tronca Molí d’en Carritxó all luis V Fra L C. de 1 >> Sant Joan_Points of Interest Gothic doorway from the 16th Century with a lancet arch, with convex moulding and two archivolts, and dust-cover also pointed; the Tympanum is undecorated. On the right beside the Belfry, a simple monument commemorates the Missionary, Friar Lluís Jaume. The interior with a Classic style has a floor plan with three naves, six lateral chapels, and flat roof with coffered woodwork by Joan Ginard. The naves are separated by two rows of pillars with quadrangular sections joined by semi-circular arches. Over the lateral naves, a gallery with balustrade extends which encloses the nave with statues of the Apostles. The Presbytery has a barrel vault roof and has three mural paintings by Pere Barceló, blessed in 1948; they represent the Birth, Ministry, and Martyrdom of the forerunner of the Messiah. The large painting in the upper section represents the glorification of Sant Joan, with the family Coat of Arms of Verí, Verger, and another surname of the village. >> Catholic Centre The chapels on the left or the Gospel side are: The first chapel under the gallery houses the belfry doorway; chapel of Heart of Jesus; the lateral doorway, called the Men’s doorway with the organ above it created between 1873 and 1901; Chapel de les Ànimes; Chapel of the Name of Jesus, which houses the Baroque altarpiece (1671), by Pere Joan Pinya, with three levels, the central chapel with the sculptured relief of the Circumcision; and Chapel of Sant Josep, with its 3-level Baroque altarpiece, the central one occupied by an image of the Patron Saint. The Altar of the Sang de Crist (Blood of Christ Altar) is between this chapel and the presbytery. The chapels on the right or Epistles side are: Chapel of the Mare de Déu de Lourdes; Chapel of Sant Antoni; Chapel of Santa Catalina Tomàs; Chapel de la Puríssima; Chapel del Roser; Chapel de la Mare de Déu del Carme. The Apse chapel of the Epistle side is the Sagrari (Tabernacle); between it and the presbytery is the image of Sant Joan Baptista, possibly brought from the Cathedral of Palma 1541. On the left of the Presbytery, there is the Sacristy with irregular pentagonal floor plan with a balcony that faces the exterior. Its interior conserves a painting of Friar Lluís Jaume. The Parish Museum located in the upper gallery, contains among other elements, a Virgin of Assumption figure from the early 16th Century attributed to Gabriel Mòger and the Baroque reliquary of the Mare de Déu de la Consolación created in 1804. The Catholic Centre (Centre Católic) (New Square or King Juan Carlos I Square [Plaça Nova o de Joan Carles I]) The Catholic Centre known by the name: “Es Centre” was built in the site which was occupied by the Old Rectory. It was inaugurated in 1922 based on a project by Monsignor Joan Vich Nebot and sponsored by Monsignor Francesc Mas Galmés, Rector of the Parish. One part of the building was occupied by Sant Joan >> Parish Church of Sant Joan 191 Pla de Mallorca_Sant Joan Pla de Mallorca >> Pla de Mallorca_Sant Joan >> Sant Joan_Points of Interest The building has two floors and a central tower, crowned by a sculpture by the Franciscan “santjoaner”, Friar Lluís Jaume made by the sculptor Tomàs Vila. The ground floor has five spans which are all skene arches. The first floor also has five lintel arches with alternating curved and triangular pediments. These arches have the form of balcony windows, the sides and doorways connect to a continuous balcony, the three central ones with balustrade. The tower forms a symmetrical axis and has a semi-circular arch, while around it, there is a closed terrace with balustrade; the pedestal with a sculpture of Friar Lluís Jaume has the Sant Joan Coat of Arms. The Son Roig Inn (Posada de Son Roig) (C/ Major o d’Enmig, 80) This is a traditional house which was possibly built by Antoni Company Nicolau at the end of the 17th Century, with a façade with two floors and a semi-circular vaulted doorway. The lintel doorway on the left is more modern while the one on the right has a window. In the first floor, there are two windows with sill. Above the doorway, there is an engraving with the name of Compañy and the date 1698. Birthplace House of Friar Lluís Jaume (Casa Pairal de Fra Lluís Jaume) (C/ Fra Lluís Jaume, 23) This is a house with a popular style, its façade has irregular stone masonry with two floors and a skene arch doorway; there are two simple windows on the first floor. To the left of the portal, >> The Calderers Inn >> Birthplace House of Friar Lluís Jaume The Calderers Inn (Posada dels Calderers) (C/ Major, 98) This is a house with a popular style, its façade has irregular stone masonry with two floors and a skene arch doorway; there are two simple windows on the first floor. In the first floor, there are two windows with sill. This house served as an Inn for the peasant land-owners of the possession: possessió dels Calderers, the Oliver family, who were tenants of the property mentioned from the 18th Century until the 1950’s decade. One of the most famous landowners of Els Calderers and the owner of this house was Antoni Oliver Gaià (1863-1936), who carried out a major modernization activity of Mallorcan agriculture. In front of the Inn, there is the Convent de les monges de la Caritat de Sant Vicenç de Paül (Brothers of Charity Monastery) (num. 87), which was established in the town in 1870 and in its current location since 1926. Sant Joan >> Son Roig Inn a commemorative sandstone plaque of Friar Lluís Jaume has this inscription: “Aquesta era segons tradició la casa pairal del V. Fr. Lluís Jaume, zelós defensor de Crist; qui, en la apostòlica tasca de la conversió dels gentils rebé cruent i dolorosíssim martiri de mans dels indis de l’Alta Califòrnia (1740-1775)” (According to tradition, this is the birthplace of Friar Lluís Jaume, a zealous defender of Christ; who in the Apostle’s task of the conversion of the Gentiles, he received a cruel and painful martyrdom at the hands of Indians of the Upper California (1740-1775)” 193 a Theatre which later became a Cinema until it burned in 1978. Another part of the building is currently dedicated to the Rectory. Pla de Mallorca >> Pla de Mallorca_Sant Joan The Sanctuary de Consolación has an entrance with a semi-circular arch doorway, with a tile roof; further to the right, the Cas Donat has two floors with lintel doorway sheltered by a porch. In relation to the Oratory, the main façade is the result of the refurbishment in 1959, with a sloped vertical wall. The main doorway is a semi-circular arch, with NeoRomanic style, sheltered by a porch buttressed by two pillars; above it, there is a circular >> Interior of Consolation Sanctuary skylight. The lateral doorway, which forms part of the Medieval temple is semi-circular arch sheltered by an archivolt with simple moulding. The interior has a rectangular floor plan with four sections of barrel vaulted ceiling and four lateral chapels with shallow depth and semi-circular arches. The Presbytery with quadrangular floor plan has a quarter sphere roof, while the vertical wall has two lateral semi-circular arches and a central arch which allows one to see the Chapel, with a dome and six windows, which serve for the veneration of the Mare de Déu de Consolación, a sculpture from the 16th Century which was restored by Guillem Galmés in 1917. The chapels on the left or the Gospel side are: The first chapel has a painting of Sant Albert Magne, from the Monastery of Sant Domingo of Palma; in the second chapel, there is a lateral doorway with a painting of Sant Joan Baptista; the third chapel has a painting of the Mare de Déu dels Remeis with the Trinitat (Virgin of the Remedies and the Trinity) and two paintings of Sant Tomàs de Aquino and Sant Vicenç Ferrer; the fourth chapel contains a painting of Sant Bonaventura and the sides, paintings of Sant Llorenç and Sant Marçal. The chapels on the right or Epistle side are: The first contains a Gothic altar with Sant Pere from the beginning of the 16th Century, which came from the Monastery of Sant Domingo of Palma; the second chapel has a painting of Christ; the third houses a painting of Sant Domingo also from the Monastery of Sant Domingo, and the fourth has an altar piece with Sant Onofre blessed in 1912. 195 Consolation Sanctuary (Santuari de Consolación) The original Temple building of the Sanctuary of Nostra Senyora de Consolació (Our Lady of Consolation), located on a hill with a height of 172 m., dates back to the 13th Century, where there are records of this temple in 1249 when it became the first documented Parish church of Sant Joan in 1298. From this early building, there are possibly remains in the exterior walls, the door which connects to the patio and the steeple. In order to reinstate the worship which was probably interrupted in the 16th Century due to the Church’s relocation to the centre of the village, Arnau Sureda established an ecclesiastic benefit. In 1572, it also appears documented that the old church was also called Nostra Senyora de Consolación. In 1742, the Pope granted a Jubilee which made the Sanctuary very popular. The Oratory was built between 1755 and 1780, with a barrel vault and a new Presbytery. The chapel dates back to 1781, which was subsequently reformed. In 1855, the Benefit was eliminated as a result of the Madoz law. A general refurbishment was carried between 1959 and 1966 supervised by Josep Oleza Frates. Sant Joan >> Sant Joan_Points of Interest Pla de Mallorca >> >> Sant Joan_Points of Interest >> Interior of Els Calderers Possession Els Calderers The Calderers possessió (possession) was first documented in 1285 as a property belonging to the Calderer family, for which it was named, and it subsequently passed into the hands of the Nicolau family. The cadastre records in 1575 show that the possessió was divided into two properties; it appears that this ancient division was the origin of the plural name of ‘Calderers’. Newly reunited, the possession then passed into the patrimony of the Verí family. In 1662, Pere de Verí obtained the license to plant vinyards in 22 “quarterades” (Mallorcan land measurement equivalent to 7,103 m2). Based on information in 1789, J. de Berard mentioned this property estate in the following note: “Grande. Trigo. Seller sin viña” (Large. Wheat. Winery without vinyards), we may surmise that the former agricultural production of the possession had fallen into a decline in the 18th Century; it recovered in the 19th Century. However, its fortunes declined yet again with the advent of the grape phylloxera crisis at the end of the 19th Century. Since the mid 20th Century, it has been owned by the Juan de Sentmenat Morell family, due to the marriage of Mrs. Margalida de Verí’s niece and heiress to Francesc Juan de Sentmenat, son of Conde de Ribas (Count Ribas). This estate house was refurbished by Count Ribas in the mid 20th Century and it houses a major collection of his furniture, artwork, and decorative objects. The Calderers houses were built in the first half of the 18th Century. The main façade facing Southeast corresponds to the landowner’s house and it has three floors. The portal forà (doorway) is a semicircular vaulted arch, built on six steps with two lions which decorate the entrance. It is connected to a square room which provides access to the rooms and central patio. We highlight that the central patio no longer serves as the main layout of the house’s rooms. In this possession, the Juan de Sentmenat family has reconstructed an agricultural production unit which represents the Pla de Mallorca tradition, where it is possible to visit the houses, their attached buildings, stables, and remaining premises. Sa Bastida The possessió de Sa Bastida (Sa Bastida Possession) originated from the Islamic farmhouse of Alhamar. This farmhouse was documented in 1242 and in 1256, it was recorded as the property of Gonçal i Joan de Verí. It subsequently passed into the hands of Arias Yánez and his son, Arias Ferrandis, with the title of Knight. By means of marriage with the heir above, Margalida Ferrandis with Joan de Sant Joan In addition to the Oratory, we highlight other buildings such as the Cas Donat, the old Rectory building which was modified and rebuilt on various occasions, the last restoration in the years: 1959-66. In these works, a new doorway was opened in the patio, a cross was installed in the embankment of ses Roques, the garden was repaired and the motorway was opened. Originally built in 1715, the cells were also restored. The cistern with its octagonal curbstone dates back to 1972; it was renovated in 1777. The two sundials, dated 1986, were designed by Rafel Soler and crafted by Baltasar Vidal. 197 Pla de Mallorca_Sant Joan Pla de Mallorca >> The peasant farm-owners house is the oldest. It consists of a single floor, it has a main doorway with semi-circular arch and a lintel doorway on the left. >> Main Façade of Els Calderers Possession In the patio, the wall that is located in front of the main doorway, has a height of two floors and contains two lintel doorways with an Ogee arch frame, corresponding to the peasant land-owner’s house. The interior conserves a Gothic segmental arch, with archivolts, reliefs, and other Medieval details. To the right of the patio which corresponds to the landowner’s house, it has three floors and a porch with octagonal pillars. 199 The façade of the peasant farm-owners house has been refurbished. It has three floors, a main doorway with semi-circular arch, and on the second floor, there is a porch with octagonal pillars. The right side has a terrace buttressed by four semi-circular arches. The foyer, with a beam roof (raised in a subsequent refurbishment), formerly had extending beams, which are still visible. It has lateral stone benches, one of them could be a lintel with a reused Ogee arch frame and contains old objects and instruments; they conserve fragments of painting with the Sant Joan Coat of Arms. To the left, there is an old deteriorated lintel doorway with ruins of embedded pilasters. Through a skene arch, we access a rectangular patio with a well curbstone. The left side has an interesting porch with two segmental arches and a central octagonal pillar, with the Sant Joan Coat of Arms in the capital. There is a Gothic Ogee arch doorway in the porch interior. The first floor houses a straw storage room with elevated access. In the left angle, a constructive detail with a Gothic origin reveals another Ogee arch doorway. Pla de Mallorca Sant Joan, the possession passed to the Sant Joan family. In the decade of 1520, the owner was Hug de Sant Joan, who during the Germanies (Artisan guild’s revolt), was imprisoned in his home by the agermanats (or Artisan Supporters) and was liberated by a group of bandolers (bandits); in 1525, he was appointed as the Governor’s lieutenant. The last owner with the Sant Joan surname was Jordi de Sant Joan, who died in 1659 without a male heir. Throughout the 17th Century, it became the property of the Dameto family, the Marquis and Marchioness of Bellpuig. In 1789, Jeroni de Berard says: “Grande. Trigo. Viña. Del marqués de Bellpuig” (Grand. Wheat. Vineyards. From the Marquis of Bellpuig). At the beginning of the 19th century, the property was managed by the Gual family, major peasant tenants. It 1863, it belonged to Francesc SáenzRamírez Socías and it was the Municipality’s second largest property. According to Arxiduc (Archduke Luis Salvador of Austria), around 1885, “a la Bastida hi ha una capella amb arc escarser gòtic en la qual abans hi havia un altar; avui s’hi adossa un forn de pa al qual dóna accés una porta gòtica amb marc rectangular” (“In the Bastida, there is a chapel with a Gothic skene Arch in which there was formerly an altar; today a bakery is attached to it which is accessed by a Gothic door with a rectangular frame”). In the 1920’s decade, it was acquired by the peasant land-owner Antoni Camps Ribas; it recently belonged to the brothers, Francesc and Joan Camps Verger. Sant Joan >> Sant Joan_Points of Interest >> Pla de Mallorca_Santa Eugènia The Municipality adopted its name from the farmhouse of Bernat de Santa Eugènia, a small Medieval town which was the Benibazari farmhouse in the Islamic period. Agricultural production and cattle-raising have existed in Santa Eugènia since prehistoric times. Throughout the Roman Age, cattle-raising became consolidated as well as the Mediterranean trilogy, primarily cereal crops and vineyards. Following the Catalonian Conquest, fruits and vegetables were cultivated in the “possessions” and “rafals” (country estates). From the PreTalayotic period, different caves have been conserved such as the Caves of the Puig de Santa Eugènia, >> Scenic overview of Santa Eugènia Es Puget, Son Matxina, etc. The archaeological site, des Rafal, where there is a large Talayot with a circular floor plan, is a sample of the Talayotic culture. In the Royal Property Distribution Book, “Llibre del Repartiment” of Mallorca (1232), it documents the granting of the present lands of Santa Eugènia to Bernat de Santa Eugènia. Throughout the second half of the 13th century, the zone’s lands were subjected to property subdivisions and transfers. Starting from that century until the 19th Century, Santa Eugènia administratively belonged to Santa Maria. Finally, after a very long process, the Municipality was consolidated and managed to constitute its first independent Town Council (1840). We highlight that the Council of Mallorca has initiated a series of dossiers to file a declaration of Assets of Cultural Interest for each one of the Municipal’s villages. 201 The Municipality of Santa Eugènia has an extension of 20 km2 and a population of 1,562 inhabitants (2008 census data). It is bordered by the Municipalities of Sencelles, Algaida, Palma, Santa Maria del Camí, and Consell. Pla de Mallorca Historical References Santa Eugènia Santa Eugènia ue rie s uer a ar ia La Ba lan er a ele sM ll n Llu ta ol l Ram r lull 3 4 s'A Ses lju b t ge Pu s de s e Jornet Pge. d on L o Ram Majo Es Puget n Llarch Pge. de Ca u sq de gu S’E Bisbe Sastre Santa Eugènia Can Ferriol .M Can s Sol ep Jos de sa Plaça de Bernat de Sta Eugènia 1 Ca m íd Esglèsia 4 5 6 es O eS 7 es 25 7 es M g on lleries de s íd g 3 ta ui 1 2 s Co es P r gue a Bal 25 6 t Plaça es Puget lete 2 er agu Bal 5 Puge Esco ep Jos al Nad s'A lju b Església parroquial de Santa Eugènia Son Bosso Jornets S’Aljub Molí de can Fideu o de can Toni Xel·la Molí de can Camarada Molí de cas Moliner Vell Bodegues Vinya Taujana Restaurant can Puceta er rra Se u aJ Fr p ní s'A lju Si ne u b -A lg ai da 7 Parish Church of St. Eugenia (Església Parroquial de Santa Eugènia) The first Church was built in the 16th Century, when the population centre which surrounded the old Islamic Benibazari farmhouse was converted into the farmhouse of Bernat de Santa Eugènia starting in 1230, when there was a significant population increase. On the date of 22nd of February 1583, the residents of Santa Eugènia assembled into a council to make the decision to build a temple which would thus eliminate having to visit the Parish Church of Santa Maria and they unanimously decided to the build the church. The Bishop of Mallorca, Joan Vich i Manrique, granted the authorisation and the works began immediately. Architecturally, this Early Christian temple is unknown, but it must have been a simple building in a Gothic style with a wood and tile roof. Administratively, it depended on the Parish Church of Santa Maria and in 1603, it was converted into a Vicarage by order of the Bishop Joan Vich with installation of the Reserva del Santíssim (Eucharistic reserve). The extensive competencies which correspond to a vicarage in capite were assigned during the Seventeenth Century. The early Christian Gothic Oratory became too small due to the population growth and at the end of the 17th Century, it was necessary to build a new Church. The current temple was built between 1699 and 1716, with subsequent additions, such as the Chapel de la Puríssima (built between 1839- 1841), the current belfry (approx. 1850), the transept and the lintel, with the Presbytery (between 1863- 1869). In 1913, in the period of the Bishop Pere Campins, the Vicarage in capite of Santa Eugènia was converted into a Parish Church. The main façade has a quadrangular wall with a flat finish in the form of a cornice or horizontal moulding. The main doorway has a lintel and doorjambs with linear mouldings in the capital and the base. Over the doorway, there is a small semi-circular niche which contains a modern image of Santa Eugènia and it is crowned by the sculptured relief of a cross. In the upper section of the façade, there is a circular Rose window with a spiral moulding and a sundial. In front of the façade, there is a platform, occupied by the village fossar (cemetery), or “es Sagrat”, from 1645 until the beginning of the 19th Century. The entrance to the temple is through a wood door dated 1870. The interior is a single nave, with a Latin cross floor plan, with a slightly marked transept, and four lateral chapels as well as the transept arms. The nave has a barrel vault ceiling divided into four sections. The vertical wall alternates between the high arches of the chapels and a semi-circular arch, and the smooth pilasters which separate the chapels. The centre of the transept is occupied by a dome with a circular base on penditives. In the upper section of the transept arms, there is a skylight in the form of a port-hole on each side. Santa Eugènia ang ta s Bal 203 íd -S Ca m La ue rie es lq ov Pla de Mallorca Palma Points of Interest e sC >> Santa Eugènia_Points of Interest Pla de Mallorca 7 lq 40 Se sA 30 s'E st ac ió Se de a- Se sA M Pla de Mallorca_Santa Eugènia >> Son Bosso House Son Bosso According to tradition, these houses could have constituted the heart of the Isalmic Benibazari farmhouse, which was refurbished by Bernat de Santa Eugènia, around which the village was gradually built. It appears that in the 16th Century, Son Bosso belonged to the Bibiloni family, with the surname of Bosso. This old name of Son Bosso frequently alternates with the more modern names of can Paterno and sa Casa Paterna, which refer to the antiquity of this house. The exterior façade is an undecorated wall like a fortified house, with a square window on the left of the doorway. The main door is a vaulted semi-circular doorway, very wide, with a post on the left and a wood rail in the upper section. The doorway connects to a foyer with a groined vault roof and a baker’s oven on the right. To the left of the foyer, there is a stone bench which also functions as a ledge known by the name: “es pujador”, formed by a piece of stone on a base. The foyer connects to a small patio starting with a large semi-circular stone arch made with sandstone. At the end of it, there is the main façade with two floors. In the ground floor on five steps, there is a lintel >> The Cistern: S’Aljub >> Parish Church of St. Eugenia doorway with an Ogee arch frame and doorjambs with a simple stone moulding. On the first floor, there is a window with sill, with pictorial decoration and floral motifs in the form of a border. On the right on the doorway attached to the angle of the walls, there is a well curbstone with square section in one piece and a stone basin carved in the lower section. To the left of the doorway, there is a small water tank called “es cisternó”, which is used to convey the water to the well. On the right of the patio in an angle with the main façade, there is the large entrance door of the old wine vat with a wood lintel. The Cistern (S’Aljub) The street, carrer de s’Aljub is one of the village’s most important roads, since it links the Sencelles and Sineu motorways, while it also serves to separate the city centres of Vila and Puget. The water tank for which it is named is an interesting example of the traditional hydraulic system. It is a water tank with a rectangular floor plan, attached to the wall of the neighbouring house. The roof is a very segmental vault with flat sides and flagstone surface with small stones joined with lime mortar, two of the well curbstones which extend have a square section with a chapel or Ogive arch roof. There is a canal which extends from each of the curbstones which connect to the corresponding basin. Several iron fittings which were used to tie the cattle are still conserved here. Until the 1950’s decade, the water tank supplied the majority of the water which the city consumed, not to mention the corresponding family cisterns and various wells to underground streams. 205 The main altarpiece is Baroque with Rococo elements dated in 1757 and designed by the Friar, Fra Albert Borguny. It is built on a modern base or wood baseboard and has a vertical wood structure with a stony decoration. We highlight its central niche with roof decorated with the sculptured reliefs of Seraphin angels, with the image of Santa Eugènia. Surrounding the altar, there are nine paintings with representations of the Saints. Santa Eugènia >> Santa Eugènia_Points of Interest Pla de Mallorca >> Pla de Mallorca_Santa Eugènia >> Santa Eugènia_Points of Interest -30 40 èn ia Ctra de Ma-3020 Es Puget ncelles aria a Se Santa M 1 í de Mun tany a 3 ries Ses Alque 2 Son Sastre Son Vidal i celler Pou 2 4 M u Sta. Eugè 1 Camí de 1 í de ya an nt Ses Coves nia Cam Camí de Muntanya Cam Ses Alqueries 3 Ses Alqueries Pla de Mallorca 26 23 1 Se sA lq ue rie s Ses Coves Santa Eugènia e Santa Eugènia m íd Palma 23 26 4 Agroturisme Restaurant Sa Torre de Santa Eugènia Molí de Son Pau Es Puget was land that was classified as a communal asset which was attached to the Church according to the “capbrevació” (property register) of 21st of December 1747. Throughout the 18th Century, es Puget was divided into plots to build houses and thanks to its elevated position, several windmills. With the passage of time, the streets and the square (Plaça) of es Puget were defined. One of the outstanding houses in des Puget is Jornets, (C/ Ramon Llull, 33), with a façade that has a height of three floors, semi-circular doorway with stone doorjambs and a rectangular window on each side of the door. On the first floor, there is a balcony over the door and a window on each side and the porch on the second floor has three windows. In the rear section of the houses, with entrance by a street without an exit called passatge de Jornets, there is a partially conserved tafona (oil press), a site which was dedicated to olive oil production. Undoubtedly, the most characteristic features in es Puget are the three flour wind mills, whose silhouettes can be seen over the hill’s horizon and the rest of the houses: The windmills: Molí de can Fideu or de can Toni Xel·la (C/ des Puget, 5), Molí de cas Moliner Vell (Plaça del Puget, 7), with lintel doorway and 3-piece doorjamb on each side; it ceased operations at the beginning of the 1920’s decade and its antenna were dismantled, and Molí de can Camarada (Plaça del Puget), which according to oral testimony, ceased to function around 1910. In the Property Register of 1858, two owners appeared with the surname of Camarada, Bartomeu Rigo and Miquel Rigo. Ses Coves The name of this village originates from the caves which are located in its surroundings. The most numerous group of caves are located in the stream: Torrent de Son Vidal, between Son Vidal and Son Sastre, however, in the hill zone which the village occupies beside the houses, there are also the caves of can Sant and Son Vidal, among others; other caves are located in the zone of the mola de Son Vidal, and also in the spot which is known as the Comellar des Rafal. Several caves are man-made prehistoric sites and currently many of them are used as storerooms, garages, hen houses, and stables. In this village, we find a series of important houses, as exemplified by the can Matet, can Tiana, cas Gorrió, can Soler, can Rom, or Son Vidal. Furthermore, there is a curious space which contains the wine vat and wine cellar, Celler de Son Vidal: A cavern opens in the natural rock which is occupied by the wine vat, excavated in cave wall and covered with stone; further inside the cavity, a wine press with two spigots is still conserved. To the right of the cavity entrance, there is a lintel doorway which opens into the wall that seals the cavern with a prehistoric form. The space is dedicated to the wine cellar and the right side has also been artificially sealed with a wall, now covered Santa Eugènia Ma ug 207 .E Pla de Mallorca Sta Ca >> Pla de Mallorca_Santa Eugènia >> Santa Eugènia_Points of Interest >> Windmill: Molí de Son Pau Ses Alqueries It appears that the name of ses Alqueries, in plural, comes from two farmhouses with an Islamic origin which constituted the base of the village. According to documentation from the 13th Century, these farmhouses were probable Benibahari —or Benibafari— and Beniporrex. In this village, we find a series of incredible houses, as exemplified by Cas Teixidor, can Caló, can Batlet, can Cotà, s’Hostal d’en Comuna, >> Son Vidal Wine-Cellar Sa Torre The houses of the Sa Torre possession are some of the most representative structures of the Municipality of Santa Eugènia. The vertical wall of the façade and the first corridor has two floors while in the second level we can see a third floor (located above the wine cellar, comprised by two more corridors). The main door is a semicircular arch, with very stylized Santanyí stone vaults; in the keystone vault, there is a stone relief with the Immaculate Conception. The doorjambs are formed by a large stone piece. On the sides of the doorway, there are two benches covered with stone slabs; the one on the right is scaled since it served as a ledge. The main doorway connects to a spacious rectangular foyer. The central part of the floor has a corridor tiled with stones and geometric figures, which served to define the passageway to the wine cellar; on the right, the flooring is Mallorcan floor tile, while on the left, the flooring has been refurbished and now reproduces the typology of flagstone pavement. To the right of the foyer, there is a Santa Eugènia Another remarkable construction in the village is the well, with a circular curbstone and a wider base. Prior to the modifications, there were two basins, one with a rectangular base and the other circular, which are still conserved in the exterior of the Town Council of Santa Eugènia; the first was used for washing and the second as a drinking trough. More specifically, the Plaça which contains the well responded to the need for space in order to water the sheep. The well mouth has a stem in the form of a crossbeam in order to extract water. According to oral accounts, this was not a well to an underground stream, but a dripping or filtration well which connects to a natural cave with very large dimensions. Son Paraire, or can Corna. Equally outstanding, note the windmill, Molí de Son Pau. The tower with stone face has a circular section and square base, semi-circular arches, and a very steep tile roof. It has a stone masonry construction with embankment and two floors. The windmill terrace, which is accessed through the tower interior, has a tiled floor. The wall enclosure has been conserved in excellent condition as an outdoor decoration. The interior has been completely restored. 209 with ivy; to the left of the wine vat in the lower section, there is a door which connects to the wine tank’s base, where the wine basin is located. Pla de Mallorca >> >> Windmill: Molí de can Camarada >> Windmill: Molí de cas Moliner Vell >> Santa Eugènia_Points of Interest transversal segmental arch with mouldings in the capital, behind it, there is an interesting stairway which leads to the upper floors. This foyer leads to the different rooms of the houses: on the left, from the entrance, there is the kitchen with a lintel doorway crowned with a wood pediment. On the right, there is a lintel doorway, it has a niche with a Virgin Mary image of the Immaculada which opens into the space of the current Lord’s house: the first room has a quadrangular floor plan and we highlight several pieces of furniture with Mallorcan carpentry and a small image of Sant Miquel. To the left, there is the lintel doorway of the Chapel room with a small basin for holy water on the right. This Chapel is located in a square living room. It consists of a small Presbytery, which is the Chapel properly speaking, it opens starting from a semi-circular arch, protected by several wood doors which isolate it from the room when it is not in use. To the left of the Presbytery, there is a small room used as a Sacristy and Confessional. The altar is presided by a Baroque painting which represents Sant Bonaventura; surrounding it, there are three other small paintings which represent Sant Alonso Rodríguez (in the scene of the Bellver Castle), Santa Catalina Tomàs, and Ramon Llull (in the Miramar cave). The first room of the Lord’s house, prior to the Chapel room, has a doorway which is connected to the Northeast platform, where there is an octagonal curbstone of the well, with doorjambs and a stone crossbeam. The platform has a flagstone floor and connects to several landscaped spaces which have a great view of the serra de Tramuntana (Tramuntana Mountains). By the stairway which begins in the foyer, we ascend to the first floor where there are several old rooms; they are currently furnished as spaces for Rural tourism clients and decorated with Mallorcan style furniture and details. The second floor has a small viewpoint with a balustrade which is connected to the bedrooms. The wine cellar located in front of the main doorway occupies a very large sized room. The room is divided in the centre by a row of isolated pillars and two pilasters embedded in the lateral walls which configure two transversal naves. The two naves have a design with a total of 8 sections which contain a set of 17 wine vats. Starting from a large lintel doorway, it connects to a porch with two transversal sections which have three segments each; it contains a wine press and wine vats. The wine press has the form a beam press, a very typical system used in the tafones (oil presses) for oil production. This system conserves the different parts that integrate it. Beside the beam press, there are the wine vats which occupy three of the porch sections. As a whole, there are three enormous stone lined tanks, two on the ends with a square design and the smaller central one with a rectangular design. The wine vats and the wine cellar are the best examples of this possession’s primary economic activity: Vineyards and the elaboration of wine. Santa Eugènia >> Windmill: Molí de can Fideu oder Molí de can Toni Xel·la >> Sa Torre Possession 211 Pla de Mallorca_Santa Eugènia Pla de Mallorca >> Pla de Mallorca_Sencelles Sencelles >> Pla de Mallorca 213 Sencelles Historical References The Municipality of Sencelles, with an extension of 52.52 km2 and a population of 3,330 inhabitants (2008 census data), is bordered by the municipalities of Binissalem, Inca, Costitx, Lloret de Vistalegre, Algaida, Santa Eugènia, and Consell. >> Scenic overview of Sencelles The Sencelles place name was documented for the first time in 1237, and although its origin is uncertain, there are different theories: Some think that it comes from the Latin: centum cellas; Joan Coromines interprets that it is >> Sencelles_Historical References Biniali is a place name with an Arabic origin derived from Bânu Alî, “the sons of Alí”. Ruberts appears documented in the Royal Property Distribution Book (“Llibre del Repartiment”) of Mallorca (1232), with an uncertain origin, Jornets adopted the name of the possession from which it arose (although it appears that it originated from the Romanic period, its origin is unknown), Cascanar appears documented starting from 1247 in different spellings with an unknown source although it has been attributed with an Arabic origin, Laiar appears to have its etymological origin from Arabic and Sanarrossa is probably a derivative of the Islamic term, Qanarusa. >> Parish Church of Sant Cristòfol in Biniali The first traces of human occupancy date back to the PreTalayotic period, according to the discovered archaeological ruins, such as the settlements of the “navetiform” (Boat-shaped dwellings) cities in Morelló Nou, Son Calussa, Son Fransoi, and Son Caimari. There are also numerous caves, a natural cavern in Son Ganyada as well as man-made ones (the cave of Cuineta, the cave d’en Mariaina and the cave of Sa Talaia). The Talayotic culture left many ruins, such as the cities of Son Fred, Son Company, and Velar de sa Coma, etc. There are also ruins from the Roman Domination which have >> Talayot in Cascanar been discovered in the topsoil of Son Fred, Sonarrossa, and Son Campaner. From the Islamic period, there are also ruins, especially the place names as illustrated by the names of several farmhouses: Alayar (Laiar), Beniferri (Biniferrí), Abenalia (Biniali), etc. After the Catalonian conquest, the district of Qanat al-Arusa corresponded to Gastó de Montcada, the viscount of Berarn, however twenty years later, the lands returned to the hands of King Jaume I, who ceded them to the Bishop of Mallorca, the Archbishop of Barcelona, the Sacristan of Gerona and the Archdeacon of Barcelona. The economy and the demography were affected by various revolts and bad harvests. Likewise, the droughts which occurred between 1732 and 1755 aggravated the situation of the population’s misery and poverty. The definitive segregation from Costitx took place in 1858. Nonetheless, the disputes about the boundary issues continued, since the new Town Council had interests in the villages of Jornets, Ruberts, and Binifat. Thus in 1863, the Provincial authorities appointed the Marquis of Campo-Franco as the person in charge of issuing a verdict and he ruled in favour of maintaining the villages in the Sencelles lands. Sencelles derived from the Latin: senticellas, the diminutive of sentix (“arch, bramble”); it is also possible that after the conquest, it adopted the lineage name of a property owner, Pere de Centelles, who received several possessions from the Qanarusa district. There are also other theories based on popular tradition. 215 Pla de Mallorca_Sencelles Pla de Mallorca >> Sa ns i ç n re lo tL n Sa olí M ria Glò Plaça de Sant Ferràn 1 n Se l ce le sa P in a s elle c Sen Sta ria Ma nta Sa ra. ria Ma a lles ce Sen The current temple dates from the end of the 17th century and the first half of the 18th century. The first stone was placed on the 2nd of April 1691; the main doorway was completed in 1738, and the main altar piece was finished in 1776. The main altar was consecrated on 29th of June 1777. In 1888, the access to the main portal was modified and the bell tower crown was completed. Its interior was also refurbished Sencelles 217 So Bo e Molins a- 6 27 ent Torr Pou M da ai lg 3140 A d a ll tre Es or Rafal 5 Sant Isidre aj M a ig èn s 7 Ct ra M in ida ga Al 6 Església parroquial de Sant Pere Monument de la Beata Sor Francinaina Cirer Convent de les Germanes de la Caritat Can Ramis i Son Morei Can Ramis Talaiot de Son Fred Son Sant Joan de Sonarrossa Aireflor Vell Molí de can Mascaró Molí de can Sinto Sa Cuina de n’Aina e ol M 10 -31 MA G Plaça de Concepció íd l l al G 7 6 6 5 ad s lo 1 e or l L or 5 Biniali t Mu m fa s de tu ar 3 4 o tir Re xo ón l ul Ll m Ra C nç 2 Ra l c Es d es Air 1 27 al r So na ai in nc s e es ns Bo ri sa Ro G r a Fr itu st n Co s ole re Ci ció de n So Ca 3 mí Ca re s r Fra s ria d ar rd Ja r ire C ina de Sta Ma s in eS C Pau um at 20 Ja An a it ar Ma-30 ra au iM n to 2 in nc Parish Church of St. Peter (Església Parroquial de Sant Pere) The Early Christian Parish Church of Canarrossa, located in Costitx, was built in 1236, however its location and serious communication problems caused the Bishop of Mallorca to transfer the Parish Church to Sencelles on the 15th of March 1238. A second temple must have been built in 1393, according to the document dated 1398 signed by Gabriel Sirvent, which states that in 1393 the sworn officers of Sencelles made him extract stones for the works of a Church. The works continued in the year 1418, when it was necessary to roof the temple. An inventory in 1482 mentions the main altar and various chapels. In 1568, he was ordered to redo the main altar piece, because it was «corrosum et putridum »; thus, in the year 1583, the painter, Mateu Llopis Oliver worked on the new altarpiece for Sant Pere, part of which is currently conserved in the Rectory. a A 4 M a Ll Plaça d’Espanya 5 ni to An Points of Interest n Joa ur ia lès 1 J. ud M Am arg Esg ni o nt oy és br nt Sa Pla de Mallorca N r Sencelles e ino d Son Cam Bo Palma r au e íd m Ca tx Costi a ou ajo Ai uM Parròquia de Sant Cristòfol 1 2 Ma-31 ol Fi Po 1 a le de 1 Pe no rrom Son A mi ara alm Pla de Mallorca i í de Bin Ca n So Ca m >> Sencelles_Points of Interest The lateral doorway located in front of the Plaça is a Renaissance work and possibly originates from the previous temple. It has branches in the form of circular-section pilasters with rings in the lower third section. The arch is semi-circular and the tympanum has two Coats of Arms: on the right, the Sencelles Coat of Arms and the date 1707, and to the left, the relief of a tree. The common graveyard (fosar) is located in front of the doorway, which was used to bury the dead who did not have a tomb inside the Church. Between the two doorways of the temple, there is a solid square Belfry with seven sections, the upper two with two small arches slightly pointed on each side. The crown has a balcony with a balustrade, decorated with a hidria on each corner; higher up, an octagonal tower extends. The building is finished with a pinnacle crowned by a Papal tiara, in memory of the Temple’s Patron, Sant Pere. The interior consists of a single nave with six sections of barrel vaulted ceiling with half-moon windows, and the section corresponding to >> Belfry of the Parish Church of St. Peter >> Beatified Sister Francinaina Cirer Monument The Presbytery has a trapezoidal floor plan, converging vertical walls and a quarter sphere roof. The main Baroque altarpiece, designed by Friar Albert Borguny Castelló in 1766 houses the image of Sant Pere, seated in a Papal throne and under a dorsal, an artwork by Antoni Llabrés Mudoi in 1811; on the sides, there are two Corinthian columns on each side with the images of Sant Pau and Sant Jaume on the ends. There is a sculpture scene in the upper section which represents the Assumption of Mary, surrounded by angels. A dorsal frames this scene, while the definition highlights a chair, the symbol of the village. The main altar, which is contemporary with the altar piece is made of jasper stone, and features an alabaster Coat of Arms which makes reference to the “devote and noble personage” who 219 The temple’s main doorway has grooved branches and an entablature with the date of 1738. On this, there is a pediment with a medallion which contains a relief bust of Sant Pere. The doorway is built on a double section stairway, each with fifteen steps, and dated 1888. On each side, there is a relief with the Cross of the Via Crucis (Stations of the Cross). the core gallery, with a differentiated treatment. It has six lateral chapels, with semi-circular arches and barrel vault roof. A cornice extends along the perimeter of the upper section, above which port-holes open in the half-moon windows with the perimeter moulding. The choir gallery is above the main doorway, with groined vault roof, with incomplete ribs, embedded within the lateral spaces; the keystone of the vault displays a Papal tiara, in reference to the Patron saint of Sant Pere. The base of the Belfry is located to the left, it also contains the choir gallery stairway, and on the right, there is an exceptional room with a rectangular floor plan with four sections of barrel vaulted ceiling with half-moon windows, which formerly served as the baptism chapel. Pla de Mallorca which consisted in major soil excavation works; these works involved modifications in the altarpieces, with additions in the base. Sencelles >> Sencelles_Points of Interest >> Sencelles_Points of Interest >> Sisters of Charity Convent Can Ramis and Son Morei (Plaça de Son Morei) Attached to the apse of the Parish Church, there are a series of very old buildings which quite possibly correspond to the former House of Son Morei, for whom the Plaça is named. This urban space was completely modified during the 1920’s decade, when this square was widened. According to the hypothesis by Jeroni de Berard based on a popular tradition, Son Morei may have been the centre of the Islamic farmhouse of The façade has a large lintel doorway, with big stone frames. On the right of the foyer, there is a wine vat, without the traditional steps, while on the left, you may view a wood wine press. Behind the entrance hall, a small patio leads to the main rooms of the House estate: The right stair provides access to the first floor where there is a restaurant. In the lower section also on the right, a winery still operates, with access by a lintel portal (in the lintel headstone, there is a Coat of Arms with the date 1870, the year of the winery’s founding), located on the right of the front Hall. It contains various types of wine vats and other casks. Sisters of Charity Convent (Convent de les Germanes de la Caritat) (C/ de la Caritat, 3) The present day Convent was the birthplace of the Beatified Sister Francinaina Cirer (1781-1855). The Building was popularly known by Prior to becoming a Convent, the House only had one floor. In 1821, upon the death of the Beatified sister’s father, Joan Cirer Ramis, the house ceased to be a family residence and primarily became a House of Prayer. Starting in 1851, major works were performed which consisted in the addition of the first floor and the upper porch. In 1945, 1957, and 1986, new House purchases made it possible to expand the Convent. The façade with three floors has a main doorway with a semi-circular stone arch and two-layer roof. To the left of the portal, there is a ceremonial stone placed in 1951, which commemorates the centennial anniversary of its founding. In the upper portal section, an inscription identifies the House estate as the “Casa de les Germanes de la Caritat“ (House of the Sisters of Charity). To the right of the main façade, a perpendicular block building corresponds to the Oratory; it has a lintel doorway with a semi-circular arch with a headstone which houses a closed semi-circular tympanum with wood latticework. In the interior, the main doorway is connected to the foyer with a square floor plan and beam roof; this room is laid out with two lintel Sencelles In reference to can Ramis (num. 14), in the second half of the last century, it belonged to the family of the Rector, Monsignor Joan Molines i Amengual. Due to the marriage between Francesca Molinas Oliver and Gabriel Morell, the House estate became the property of the Morell Molinas family. the name of can Xiroia, the family nickname and it was Francinaina who ceded it to the congregation which she had just founded (1851): the Community of the Sisters of Charity of San Vicente de Paúl. In 1890, as ordained by the Bishop Cervera, the Convent was integrated within the congregation of the Germanes de la Caritat (Sisters of Charity). 221 >> Can Ramis House Beatified Sister Francinaina Cirer Monument (Monument de la Beata Sor Francinaina Cirer) In the Plaça in front of the lateral door façade of the Church, we highlight the monument to the Beatified Francinaina Cirer, created by the sculptor, Jaume Mir, and inaugurated in 1955. It has a square sectioned pedestal with diverse motifs: In the North face, there is an inscription which reads “Sencelles a Sor Francinaina any 1955” (Sencelles to Sister Francinaina year 1955), while the other three faces have corresponding sculpture reliefs. In the lower wall, there is a set of relief sculptures in bronze which commemorates the supporters of the Beatification of Sor Francinaina. Sencelles. According to the cadastre register of 1694, the houses of Son Morei were the property of Baltasar Morei, Captain. In the first half of the 18th Century, the Morei family’s property was transferred to the Nét family; thus, in 1773, the House estate belonged to the Nobleman, Pere Joan Nét, and was classified as the Inn of the Son Morei property. Pla de Mallorca paid for the artwork. There is a wood bench on the sides of the altar with paintings which simulate an inlaid checkerboard design. In the Presbytery’s entrance on the right, there is a sculpture of the Beatified Francinaina Cirer, with a small reliquary (a fragment of the Beatified Saint’s rib); it is a cedar sculpture by the sculptor, Mateu Forteza, and donated by the Lords of Son Jordà, Miquel Perelló and Magdalena Oliver, blessed by the Bishop Teodor Úbeda in 1989. 2 2 25 8 25 8 5 5 3 24 3 24 s rt be ts Ru ber Ru 1 1 5 6 8 25 Ruberts Ruberts 3 4 Jornets 5 6 Sencelles Sencelles Biniali 2 Can Raió de Laiar de Laià Bassa Can Castell Camí dee Bassa de Laià íd Cam Camí de Inferns Camí de Inferns tia Llen e sa entia sa d sa Ll s a B de í de ssa Cam de Ba í Cam Laiar Laiar 2 2 Can Romanyà Can Garau Can Riera Talaiot de Cascanar Talaiot de Binifat Talaiot de ses Talaies de can Xim Laiar Cascanar Ruberts Oratori de Sant Josep Jornets 1 Ca Cm amí V 2 í Vallc al de lc C de o Const nsitu titxi ux i 1 1 ns aasea daid ig lg’Aal de’rAd rear r CarC ju ju i Plia P lla il Vi V e de íd í m am Ca C CarCarrer rer ’Alg d’Adlg aidaaida a sen a senc celles elles 1 orts de H Camí e Horts d í Cam a Pla de Mallorca Palma >> Sencelles_Points of Interest alm Pa alm aesP a leslll ellce ncen Se. S a.tra Ctr C 2 3 24 L’església de la Mare de Déu del Carme Hotel Rural Son Jordà Judí Pou de Judí Hotel Rural Son Xotano Cascanar Cascanar rts Rube rts Rube M deí dMeuntuunt Caí m ïriuïri Cam 1 Ct r Cta. S ra en .S c enell celes lll a es Pi a na Pi na 1 6 2 1 6 2 3 Camí de Campàs 3 Camí de Campàs 1 4 2 4 Jornets Jornets 1 1 2 2 5 5 doorways, the access to the chapel on the right and the Convent cells, in a straight line with the visitor’s portal. The Oratory of the Mare de Déu dels Dolors was reinaugurated and opened to the public in 1906; the current Oratory, with a more modern style, replaced the former one which was destroyed in a fire. The space has a square floor plan, divided into three naves separated by two rows of two concrete columns. The Presbytery has been added to these naves, in the form of a head-wall with converging walls elevated on two steps. There is no main altarpiece, and behind the altar, there is an image of Christ, which came from the former Chapel. To the right of the Presbytery, there is an image of the Virgin, sculpted by Remígia Caubet made of teak wood. The right nave contains the tomb of the Beatified Francinaina with a sculptured relief on the burial urn. Behind the Presbytery, on the right side, a hallway displays a portrait of the Beatified Sister. This hallway, with a segmental arch, provides access to the tabernacle room, a very exceptional space extraordinarily illuminated by an Ogive arch which has views of an outdoor patio. A tabernacle with checkerboard woodwork presides the room as well as an image of the Mare de Déu de Lluc. Following the hall to the left, there is an oil painting of the Mare de Déu dels Dolors, highly venerated by the Beatified Nun, which was a gift from the Count of Formiguera. Through the access doorway to the Convent cells, you may visit various rooms of the Convent which are open to the public. The room of the second corridor contains various valuable objects such as the clock owned by Sister Francinaina, made by Miquel Rousset and diverse paintings. To the left, through a small lintel doorway, one finds the dining room with several paintings, as well as two reliquaries, one with the nails of Christ, a simple black wooden cross of the via crucis (Stations of the Cross) which belonged to Sister Francinaina and a display case with various household items. From the dining room, through the lintel doorway located on the left, we enter the kitchen, with a bonfire chimney on the right with a wood rack with several pots, supported on the exterior angle by an unpainted wood column. Further into the kitchen to the right, there is the kitchen sink carved out of a single stone. In front of the access door to the second corridor room, there is a lintel portal which connects to the patios with a porch which extends along the opposite perimeter of the doorway and a curbstone attached to the wall with a square section, next to two octagonal pillars of the porch. The Beatified Sister’s vía crucis (Stations of the Cross) marks the perimeter with ceramic floor tiles. Once more inside the room, there is a stairway on the left which goes to the first floor, where a lintel doorway provides access to the Beatified Saints bedroom, with a wood bed and other elements. Through a doorway located to the left of the bedroom, we enter a museum-room, inaugurated in 1965 which conserves numerous objects related to the life of Sister Francinaina with documents, photographs, exvots (votive offerings), and personal items. Sencelles 11 Ma-30 11 Ma-30 223 6 6 .d u Ctra sine . de Ctra Pla de Mallorca eu Pla de Mallorca_Sencelles e sin Ca Cam mí í d de e Ca n Flitorit Can Flor >> >> Sencelles_Points of Interest The prehistoric occupation of the Cascanar district has been confirmed by diverse ruins, such as the Pretalayotic Caves of can Garau, the Talayotic ruins of ses Talaies de can Xim, and the Talayotic and Roman necropolis called the Moors Cemetery, which has now vanished. It was also an inhabited zone during the Roman and Islamic age; later on in the 14th Century, there are records of vineyards, cereals, figs, and pork and sheep raising. In 1457, the possession of Cascanar was auctioned, which until then was the property of Andreu Ferrer. >> Can Garau House In the 13th and 14th Century, the property structure was based on large estate possessions; however they underwent continual divisions and segregations, a process which permitted the village’s current layout over the centuries. Around 1890, the grape phylloxera pest destroyed the zone’s vineyards and accelerated the economic crisis. In 1925, Cascanar had 75 inhabitants who occupied 14 houses. In the 1960’s, the village was practically deserted, however since the 1980’s decade, activity has resumed and the majority of its houses have been restored. Along the des Campàs road, it is possible to see three important houses: The first, can Romanyà, has a façade with two floors and a semi-circular arch doorway with pendentive; it also has a block with one floor with an attached corridor to the right. Next to the doorway, there is a window on each side, and on the first floor, three windows with sills and ogee arch frame, the one in the centre with a date in >> Can Riera House the lintel (1706) while the one on the right has the “tau” sign of Sant Antoni. From the interior, we highlight a very segmental arch which separates the two levels, and in the second wall, there is an image of Sister Francinaina. In 1672, it belonged to Bartomeu Ramis, alias Romanyà, at that time, he had houses and 18 “quarterades” with seed crops and uncultivated land; it was dedicated to vineyards and cereal crops. Can Garau ascends at the end of a spacious platform. The façade has two floors, a doorway with semi-circular stone arch with pendentive, and a stone bench on each side. Further to the right, there is another lintel doorway. The interior has a Mallorcan floor tile and semi-circular arch, with a small moulding in the capitals, which separate the two corridors. A lintel doorway provides access to the third corridor. To the right of the entrance in the platform, there is a block building which houses an old wine cellar with a wine vat. Its name comes from the Garau family of Cascanar, to which it already belonged in 1578, when it was owned by Miquel Garau. Can Riera has a gate with skene arch and stone doorjambs; this access is connected to a patio. Further in, there is the main façade with two floors. The main doorway has a semi-circular stone arch with pendentive, and a stone bench on the right; above a rectangular stone plate displays the date 1728, with the sculptured relief of the head of a small angel. We highlight the window with its sill on the second floor. According to the Cadastre Register of 1756, can Riera belonged to Lord Miquel Garau Clerga, and it had new and old houses. Sencelles Cascanar >> Can Romanya House 225 >> The Well of Judí Pla de Mallorca_Sencelles Pla de Mallorca >> >> Sencelles_Points of Interest The Judí farmhouse appears documented shortly after the Conquest of King Jaume I. In 1578, the lands of the old farmhouse were divided into three possessions, all denominated Judí. In the Cadastre Register of 1694, the main properties listed for Judí were the possessions: Judí, Son Xotano, and Son Torrent de Judí. From the farmhouse, we highlight the well of Judí, which is considerably deep, located next to the old motorway to Sineu. One tradition states that the well of Judí, whose name reminds us of a Jewish influence, is the geographic centre of Mallorca. In 1999, the well neck was subjected to a complete restoration and an Ogive arch was added. >> Church of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel One of the representative estate possessions is Son Xotano, which was created as the result of the segregation of the old farmhouse lands. The house’s main façade has three floors and main doorway with a skene arch. In the interior, the first corridor has a beam roof. To the right, a small descending stairway leads to the wine cellar with a square pillar which occupies the centre of the room, divided into two naves with two sections each and beam roof. A segmental arch connects to the second corridor, to the right of which there is an office, and on the left, there is the estate manager’s kitchen. In the rear section, there is an platform where you may contemplate the old sleeping quarters which today have been converted into the shepherd’s house and shed. Ruberts The name of Ruberts probably originates from an important person of the Roberts or Ruberts family of Tarragona, who participated in the Conquest in 1229, and in the distribution, three neighbouring farmhouses in Pina and three more in the Municipality of Sineu corresponded to him. As time passed, the most important possession of the zone was the present-day Son Jordà, which was documented with this name in the 16th Century. It appears that the current possession was the old farmhouse called Ruberts. Church of the Our Lady of Mt. Carmel (L’església de la Mare de Déu del Carme) This church was built in the second half of the 18th Century on the lands of Son Jordà, ceded by the Sard family, who were the owners of the property. Due to the initiative of the Rector of Sencelles, Bartomeu Verd i Falcó, the first stone was placed on the 15th of May 1768 and it was blessed on the 25th of November 1770. Between 1909 and 1910, the temple was expanded and it was restored in 1985. The façade has a main doorway elevated on four steps; the doorjambs have two Corinthian columns and on the lintel, an empty typanum sealed by three smooth sandstone archivolts with semi-circular arch. Higher up, a flared circular Rose Window with linear moulding which contains stained glass with the representation of the Mare de Déu del Carme (Our Lady of Mt. Carmel) interceding on behalf of the souls of Purgatory. The church walls is defined with two vertical sections decorated with an arcade of small sealed semi-circular arches and there is a stone cross which crowns the building. We access the interior through a wood grille. The nave has a barrel vault ceiling and four lateral chapels, open with semi-circular arches, except the first section. The vaults of the nave mark the construction dates of the different sections: The transversal arch entrance to the Presbytery bears the date of 1770; the fourth and third sections show the date of 1807, while the second records the year 1909, when the Oratory was enlarged. In the presbytery, the main altar piece has a classical style; the central section has two Ionic pilasters which frame a painting which represents the Mare de Déu del Carme giving the Carmelite robe to Sant Simó Stock. In the attic, there is a medallion with a painting of Sant Antoni Abat. The chapels on the right or Epistles side are: Chapel of Sant Crist, in an open segmental arch; chapel of Mare de Déu de Lluc; Chapel of the Name of Jesus, with a painting of the Circumcision, executed between 1574 and 1578, attributed to the Painter, Mateu Llopis Oliver; Chapel of Mare de Déu del Roser, with a painting of the Patron Saint surrounded by the mysteries of the Rosary. In the chapel entrance, there is an image of Beatified Francinaina Cirer. Among the chapels on the left or Gospel side, we highlight the second, the chapel of the Immaculada with a painting of the Puríssima surrounded by angels and symbols of the Virgin Mary litany; the third is the Chapel of the Sacred Heart, with an image Sencelles Judí 227 Pla de Mallorca_Sencelles Pla de Mallorca >> Other interesting cultural and architectural examples are the complex of Sa Plaça (the Square) as well as other houses such as can Tià, Son Durí, can Pintat, s’Aigovés, sa Creu, and s’Hostal Laiar The origin of the Laiar village was the Islamic farmhouse called Alayar, which formed part of the juz’ (district) of Qanarussa. In 1231, in the Royal Property Distribution or Repartiment, it corresponded to Gastó de Montcada, Viscount of Bearn. In the 14th Century, the old farmhouse coexisted with small properties, forming the village; it was basically dedicated to the production of cereal and pulse crops, and the cultivation of vineyards as well as herds of sheep and goats. In the 16th-19th Centuries, the village’s main family was the Raiò de Laiar. In numerous occasions in the 16th Century, the Raió family were the “batles reials” (royal Mayors) of Sencelles. In 1578, Laiar comprised two possessions (can Raió and can Genestar), a country estate or “rafal” (can Rotger) and seven houses. In the cadastre register of 1694, the main property-owners were Antoni Raió, the brothers, >> Can Raió Possession Antoni, Bartomeu, and Joan Llebrés and Antoni Castell; in the part of the Llebrés brothers, the following place names appear: el Molí, l’Era, la Vinya Vella, el camp dels Lledoners, les Rotes, els Clapessos, la Figuereta, les Tanquetes, els Robiols, and Son Castell. According to the cadastre register of 1756, the main property-owners of Laiar were the Raió i Vicenç Castell family. In 1789, Jeroni de Berard described Laiar as a village located in a very low location with wetlands, few houses, without a church, and dedicated to wheat production and vineyards. In 1859, the main land-owners were Llorenç Raió Ferrer, Joan Vicenç Castell, and Gabriel Verd Ribas. After the grape phylloxera pest at the end of the 19th Century, the village entered into decadence and became uninhabited. Currently, the Pizà Alabern family, with over 300 “quarterades”, was the main property-owner of Laiar. The city centre was formed by the houses of can Raió, can Castell, can Ribes, can Ros, can Tano, and others which are in ruins. Can Raió de Laiar Can Raió, also formerly called Laiar dels Raió, in 1584, it was the largest possessió (possession) of the village and the entire Municipality of Sencelles, and belonged to Pere Raió. In 1859, it was in the name of D. Llorenç Raió Ferrer, with 356 “quarterades”. In 1925, the Pizà family of Sóller bought the possession and also that of the ccccan Ribes. At present, can Raió has 155.26 hectares and belongs to Rosa Alabern Montis, the widow of Joan Pizà Serra. The main doorway is an impressive and very high semi-circular arch entrance, which opens in front of the motorway. A central patio ex- 229 located inside a niche covered with a penditive, two grooved pilasters and smooth entablature. The fourth chapel is Sant Pere, with a painting of the Patron Saint and the inscription “Pintat a devoció de lamon Pere Aloy, 1772” (Painted in devotion of lamon Pere Aloy, 1772). Sencelles >> Sencelles_Points of Interest Pla de Mallorca_Sencelles Pla de Mallorca >> >> Jornets Possession >> Sencelles_Points of Interest tends behind the large entrance door, which has a trapezoid shape and partially paved flagstone, with regular long blocks, a lime flower tree and different elements such as basins and old items from mills decorate the patio. On the right of the doorway, there is the main façade with a height of two floors; the doorway is a semi-circular vaulted arch with the Raiò Coat of Arms. To the left of the door, there is a ledge which also serves as a bench and above it, a sealed window with an Ogee arch moulding in the lintel, with has a ceramic image which represents the Immaculada. To the right of the doorway beside a small stone bench with plants, there is a well with a two-slope tile roof chapel. The wine cellar has a large room with a rectangular floor plan, divided into two naves starting from two isolated pillars with square section which form three semi-circular arches; between the first and second arch, we see the date 1831; to the right of it, there is the wine cellar basin which is connected to the wine vat. Jornets The place name of Jornets, not documented prior to the 14th Century, comes from the Jornet family, who was the owner of the lands of the current possession with the same name now, which is still the town centre today. The farmhouse of the Jornets, with a plural name, is documented in a will dated 1390. In the 16th Century, the owners of the possession were the Llebrés —or Llabrés family—, whose surname was accordingly Llabrés de Jornets. In the 18th Century, vineyard cultivation increased as indicated by the winery, created in 1767, as well as the segregation of the lands from the original possessió (possession), which allowed the growth of the village. The cadastre register of 1756 mentions Bartomeu Llabrés de Jornets de Bartomeu, as the owner of the possession. In 1826, as indicated by the façade’s date, the houses were refurbished. In the first half of the 20th Century, the Llabrés de Jornets united with Planas family and the ownership of the property then passed on to this surname. The façade of the houses is in front of a stone paved platform; it has two floors and is decorated with geometric engravings, basically in the form of a checker board. The main doorway is a semi-circular vaulted arch crowned with the Llebrés de Jornets Coat of Arms (a tree with two grey hound dogs, and three fleurde-lis) and the date 1826. There are ledges on the sides of the doorway. To the left, there is a second lintel doorway with an Ogee arch frame and another ledge, to the right further to the left, beside the Oratory, there is a block with one floor and a roof with one slope, beside which there is a rustic exterior stairway with two sections which leads to a straw storage room. To the right, there is a sundial and further to the left, there is a porch with two embedded pillars in a sandstone wall; under the porch, a segmental doorway shows the date 1764. To the right, there is also a large entrance door; this is the space that the large wine cellar occupies. Sencelles >> The Oratory of Jornets 231 Pla de Mallorca_Sencelles Pla de Mallorca >> During the Second Republic, a public school was founded which operated until the 1960’s decade. The old school building now a private residence can be seen at the village exit, in the direction of Sencelles. It was designed on the 1st of February 1932 by the architect, Guillem Forteza; it was a mixed school and also included the teacher’s residence. The Oratory of St. Joseph (Oratori de Sant Josep) was built in the final years of the 18th Century and inaugurated in 1799; it was >> Son Sant Joan de Sonarrossa Possession initially designed as a Private Oratory of the Jornets possession. Upon the consolidation of the village’s population, the Llabrés de Jornets family ceded the Chapel to the Bishopric so that it could be used as a public Oratory. It is the building attached to the right of possession houses, beside the platform. The chapel façade has a smooth wall, currently whitewashed; it has a large architrave doorway with jambs in the form of half-column embedded in a rectilinear moulding with the base framed in the form of plinths; the entablature is a moulded lintel with a small central niche in the upper section without any image; above the jambs and the niche, there are three pyramids with balls. Higher up, there is a moulded, flared, and circular skylight. The façade’s crown is a multi-lined church wall. In the rear right section, there is a steeple with a bell. The interior has a small-sized nave with a barrel vault ceiling with lunettes, divided in three sections. The Presbytery has a barrel vault ceiling and six apses with a quarter sphere ceiling. The main altar piece, the only one in the Oratory, is dedicated to the Patron Saint, with the central image of Sant Josep, located inside a niche and surrounded by several medallions with stony decoration which contains the representations of other Saints which include Santa Catalina Tomás and the Beatified Ramon Llull. Son Sant Joan de Sonarrossa In 1578, the possession was then known by the name of So na Rossa; it was the property of the Knight, Jeroni de Sant Joan; his family became owners with the definitive name of Son Sant Joan (Rosselló-Vaquer, 1993: 59). In 1646, the property belonged to one of his descendants also called Jeroni de Sant Joan, a Knight of 233 The Jornets village properly speaking was created based on the segregation of the lands from the original possession of this name throughout the 18th Century. Vineyards were the most important crop in Jornets until the grape phylloxera pest destroyed it. The Archduke Lluís Salvador who mentioned a village during its full economic bonanza around 1880, stated that it had 197 inhabitants and 49 houses. It also mentions the Public Oratory dedicated to Sant Joseph and built at the end of the 18th Century. The 20th Century was a critical period for Jornets: in 1950, it had 81 inhabitants, in 1970, there were 63 and in 1991, the census showed 48 inhabitants. The village is formed by approximately 20 houses, among which we highlight the following names: can Burí, Ca ses Capes, Ca Madò Estrella, can Marrai, can Montserrat, can Nofre Lip, Ca na Tirona, can Tro, can Vallès, and can Ventura. There are painted roof tiles on several of them such as in can Nadal, identified with the num. 11, with floral decorations and the names of Jesus and Maria. The Village Plaça has been adorned with several Mulberry trees. Sencelles >> Sencelles_Points of Interest Pla de Mallorca_Sencelles Pla de Mallorca >> >> Sencelles_Points of Interest >> Windmill: Molí de can Sito In 1491, the Knight Salvador Sureda ceded to Joan Sintes and his wife, Pauleta, the Ayreflor possession, the Tanca Llarga and the scrubland called los Robiols, for a tax of 100 £. In 1523, the cession was to Miquel Ramis, who gained access to the property due to the Aireflor possession, consequently, he can be considered as the initiator of the Ramis d’Aireflor line. In 1578, the property belonged to Miquel Ramis and had an estimated value of 2,800. In 1773, Aireflor belonged to Miquel Ramis d’Aireflor, and that time, it possessed 200 “quarterades” with wheat, 9 plots with soft wheat, 100 with barley and 26 with beans. In 1789, Jeroni de Berard briefly describes this property: «Ayreflor. Grande. Trigo, viña. Del señor Ramis y Ferrer de Palma» (Ayreflor. Large. Wheat, vineyards. Of Lord Ramis i Ferrer from Palma). In 1859, the possession appears in the name of Mr. Miguel Ramis d’Ayreflor [and Marcel], who had died in 1855. This landowner divided the net worth among his The possession’s large entrance door has two excellent examples of doorjambs with square section and bevelled angles; each jamb has a relief with a Coat of Arms: The left one is the emblem of the Ramis family. At the end of a private road, we see the houses of Aireflor; the façade faces Southeast and has a height of three floors. On the left, a segmental arch provides access to the central patio; a second doorway also segmental arch also connects to the central patio; this door is crowned with a Lord’s shield, with the Ramis Coat of Arms; above the arch and the shield, it is crowned with a balustrade. On the right, the central patio has a semi-circular vaulted arch door and a ledge; further to the right, there is the house of the peasant farm-owners, with a lintel doorway elevated on two steps and a large entrance door. On the right is the façade’s most important wall, with two lintel doorways and two windows on the ground floor. On the first floor, there are two balcony windows flanked by two rectangular windows; on the second floor, the porch has four scenic windows. Sencelles At present, the houses of Son Sant Joan Vell appear to be divided into three properties. The main façade faces Southeast and has a height of two floors; the main doorway opens in the centre of the façade in the central property; it is an impressive semi-circular vaulted arch, with very stylized vaults and it is crowned by the Coat of Arms of the Santjoan (three sashes); to the left of the main doorway, there is another with a skene arch, it has a window on the second floor and a flared window on the side; in front there is a well curbstone. The property on the left has a segmental doorway, crowned by a ogee arch, lobulated, and with a Gothic style convex moulding. The property on the right conserves what was possibly the only Oratory of Sonarrossa; it is an interesting Gothic building, whose façade is aligned with the façade of the houses, to which it is attached on the left side. At a halfway height, the façade has a voussoir line, interrupted by the doorway arch and has a flat crown. The doorway has a large lancet arch design, with a veined Aireflor Vell twelve children. Miquel Ramis d’Ayreflor i Alemany (1822-1883) married Aina Sureda i Sanxo de la Jordana and legitimately received one part of Aireflor, currently Aireflor Nou. The heir of Aireflor was Josep Francesc Ramis d‘ Ayreflor i Alemany (1824-1889), the second son. 235 tympanum; in the entablature, a pedestal extends which must have served as the base of an image; the doorway has three archivolts in the form of convex moulding with circular section and small samples of sculptured decoration with masks and floral motifs in the capitals in the intersection with the voussoir line; in the jambs base where the archivolts continue, there are small Gothic polygonal pedestals. The original doorway appears sealed with a sandstone wall, where a skene arch doorway serves as entrance to the interior which is currently used as a storeroom. Pla de Mallorca the Alcántara Order. In the final part of the 17th Century, there was a change of ownership by the family owner, since the Sant Joan lands passed to Berenguer d’Oms, who was already recorded as the owner in 1689. In the second half of the 18th Century, it belonged to Margalida Sureda Valero, the wife of Pere Caro i Fontes, second Marchioness de la Romana. In 1789, Jeroni de Berard mentioned this possession in this note: «Son San Juan. Predio grande. Trigo, viña. De la marquesa de la Romana (Son San Juan. Large Rural Propery. Wheat, vineyards. From the Marchioness of la Romana». In 1850, the Lord of Son Sant Joan was Pere Caro i Sales, fourth Marquis de la Romana (Bover, 1850: 100). Shortly afterwards, the estate was segregated into smaller properties. >> Pla de Mallorca_Sineu Sineu The etymology of the place name has been historically controversial. It appeared documented in the 13th Century with four different spellings: Sixneu, Xisneu, Sisneu, and Xineu. It appears that the incorrect reading of a quote by Pliny (1st Century A.D.) interpreted the Roman city called Gium as Cinium, which was identified in the >> Scenic overview of Sineu 237 year 1842 by Antoni Furió with Sineu, an opinion which was still repeated a century later by the Historian of Sineu, Monsignor Joan Rotger. Once this old theory was discarded, another hypothesis defended by the Arabist, Miquel Barceló, attempted to derive the name of Sineu from Jijnau (Arabic place name, which jointly with that of Bitra, gave its name to one of the districts of the Muslim Mallorca). Likewise, Jijnau could originate from the Arabic form: J.jnu, which is near to the Arabic-inspired names of the Berber word Ignawen which originally meant: “mul” (mule). Furthermore, in the aforementioned district, there are also place names where the form “Jijnau” appears, a fact which supports the theory that defends that this Arabic word was translated into the Catalan form of Xisneu/Sixneu. A third theory provided by the philologist, Pla de Mallorca The Municipality of Sineu is one of the largest in the Pla region. It has an extension of 48 km2 and a population of 3,300 inhabitants (2008 census data), and it is bordered by the Municipalities of Llubí, Maria de la Salut, Ariany, Petra, Sant Joan, Lloret de Vistalegre, Costitx, and Inca. It is a Municipality with only one city centre, although it historically comprised the villages of Sant Joan and Lloret de Vistalegre. Sineu Historical References >> Sineu_Historical References Joan Coromines, sees the origin of the name of Sineu in specifically German names such as Sisenand or Sisald. The Royal Property Distribution Book (Llibre del Repartiment de Mallorca) mentions the district of Djidjnaw, which was adapted to Catalan as Sixneu. It consisted of a total of 82 farmhouses and country estates (rafals), the most extensive was Alhoffra al-Djawfiya, while one of the most significant country estates was Adefla Exarquia, now known as Defla. There was also a larger population centre, which can be identified with the current town, with houses, necropolis, and baths, a Mosque and probably an “alcàsser” (Medieval Arabic Fortress or Palace) located in the plot of the Palace or the Concepcionista Convent. The Sixneu farmhouse was documented with its Catalan name in the year 1237. Sineu probably had a consolidated market at least from the beginning of the 13th Century, and in step with the general trends of the island, there was considerable cattle raising activity. Irrigation agriculture must have had an important influence, especially around the qanats (underground irrigation tunnels) of Binitaref and the Torre de Montornes (Montornes Tower). The Christian Conquest of the Sineu district took place at the end of 1229 and concluded in 1230 without much resistance. Sineu corresponded to a Royal portion in the Royal Land Distribution. In 1298, Sineu was segregated from the Parish Church of Sant Joan, a process which concluded in the year 1300 with the creation of two different municipalities. The new economic system of the repopulation settlers was focused on the monopoly of the extensive dry-land farming, basically wheat, and it was one of the villages with the largest production. The “barcella” (a type of grain container) of Sineu, dated around 1240, is also an example of the town’s wheat production and the Sineu’s prominence as an agricultural trading centre at that time. The Royal Palace was built at the beginning of the 14th Century, assuredly on the foundation of the Islamic Fortress. The 14th Century also meant the consolidation of the weekly market, with the privilege granted by King Jaume II in 1306. The May Street Fair probably arose from the privilege of King Sanç in 1318, revalidated by Pere el Cerimoniós. One of the most significant events of the 17th Century was the bubonic plague of 1652, which had a huge impact in Sineu. The houses of Binitaref were confiscated and converted into a Leper’s hospital, and a cemetery was created in the vineyard: Vinya Vella de Binitaref; the possession of Son Joan Arnau was used as a quarantine site. The second decade of the 20th Century witnessed the growth of the raw materials sector, with the aperture of a large number of lignite mines and stone quarries. The segregation process of the land properties reached its peak with the establishment of Son Rossinyol which culminated in 1933. The influenza epidemic of 1918 heavily affected the village and 49 people died. Sineu >> Windmill: Molí d’en Gaspar 239 Pla de Mallorca_Sineu Pla de Mallorca >> s Parre oa n Ma -32 40 Ma-3 510 Sta. M argalid Petra Ma-3330 a Doctor Pla de Mallorca rr 10 il Palma Sineu The first early Christian Gothic Church suffered a fire in 1505, and work immediately began on a new temple, also with a Gothic style which replaced it. Between 1880 and 1881, the temple was expanded with the addition of a transept with an impressive dome and a new head wall. Between 1600 and 1981, Santa Maria de Sineu was named Nostra Senyora dels Àngels (Our Lady of Angels) due to the Franciscan influence. On the 27th of September 1981, in the celebration of the centennial anniversary of the temple’s expansion, it was consecrated The lateral façade in front of the Plaça of Sant Marc has a vertical wall divided into two sections. in the upper section, we highlight four large semi-circular arches which open among the buttresses, from which four geometric gargoyles extend. It has a Baroque main doorway, with doorjambs in the form of moulded pilasters on plinths, and an entablature with a cornice crowned by a curved 241 The main façade illustrates an austere Gothic style. The main doorway has been designed with four lancet-arch archivolts which frame the tympanum (undecorated), with plant and zoomorphic reliefs in the capitals. The crown adopts the form of a triangular church wall, more modern than the rest of the façade, with semicircular arch in the centre, testimony of an Early Christian steeple. On the left of the second section, there is a very worn sundial with the date 1664, while on the right of the doorway, it still conserves a wooden cross on a stone pedestal, one of the Via-Crucis stations (Stations of the Cross). Sineu by the Bishop Teodor Úbeda and recovered its old name. Several years ago, it was subject to restoration and consolidation works. Pla de Mallorca s Voltantes u Cre Cases nove estre er i M al Ca 28 n oa Sa n 32 32 n a 240 a- Gra 13 Sta. Margalid Ma-3 tJ Son Real M Camino de Sa n tJ 6 Plaça del Fossar s Manacor 2 29 als estr Men Plaça dels Donants de Sang s ove Molin l Rotg n Costa Camino de So a Pujol Son Rier Guerreria ll Ramón Llu 5 all Av Parish Church of St. Mary (Església Parroquial de Santa Maria) The Parish Church of Santa Maria de Sineu appears documented in the Papal Bull of Pope Innocence IV, of 1248, however its origin can be dated back to the first Ecclesiastic Organization of Mallorca in 1236. During the second half of the 14th Century, the first temple was expanded or newly erected; thus, in 1366, Pere el Cerimoniós permitted the acquisition of an inn from the Blacksmith, Francesc Reixac, so that it could be expanded. Rafae c Xalo sip Son Mas Sant Joan 27 Nou 1 29 iera nR Joa Fray Llub Inca l ita sp Ho Fang Joan Rotger 4 Ponent Roser Retir Capella 3 Placeta de Germanies 9 Major Sol ll Ava Ma-3240 5 Palau Penyes 14 N Entorns Cases Torre 8 Esperença 3 6 Torre 12 7 í a alanc Lloret ers lubí Ermita Lloret Lloret Bous s Tavern Bous rdia Ma-3130 ma Bou Pau na Camp s u Bo es Air Conco Pal Gloria 28 Bon Llevant t ma s r Pal 4 7 Obli 40 Aljubs Llebeig abate -31 Son S itx st ma Ma 26 Frontó C Points of Interest 11 de L Co Pal Tramuntana a ter e arr unta Tram e d ll Ve tó 5 a eter Carr C. Fron 28 4 >> Sineu_Points of Interest Ma-35 Son P 8 6 9 3 Mestre e 4 14 Celler Sa Bòveda Hotel León de Sineu Can Joan Capó Hotel d’interior Son Cleda í Hotel d’interior de Llub L’E sta ció L’E sta ció 7 12 28 13 Son Sabater d ll Ve 3 7 Defla 26 Molí d’en Pep Gomila 29 27 Molí d’en Pau Molí d’en Gaspar 29 Celler es Palau Pou d’en Cardils Hotel celler can Font Celler Es Grop Tramuntana Tramuntana 10 Arrav 6 o min Ca 2 Pou d’en Rabassa Monument de la plaça Corts de Sant Marc Ajuntament (Antic Convent dels Mínims) Can Gili Celler de Son Torelló 5 Alou Església parroquial de Santa Maria La Rectoria Monestir Concepcionista Co stReis (antic palau dels itx de Mallorca) Creu d’en Rabassa 1 >> Sineu_Points of Interest >> Medieval Ceramics in the Rectory Museum The Early Christian Belfry was destroyed in a fire in 1505, and the reconstruction of the current one began in 1549. It is isolated with a square section with seven sections separated by mouldings and a pyramidal crown; in the upper floors, there are two lancet arch windows per side. The first room became the Chapel of Santa Catalina, with access through a small lancet arch doorway, with very deteriorated vaults. The belfry contains seven bells, six of them with names: N’Antònia, Na Bàrbara, N’Extremaunció, Na Feris, Na Combregar, and Na Missa; the seventh bell belongs to the clock. The interior has a single nave with transversal transept and five chapels on the sides with open semi-circular arches except for the two which are located under the gallery. In the nave’s vertical wall, you can see 12 red crosses which a reminders of the temple’s consecration and higher up, five Gothic windows, either sealed or with small skylights. The transept, the star-decorated dome, and the presbytery were built between 1880 (date shown on the transversal arch) and 1881. In the dome interior, it must have housed 8 stained glass windows, seven are sealed and one is dedicated to Sant Marc with the Coat of Arms from the donor, Monsignor Lluís Crespí i Niell, domestic Prelate. The presbytery has an apse with seven sections, the central one occupied by the main altar piece. It is presided by the Gothic image of Santa Maria de Sineu, sculpted in 1509 by Gabriel >> Parish Church of St. Mary Mòger, a holy family image flanked by two NeoGothic angels. The main altar was created by Sebastià Alcover in 1913, and serves as the urn which contains the image of the Mare de Déu Difunta (Deceased Virgin Mary). The lateral walls of the presbytery and the left arm are enriched with the wood reliefs which formed part of the old main altarpiece built by Gaspar Gener between 1571 and 1580, and gold-leafed by Jaume Blanquer from 1631 to 1636. This altar piece was dismantled due to the refurbishment of 1880, it had a Renaissance style with Mannerist elements, and was dedicated to the Set Goigs de la Mare de Déu (Seven Pleasures of the Virgin Mary). With the recent refurbishment, the main NeoGothic altarpiece made by the Manacor Sculpture Miquel Vadell was transferred to the right arm of the transept. On the side, there is the NeoGothic altarpiece of Sant Joseph dated 1886 by Lluís Font Martorell, and surrounded by the paintings of Sant Ferran and Sant Guillem, by the painter Bordoy, under the supervision of Faust Morell. Beside the altarpiece, there are two paintings with scenes from the life of Sant Josep: The death of the Patriarchal Saint and his patronage; on a shelf, there is the sculpture of Sant Sebastià, the Co-Patron Saint of the village and protector against the plague. The chapels on the right or Epistles side are: Chapel of Sant Cristòfol, under the gallery, the Patron Saint of the artisans of Sineu, with the images of Santa Rita and Crist de la Columna (Christ of the Sineu pediment, and on the sides, corresponding vases with flames. The pediment frames the sundial, which bears the inscription “Declina 38 Gs al Levante” (Decline 38 Degrees to the West) and the date 1783. 243 Pla de Mallorca_Sineu Pla de Mallorca >> >> Sineu_Points of Interest The Sacristy conserves an excellent set of religious gold-andsilversmith objects. We highlight the Veracreu of 1556, with a florid Gothic style. We also highlight the chalice with engravings of the Passion of Christ, from the 16th Century and the processional cross dated 1878 with its NeoGothic style. >> Monument of St. Mark Square The interior conserves approximately eighty pieces of Medieval and Renaissance ceramics (the “escudelles”), several with Islamic decoration and paintings with metallic reflections. They were discovered in 1915 and 1940 in a well located near the church. Their chronology extends from the 14th Century to the beginning of the 17th Century and they were restored by Monsignor Bartomeu Mulet. To the left of the foyer and defined by three Ogive arches, a Monument of the St. Mark Square (Monument de la Plaça de Sant Marc) In front of the Rectory, a lion monument of Sant Marc has been installed; it was inaugurated to celebrate the third centennial of Sant Marc as the Patron Saint of the village of Sineu, as written on its base: “Tertio centenario electionis sancti Marci in patronum Sinii apud Deum”. It is a work with copper plates by the sculptor, Joan Maimó Vadell in 1945, where the lion, the symbol of Sant Marc, appears winged and holding the Coat of Arms of Sineu. It is very likely that the devotion to Sant Marc was instilled by King Jaume II, who had dedicated the Royal Chapel of the Bellver Castle to this Saint. This devotion was passed on to the farmers of Sineu «perquè li demanassen pluges saludables en venir el mes d’abril, que cada gota val per mil. I sant Marc sovint els brufava els camps perquè tenguessin bona saó» [because they prayed for healthy rains in the month of April, where every drop is worth a thousand. And Sant Marc continually “brufava” (blessed) the fields in order to obtain a good “saó” (harvest)]. The origin of this Patronage dates back to the 29th of June 1645 when, having chosen the Patron Saint of the villages, having assembled the Sworn officers and the Council of Sineu in the Hospital building, they proposed, at the summons of the Rector, Sineu The three-floor building has a lintel doorway and a cuadrangular window on each side. It appears that in the space occupied by the left window, there is the old doorway, mentioned above. The two upper floors each have three windows. In the interior, there is a rectangular foyer, with a segmental arch which connects to a small patio. To its left, embedded in the wall, we observe a Santanyí stone slab with the Coat of Arms of Sineu (a circle in relief), which originates from the base of the old main altar piece from the Parish church dated 1571. The village legend is written in the figure: Sineu vila la primera, té la prima per bandera. To the right, there is the stairway, with one section, which ascends to the first floor. space has recently been inaugurated for a permanent exhibit with a selection of these ceramic specimens. 245 The chapels on the left or the Gospel side are: Chapel of Sant Francesc, under the gallery with an image of the Virgin of Assumption from the 16th Century; Chapel of Sant Antoni Abat; Chapel of the Sacred Heart, with two sections; the deep chapel with a dome roof on pendentives and a lantern as the crown with the vault keystone dated 1672, the altarpiece is a Baroque style dedicated to the Mare de Déu del Roser by Gabriel Torres, with eight pairs of columns, fifteen paintings of the corresponding Virgin Mary mysteries, and in the attic, the Coronation of the Virgin, with the Sineu Coat of Arms in the upper section, and finally the Chapel of the Mare de Déu del Carme, with a NeoGothic style, with Sant Joan de la Creu and Santa Teresa. The Rectory (Rectoria) It has always occupied the same space, attached to the church, near the lateral Baroque doorway and in front of the old cemetery; today it is occupied by the Plaça of Sant Marc. At the end of the 19th Century, the building was refurbished by Pere de Alcántara Peña, who added the third floor and modified the façade, including the main door, previously semi-circular and with vaults. Pla de Mallorca Column), which could be a work by Gaspar Gener, dated in 1588; Chapel of Crist, with a Baroque image; Chapel of Santa Catalina Tomàs, with two sections, one with an image of the Patron Saint and the reliquaries of Santa Valèria; Chapel of Sant Martí, with an altarpiece from the end of the 16th Century, with the Coat of Arms of the Rossinyol de Defla family, who were the patrons of the chapel, and the tombstone of the Rossinyol family and their heirs, the Espanya family; and finally, the lateral door. >> Sineu_Points of Interest Rabassa Cross and Well (Creu i Pou d’en Rabassa) The cross is dated in 1567 with a Renaissance style; it has an octagonal base in the form of four steps. The stem with an octagonal section is decorated with floral wreaths in the upper section. The capital also has an octagonal section and it is still possible to see six figures, three correspond to the Hermit Saints (Sant Antoni, Sant Onofre, and Sant Pau) and the other three are dressed in a tunic and cape, like the apostles, but they are difficult to identify clearly. In the middle of them, there are two overlapping Coats of Arms which correspond to the Sabater Family. The capital is crowned by a segmented scale dome. The cross itself is Latin cross with straight arms with terminations in rhomboid medallions and floral decoration in the forearms. On the obverse side, there is a relief of a mutilated Crucified Christ with Mary Magdalene at his feet; in the angles, there are three medallions with the Virgin Mary, Sant Joan, and a pelican. On the reverse side, we see an image of the Virgin Mary with the symbols of the Four Evangelists in the ends of the arms. >> Interior of the can Font Winery Beside the cross, there is the well: Pou d’en Rabassa, an excellent example of the traditional water supply. It appears to be dated in >> Rabassa Cross and Well 1392 prior to the cross. In the 14th Century, the “Rabasses” were a very important family in Sineu, and in 1362, they possessed the lands which extended from the Plaça of the Hospital to the well’s present location. In 1499, it was documented as the Plaça del Pou d’en Rabassa. It was restored in the late 1970’s. Can Font Winery (Celler can Font) (C/ de les Roses) This wine cellar, located on the corner of the Plaça, is one of the most typical in Sineu. The doorway is located on the street: carrer de les Roses; and has a skene arch while, the door located in the Plaça is a lintel structure and connects to a foyer with a beamed roof. To the left of this first room, we highlight the wine press with two spigots. After descending eight steps, we reach the outset of the main room, where on the right, there is the door to the street: carrer de les Roses. To the left behind a wall, we descend twelve steps. Below, at the end is the basin of the wine vat, located in a niche of converging walls and stone barrel vault ceiling and a metal tap. The wine cellar’s main rooms have a design of two naves with four sections each, buttressed by three large pillars with a square section. Each of them has four segmental arches, where the transversal arches are buttressed on the lateral walls. Three spectacular wine vats are conserved in it. Conceptionist Convent (Old Royal Palace of Mallorca) (Monestir Concepcionista) (Antic Palau dels Reis de Mallorca)) The ancient “Palau dels Reis de Mallorca” (Royal Palace of Mallorca) was ordered to be built by King Jaume in 1309 on the foundation Sineu Monsignor Cristòfol Gacies, to select the Patron Saint of the Village: Sant Marc, Patron Saint of farmers or Sant Cristòfol, Patron Saint of the artisans, which comprised all the trade guilds except for the weavers. Due to the greater number of sworn officers and councillors dedicated to agriculture, they elected Sant Marc as the Patron Saint of Sineu. 247 Pla de Mallorca_Sineu Pla de Mallorca >> >> Sineu_Points of Interest In 1583 by means of the Royal donation by King Felipe II, a community of Conceptionist Nuns was installed, founded by the Sister Francina de Puigdorfila. In order to found this new community, the Bishop of Mallorca, Joan Vich i Manrique, selected three nuns from the Convent of Santa Margalida de Palma: Sister Aina de Puigdorfila, Sister Úrsula Cotoner, daughter of the Knight, Nicolau Cotoner i Sala, and Sister Mariana Aixartell, who took possession of the new Convent on the 6th of January 1583. During the first years, the new community obeyed the rule of St. Agustín. A short time later, six new nuns joined as well as Sister Margalida Santjoan i Cotoner, from the Convent of Santa Magdalena de Palma. She was the second Prioress, starting in 1590, the time when the community changed the Augustinian rule for the Franciscan Clarist order, due to their joining the Conceptionist order founded in 1489 by Santa Beatriz de Silva. >> Conceptionist Convent (Old Royal Palace of Mallorca) The adaptation and expansion works of the Convent were especially intense in the 17th Century, which gave this architectural complex a look halfway between its former Monarchy Residence and the Cenobite order with its strict monastic seclusion. The religious followers covered the windows with lattices, built the kitchen and other rooms, reinforced the rammed earth walls, and built new groined vault roofs, which replaced the old coffered wood ceilings. Between 1616 and 1686, they recovered the seven properties which formed part of the ancient Palace that had been sold to private individuals after 1348, where once again, “les Monges” (the Nuns) managed to occupy the entire block. In 1987, the “torre de l’homenatge“ (Tower) was refurbished. The Convent of Sineu was one of the poorest cloistered nun communities in Mallorca and in order to survive, they worked in craftsmanship activities (elaboration of buttons, embroidery and laceworks), pastries (jams and local pastries such as “bunyols”, “coques” and “congrets”) and the task of raising silkworms which they used to make high priced silk handkerchiefs. To the left of the Convent church, in the wall which forms a right angle with the temple, the entrance is located with lintel doorway crowned by the Franciscan Coat of Arms. The foyer has a rectangular floor plan with a groined vault roof with two sections and key stones with religious motifs, six thin stem columns elevated on benches and embedded in the wall. In the wall on the right, there is a doorway with semi-circular arch and a lathe framed by floor tiles which defines the cloister. Through this doorway, we enter the cloister by means of long foyer called sa Llongeta, with a groined vault roof, which is connected to the “Pati de la Reina” (Queen’s Patio). The old Chapterhouse, described by the Arxiduc (Archduke Luis Salvador of Austria) is the current sewing room, with a grooved column with Sineu of Islamic origin which was possibly the “alcàsser“ (Islamic Fortress or Palace) of the Emir Mubaxir (Mubashshir Nasir Al-Dawla), who died in 1114. Its location coincides with the model of the rural Islamic Palaces, located on a hill with an extensive commanding view. 249 Pla de Mallorca_Sineu Pla de Mallorca >> >> Sineu_Points of Interest From the interior of the current Convent premises, we highlight the “torre del homenatge” a tower with a rectangular floor plan and crowned by four battlements, with semi-circular arch door as access and extending beams which buttress the coffered wood ceiling and the rear garden-orchard. At the end, there is a NeoGothic Chapel dated 1880 which contains the cemetery. Town Council (Old Monastery of Minimum Monks) (Ajuntament) (Antic Convent dels Mínims) The Monastery of Jesús Maria, of the Minimum Friar order was founded in 1667 under the patronage of Lady Margalida Font de Roqueta Gual Zaforteza i Térmens and her husband, Francesc Desbrull i Villalonga, who donated their house in Sineu as the building for the new Cenobite or Monastery building. On the 18th of May that same year, with the authorization from the Bishop Pere Fernández Manjarrés, the official ceremony was performed presided by the Frair: fra Miquel Cerdà, the provincial head of the Minimum Order. The first Mass was given in the house’s room that had been conditioned as a Chapel. The adaptation works still continued in 1686, when the houses of Dr. Antoni Costa were acquired to add them to the Monastery. In 1722, the Monastery was subjected to a major refurbishment with the construction of the cloister, among others. >> The Town Hall Cloister (Old Monastery of the Minimum Monks) The Minimum religious order was definitively expelled in 1835, with the “Desamortització“ (seizure and sale of church property), the Monastery was closed and the building was dedicated to other uses such as the Guardia Civil’s headquarters and residence. The old installations now house the current offices of the Town Council as well as the Library and Municipal Archive. The Cloister (Claustre) is Baroque with a quadrangular, slightly trapezoidal, floor plan. All the sides of the ground floor have six segmental arches except the one on the right which only has five. The side opposite from the doorway has a second portico floor, with twelve small (modern) segmental arches, two per arch of the ground floor. The columns on plinths have two circular moulds in the base. The Capitals have small Ionic style spirals, while in the lower section, it has several relief sculptures which alternatively represent the Episcopal mitre and the star of the Coat of Arms of the Bishop Miquel Estela. These decorations do not appear in the angular columns, since they are adorned with floral reliefs. In the centre, there is an octagonal curb stone, dated in 1693, with the motto Charitas (Charity) (symbol of the Minimum Friars) in the centre. The pulley is supported by four mullion structures which converge in the centre. Can Gili (C/ Major, 13) The house has a medieval origin. At the beginning of the 16th Century, the house was owned by the Notary Joan Gili, one of the main components of “la Germanía” (Artisan’s guild) and one Sineu spiral stem which supports the large main beam. In the upper floor, which is accessed by a Renaissance style stairway, the corridors extend which connect to the different cells. 251 Pla de Mallorca_Sineu Pla de Mallorca >> >> Sineu_Points of Interest The façade has a height of two floor with a lintel doorway on the right. To the left, it has two Windows, one sealed and the other rectangular, adorned with a Renaissance lintel which has the sculptured relief of the Coat of Arms of the Gili family. The doorjambs have disappeared in the form of pilasters which they must have completed. There are three windows on the first floor, the one on the left is sealed. >> Windmill: Molí d’en Pau The interior has a corridor with a roof divided into three groined vault sections with an attractive floor. To the left, in the first section, a lintel moulded doorway opens which connects to a room with a square floor plan, now refurbished; formerly the house’s wine cellar was in the basement. In the third section of the corridor, also on the left, another lintel doorway opens which provides access to a square room with a groined vault roof. The corridor ends in a semi-circular arch, on the right, embedded in a perpendicular wall, where the main room is located, with a >> Can Gili rectangular layout and extending beam roof, an element with a Medieval origin. The floor houses six grain containers excavated in the soil. At the entrance on the right wall, you can still see the sealed Medieval arch, semi-circular with vaults, which connected to what is currently a neighbour’s house. A semi-circular arch separates this room from the house’s largest room, located in the old patio space, currently with a beam roof. It has a rectangular layout and we highlight its high pillar with square section and bevelled angles. The house’s well was located here, although it is now sealed. On the left wall, at the height of the first floor there is a window with sill and a Gothic style convex moulding. The stairway starts at the end with a wood handrail and ascends in two sections to the first floor. At the end of it, there is semi-circular vaulted arch doorway which connects to the first room. On the left, there is a seal or anagram, painted in red, perhaps with the form of the Notary, Gili. In front of the main access, another semi-circular arch doorway, vaulted with doorjamb, provides access to the second room, which has a remarkable pictorial mural decoration with geometric motifs and interesting engraved images (we can see a boat, a character with a Royal mantle and diverse human faces). Son Torelló (C/ de Son Torelló, 1) In 1607, the house belonged to Lleonard Torelló and according to the Cadastre Register of that year, it had an animal-driven mill and a wine cellar, six wine-skin bottles, and a wine vat to elaborate Sineu of the four members of the “comisió de agermanats” (Artisan Commission members) who went to beg clemency from the Court; the embassy meeting failed and the components of the Commission were executed in the Bellver Castle at the end of August 1523, in the so-called “forques dels ambaixadors”(Ambassador’s forks). Nonetheless, the house remained in the family’s hands, until at least the 17th Century. Currently, it belongs to the Aparicio family. The artist, painter, and sculptor - Ricardo Aparicio –Gago- has his study and exhibit space here. 253 Pla de Mallorca_Sineu Pla de Mallorca >> >> Sineu_Points of Interest The façade has two floors and a main doorway with semi-circular arch on two steps. In the ground floor there is a buttress to the right of the doorway and a window on each side. In the first floor, above the doorway, there is a “coronella” window, with the Coat of Arms of the Torelló family (a bull) with a reduced size, in the small space of the spandrels, above the little column of the window. You can also see an ogee arch window on the left and another quadrangular window on the right. The cornice is triplelayer roof tile. >> Son Torrelló House >> St. Joseph Chapel We access the interior through a wood grille. Despite the adaptation of the premises into a restaurant, the interior space conserves the old structure of the main rooms. The first corridor has a beam roof and maintains a section with small transversal beams called “xebrons” (half interlacings). The passage to the second corridor is through a segmental arch on the left, located next to the bar of the bar-restaurant. On the left of the first corridor, there is the wing that was dedicated to the wine-making tasks: Here, we find buried vats which were used to step on the wine grapes and fermentation, and their basins have still been conserved. In the old wine cellar, there are twelve wine vats (eight fragments are conserved attached to the walls) and a still to make liquor. The wine cellar room has a spacious rectangular floor plan divided into six sections, five with a groined vault ceiling and the second with a barrel vault ceiling. The vertical wall has a natural stone surface. At the end of the room, looking from the corridor, six steps ascend to the large entrance door which connects to the Plaça del Fossar. To the right of the second corridor, a lintel doorway connects to the main room, decorated with ancient motifs and photographs of its illustrious visitors. We highlight the parchments from the 15th and 16th Century among other decorative elements. In the front wall, a balcony opens with views of the Plaça del Fossar. To the left of the dining room in continuation of the entrance wall, this is the house’s private Oratory, with rectangular floor plan and small surface area; it contains an altar presided by the image of Christ, according to the Olot Religious Imagery style. To the left of the room, at the end, there is the so-called “la cambra del Bisbe” (Bishop’s Chambers), with elegant caoba furniture with carpentry work and the dressing room with an entrance through a foiled doorway. The lateral façade which faces the la Plaça del Fossar has three floors, with a segmental arch entrance door which provides access to the old wine cellar in the ground floor. To the left of it, you can still see a wood cross on a stone pedestal attached to the wall: It is one of the crosses of Vía Crucis (Stations of the Cross) which formerly extended throughout the streets of the village. Sineu wine. In 1974, Pere Fuster purchased the house from Carme Ferrer Oliver. 255 Pla de Mallorca_Sineu Pla de Mallorca >> >> Sineu_Points of Interest In late 1808, it belonged to Dionísia Rossinyol de Defla i de Comelles, the wife of Charles of Spain. Around 1880, the Archduke Ludwig Salvator of Austria mentioned it in his work: “Die Balearen”: “The house has the original style of one of Mallorca’s oldest houses. Since 1953, it has belonged to Ferran de España i Morell and has a surface area of 125.7 ha. The entrance of the houses is by means of a portal forà (doorway) with semi-circular vaulted arch, located in a wall face with battlements and crowned by the Rossinyol Coat of Arms which is connected to the central patio and serves as the layout to the rooms. A NeoGothic Chapel built in 1862 is located on the right. The interior with a rectangular floor plan is covered with five sections of groined vault roof. The altarpiece is NeoGothic and on the Gospel side, there is the tomb of Charles of Spain, who died during the Carlist War in Catalonia in 1839. A Medieval tower was built in the right angle of the patio with square section and possibly an Islamic base; it is crowned by battlements and has two finestres coronelles (mullion windows) in the rear section. Between the Chapel and the Tower, the doorway of the casa dels senyors (Noble’s house) is located with a semi-circular arch crowned with the Rossinyol Family Coat of Arms, with the date 1634 and a Latin motto. On the left of the tower, we can see the doorway of the casa dels amos(share-cropper’s house), also with semi-circular arch. Behind the main block of houses, there is a patio which provides access to various agricultural premises. We highlight its porch with segmental arches, with a ceramic arrangement dedicated to Santa Valeria and the date 1874. The estate has two gardens; one in the South whose entrance is located in front of the portal forà (doorway) and flanked by two terracotta lions, it conserves several ruins of the monument dedicated to Queen Isabel II which was built in the plaza de la Reina (Queen’s Square) of Palma, demolished in 1868. On the garden’s right, there is a large water tank, decorated with several 18th Century sculptures. The East garden is presided by a sculptured image of Pallas Athena. Sineu >> Defla Possession Defla Defla was an Islamic Country Estate which appears in the Royal Property Distribution Book (“Llibre del Repartiment) with the following entry: «Rahal Adeffla Exarquia, de VIII jovades, a Bernat Pocasanch de Barcelona, a Bernat Tortosa i a Arnau Pocasanch» (which may be translated as the “rafal oriental de la adelfa” (western country estate of the oleander shrub)). Since the 14th Century, it was the property of the Rossinyol family, who were called the Rossinyol de Defla. In 1378, it belonged to Pere Rossinyol and it now had record of a tower. During the Germania uprising (Artisan’s Guild Revolt), the possession fell victim to insurgents who assassinated its owner, Andreu Rossinyol, stole his weapons, clothes, and jewels as well as approximately 150 sheep. 257 Pla de Mallorca_Sineu Pla de Mallorca >> Pla de Mallorca_Vilafranca de Bonany Vilafranca de Bonany Vilafranca de Bonany The Municipality of Vilafranca has an extension of 24 Km2 and a population of 2,782 inhabitants (2008 census data). It is bordered by the Municipalities of Petra, Manacor, Felanitx, Porreres, and Sant Joan. The name of Vilafranca means village free of taxes, a name in keeping with the founding of this village in 1620: Vilafranca was founded as tax centre for all types of contributions and services in relation to the Kingdom. The place name was mentioned in 1633 as Vilafranca de Sant Martí. Over time, the name was reduced to Vilafranca, until, by Royal Decree, it added its current form “de Bonany”, >> Scenic overview of Vilafranca de Bonany 259 Historical References in order to differentiate it from other Municipalities of the Spanish state. The first signs of the population in Vilafranca date back to prehistoric times and ancient history, as documented by the 14 Archaeological sites that are located in the Municipality. Among them, we highlight the Talayots of Castellot Vell and Son Pou Vell and the Pretalayotic ruins de sa Moleta. The Islamic presence is recorded in several Arabic place names for farm houses and rafals (country estates) which still remain, such as Albadallet and Alcudiarrom. Pla de Mallorca >> >> Alcudiarrom Tower Following the Conquest of 1230 and as documented in the Royal Property Distribution Book (Llibre del Repartiment) of 1232, King Jaume I ceded several farmhouses to the Knights who had accompanied him: Alanzell, Albadallet, and the country estate, rafal de Boscana corresponded to Ramon de Castellbisbal; Alcudiarrom was the portion that was granted to the men of Lleida, and the town of Sant Martí was granted to Ramon Saclusa. In 1242, Sant Martí was obtained in a franchise by the Knights Templar. When this order was abolished in 1312, their properties were given to the Knights Hospitallers, which consequently caused litigation between this Order and the King of Mallorca, who intended to claim rights over this farm house’s territory. When it fell into the hands of King Sanç of Mallorca, he ceded it to his Treasurer, Sant Just. In 1391, it was purchased by Arnau Sureda, whose descendants adopted the surname of Sureda de Sant Martí. At the beginning of the 20th Century, a plot division process took place in many properties; until that time owned by the Sureda de Sant Martí family, which subsequently increased the number of small land-owners and the plot division of several of the Municipality’s largest possessions, such as; sa Franquesa, es Castellot, es Molí Nou, es Cremat, sa Vinya Nova, and Alenzell. This phenomenon also included the artisan activities which took place by taking advantage of the clay soil of the land which surrounded the village, which marked the founding of a new industrial activity with a family basis, which is still important today as represented by the roof tiles. Vilafranca de Bonany >> Vilafranca de Bonany_Historical References 261 Pla de Mallorca_Vilafranca de Bonany Pla de Mallorca >> u Po or M an ac a m e um e vo t us M à Se ba sti nt ar qu és de Vi tí l Parish Church of St. Barbara (Església Parroquial de Santa Bàrbara) In 1631, the first church of Vilafranca was blessed, a small scale temple with a main altar and two chapels on each side. In 1700, works began on the new temple, since the previous church had grown too small. It was completed in 1738. Between 1935 and 1941, the church was expanded again, with the addition of a transept and an apse. In 1913, the Bishop Pere J. Campins promoted the Vicarage into Parish church, and the first Rector was Gabriel Riera. Ja 3 Ag St a I 26 Bà ló rb To r e rc ar a l ue tí de S ar M r co 10 s s'E 11 ara rb Bá N ou r do xa nt Sta ino t Sa M olí re n Ba iq sM Vilafranca de Bonany 263 ió g ar ol a ur m A 1 on R ità m Po Er sS o res ar ne rti nt be au d'e ig ar rb E 2 s'A 4 sP ca Bà Points of Interest se a sg ra 7 s Ro tí Pri nc ipa Llo nL 6 u lJ lé Ve g mo uí es St ar Ra sia fe r a Na cip in Pr 5 Plaça Major ue Ra Ll ol P M eq lul l la a sc sE nt l Pa lm a So .N Fr Se ra be lo có p iL 30 Sa alma sS al .D 8 d'e be M ico de Un d' M 31 d'e 13 27 The façade has a smooth wall, with two voussoir lines, a skylight in the upper half and a flat church wall in the form of a cornice. There is the main Baroque lintel doorway with doorjambs in the form of moulded pilasters, a flat entablature with rectilinear moulds and pyramids topped with balls on the sides. In the upper doorway, there is a niche crowned by a cross which contains an image of the Patron Saint, Santa Bàrbara, with the tower as an attribute. Above the transept dome in 1942, a sculpture of the Sacred Heart was installed, a work by the sculptor Miquel Vadell. The belfry dated 1817 was built on the left of the façade and has tower with a quadrangular section, with Ogive arch windows in the upper section and crowned by a pyramid. In the upper section of façade, it is still possible to see two sealed arches which undoubtedly corresponded to the steeple. Pla de Mallorca d' es Ve nt t Ve n ó ca or Ra se ny Jo a Re pe a lm Pa d' es Plaça Tomeu Penya l al e d is Lo de d or es ns Sa J. Ba J na nt st Jo M R e rc Bo Sa Co 9 iró an ei ló n oa M N s le Plaça Sant Joan M s ló el p co Es e e sd ge et às ss se es Ba a rc lo al om ya M Th Ro Jo à uç re st e nt a d or lin Go va N ta e um nt Sa .S Av Cam eu Cr r Ce Ca Ja cS es nc a Fr a re Pa es ol P s an ns Po St ó Església parroquial de Santa Bàrbara 2 La Rectoria Vella 3 Ca ses Monges 4 Ca l’Amo en Bernat Rumbande 5 Ajuntament 6 Cas Metge Vell 7 Ca l’Amo en Jaume de s’Hostal Crema 1 8 Ca sa Manescala 9 Escola Pública Es Cremat 10 L’Escorxador a 11 Sant Martí d’Alanzell lm Pa 26 Molí Nou 27 Molins de la Pleta de Sant Martí 30 Restaurant -15 S’Estanc Vell MA 31 iRestaurant Es Cruce a v o Aut13 Pou Viguet 30 Agroturisme Sa Franquesa Vella Jo n So ny p se a rr Se 30 de na Jo e ar 1 amó n l ue ig Bo nt Sa c Es es .S Av Vilafranca de Bonany Palma an M t es M Pla de Mallorca >> Vilafranca de Bonany_Points of Interest ló e rc Ba Sa l ra Sa es d' Pla de Mallorca_Vilafranca de Bonany In front of the main façade, there is a monument dated 1985, dedicated to the three of the town’s most illustrious clergymen: The Capuchin Friar, fra Lluís de Vilafranca (Joan Mestre Oliver), the Priest, P. Jaume Rosselló, a Sacred Heart Missionary, and the Agustí Monk de la Mare de Déu del Carme (Guillem Font Català). In the exterior Gospel side, between the belfry and the current lateral door, the Fossar is located, the old cemetery of the village. It is possible to observe the ruins of the old lateral doorway from the 18th Century, which was sealed in the 20th Century refurbishment, with the marks of the footsteps of the religious followers on the ground. The current lateral doorway is an undecorated architrave. The interior has a Latin cross floor plan with five sections of barrel vaulted ceiling, lunettes, and five lateral chapels that open by means of semi-circular arches, the first under the gallery and the last integrated in the angular space of the transept. It has two transversal arms and four isolated polygonal pillars which, based on the pendentives, buttress the dome with circular base divided into eight segments and crowned by a lantern. The main altar currently appears in the transept space. The main altar piece, located in the quadrangular presbytery, has a Baroque style divided into two floors and five levels, with Corinthian columns. It is presided by the sculpted image of Santa Bàrbara, with Sant Sebastià and Sant Pere on the left and Ramon Llull and Sant Antoni Abat on the right. On the upper floor in the centre, we see >> Convent a painting of the Immaculada and on the sides, there are Sant Joan Baptista (St. John the Baptist) and the Sant Jaume (St. James). The entablature is crowned with the Coat of Arms of the Sureda de Sant Martí family, and it is topped with a relief of Christ. The Sacristy with square floor plan is located to the left of the presbytery; it contains among other elements, a black marble wash basin with the relief of the tower in the Coat of Arms of Santa Bàrbara and Vilafranca, and the date 1885, as well as diverse bowls with curious representative images and the canvasses of Santa Cecilia, Santa Bàrbara, Santa Catalina Tomás and a image of the Mare de Déu de Núria. Convent (Ca ses Monges) (C/ de Santa Bàrbara) The Nuns of Charity established residence in Vilafranca in 1895, initially in a house owned by the Mayor and in 1990, they moved to the current convent. The building was built in 1897 on a plot ceded by the Sureda family, the owners of Sant Martí. In 1900, the first floor of the building was blessed, while the chapel, designed by the Marquis de Vivot, Joan M. Sureda i de Verí, was consecrated in 1921. The façade has three floors: The ground floor has a lintel doorway with a window on each side. The doorway is presided by the Coats of Arms of the marriage comprised by Joan M. Sureda i de Verí (i Boixadors i Sales) and Bàrbara Fortuny i de Verí (i Sureda i Sales), Lords of Sant Martí, with a Marquis crown and the ermine of the “Grandes de España” (Grandee, the Noble Families of Spain). There are three windows on the first floor and on the porch, there are three rectangular windows. 265 >> Parish Church of St. Barbara Vilafranca de Bonany >> Vilafranca de Bonany_Points of Interest Pla de Mallorca >> Pla de Mallorca_Vilafranca de Bonany >> Vilafranca de Bonany_Points of Interest >> House: Ca l’Amo en Bernat Rumbande The Old Rectory (Rectoria Vella) (C/ de l’Església, 12) This old house was the residence of the Vicar and subsequently, the Rector of the Church; it was built on a plot ceded by the Sureda family. It has a façade with two floors with modified arches. The doorway, currently with a lintel, was formerly a semicircular arch and still has interesting vaults. To the left beside the doorway, there is a flared window, and higher up, the remains of a former sundial. There are three windows on the first floor. In the interior, we highlight the vault of the first corridor, with the Sureda coat of arms. >> The New Windmill Ca l’Amo en Bernat Rumbande is a house with three floors; it has two lintel doorways and large entrance door on the left. There are three windows on the first floor and on the porch, there are five rectangular windows above a decorated rail. The Ajuntament is a Regional Style building with three floors, a lintel doorway and two windows on each side. On the first floor, there are two windows at the ends and a balcony with three doors, and the Village Coat of Arms above the central doorway. In the porch, there are quadrangular pillars which open into a corridor in which there are three doorways. The New Windmill (Molí Nou) (C/ Sant Martí- C/ del Molí Nou) This is the only flour windmill which has been conserved within the city centre at the exit of the village. It belonged to the possession: possessió de Sant Martí and it ceased operations in 1915. It is a windmill with a base-residence and tower. The base has a very rustic lintel doorway and a small cistern with chapel on the left. On the right, there is a large entrance door with skene arch. The interior Vilafranca de Bonany >> Main Square Main Square (Plaça Mayor) Popularly known as the Plaça de l’Ajuntament (Town Council Plaça), in this space, you will find a series of interesting houses such as Ca l’Amo en Bernat Rumbande, Ca l’Amo Antoni de s’Estany or Cas Capellà Mateu, and la Casa de la Vila (Town Council building). 267 The NeoGothic style Oratory is located to the right of the Convent. It has a very simple façade with a stone-covered wall, lintel doorway, and above it, a flared Rose Window with a simple exterior moulding and Gothic lattice work in the centre. In the interior, we see a nave with a rectangular floor plan, without apse, and a groined vault ceiling with three sections. The Presbytery which occupies the third section corresponds to a provisional design, since a future expansion was planned. It is elevated on two steps and has a lintel doorway on each side. The altar piece, also NeoGothic, is presided by an image of the Immaculada, flanked by an image of Sant Joseph on the left and Sant Vicenç de Paül on the right. In the vertical section, we see a large twin Neogothic window on each side of the Presbytery in the lattice gallery style. In the upper part of the head wall, behind the altar piece, there is a Neogothic stained glass window with the Coat of Arms of the Sureda Fortuny. Pla de Mallorca >> >> Vilafranca de Bonany_Points of Interest Houses on Main Street (Cases del Carrer Principal) We highlight the Hostal: Ca l’Amo en Jaume de s’Hostal (num. 12), which is one of the village’s hostals and it is currently divided into two properties. The façade has two floors and note the possible frame of the main doorway with semi-circular arch on the ground floor. To the right, there is a lintel doorway and large entrance door. The second floor has two windows with sills, the one on the left was split due to the division of the house. The cornice conserves interesting painted roof tiles. >> L’Escorxador (The Butcher House) Another amazing house is Cas Metge Vell (num. 5), now can Ferragut, with three floors and lintel doorway. It has the typical decoration in the form of a covering with quadrangular panels, which several authors include within the modernist style. Known by the name of “Metge Vell”, Guillem Joan Galmés Sastre played a major role in the fight against the 1918 Influenza epidemic and was named an Illustrious Citizen of the Village. Popular Type Houses Vilafranca conserves diverse houses with a popular style; the majority were built throughout the 18th and 19th Centuries. In the street: carrer de la Unió, num. 17, there is one such house, with the porch in front of the façade, lintel doorway, and a small entrance >> Ca sa Manescala >> Es Cremat Public School door with segmental arch on the right. According to the Archduke: Arxiduc Lluís Salvador, Vilafranca was one of the villages that had the most porches in the façades of its houses. Finally, on the street: carrer del Vent, there is another house with two floors, a semicircular arch doorway and a landscaped platform, irregular masonry work and a two-slope roof. Ca sa Manescala (C/ Fra Lluís Jaume) This house is the birthplace of Joan Mestre Oliver, known by his religious name of Fra Lluís de Vilafranca (1770-1847). It has a façade with three floors and the semi-circular arch doorway with spandrel. Above the door, there is a balcony window and three windows in the porch. You may see a stone marker in it with the Franciscan Coat of Arms which testifies that this house was the birthplace of this friar. Friar Lluís de Vilafranca was a historian, book lover, and Capuchin monk. He was the librarian for the Capuchin monks of Palma and a renowned intellectual; he was a friend of Jovellanos and Joan Ramis, among others. In 1835, upon the expulsion of the Monasteries, he retired to the Casa dels Venerables (Religious Shelter) in Palma. Afterwards, he established his residence in Vilafranca where he died. Viguet Well (Pou Viguet) This well dates back to the Muslim period. Its roof is the most outstanding feature of this structure. Vilafranca de Bonany conserves a segmental vault roof. The tower has a circular section with lintel doorway above the windmill terrace, a window, and tile roof on one slope. 269 Pla de Mallorca _Vilafranca de Bonany Pla de Mallorca >> Sant Martí d’Alanzell The houses of Sant Martí d’Alanzell –or Lanzell- are located a little over a kilometer South of the village on the Felanitx motorway to Vilafranca (Ma-5111), at kilometer: 6.5, beside the junction with the PorreresVilafranca (Ma-5101) motorway. The possessió (possession) was formerly one of the most important estates in Mallorca, it occupied lands which in the Muslim domination were the farmhouses of Alanzell and Albadellet, as >> Old Wine-Cellar of the Sant Martí d’Alanzell Possession in Sant Martí in 1495, it consisted of a chapel, “amb un retaule del Davallament de la Creu, obra de Flandes, que té a una banda Sant Martí i a l’altra santa Bàrbara” (“with an altar piece of the Descent from the Cross, a work by Flandes, which has an image of Sant Martí on one side and Santa Bàrbara on the other”). In 1535, the Owner of Sant Martí was Pau Sureda de Sant Martí. In the cadastre register of 1575, it records that it was owned by Salvador Sureda, with a patrimony around Sant Martí, which included Son Pere Jaume, Lanzell, and Boscana. His son, Pau Sureda de Sant Martí i Campfullós (1571-1650) was the founder of the village of Vilafranca which was specifically called Sant Martí prior to the modern name of Vilafranca de Bonany, when it segregated part of the possession of Son Pere Jaume in 1620. In 1708, during the War of Succession, Francesc Sureda de Sant Martí i Zaforteza was appointed by the King Carlos III of Austria, as the Marquis de Vilafranca, a title which was not revalidated until 1760, by the former’s grandson, Salvador Sureda de Sant Martí i Cotoner. His son, Mariano Salvador Sureda de Sant Martí i Desbrull, died in 1805 without a direct heir and the possession of Sant Martí was transferred to the Sureda family of the Marquis of Vivot line, among whom we highlight Joan Sureda i Boixadors and Joan Miquel Sureda i de Verí, the last Marquis of Vivot. Following the death of Joan Miquel Sureda (1912), the possession was passed on to one of his daughters, Bàrbara Sureda Fortuny. His niece, Pilar Montaner Sureda, the daughter of Pere de Montaner, Count of Peralada, inherited the property and she married Vicenç Ferrer de Sant Jordi i Truyols, the Count of Santa Maria de Formiguera. The 271 The Butcher (L’Escorxador) (C/ de l´Escorxador) It has a regional design from the early 1930’s, with a side section with two floors, three flat windows on the ground floor and three semicircular arches in the first floor where the central one is highest. A sill joins the three arches. The crown is a NeoBaroque mixed-line wall, moulded and crowned with three hydrias. It was refurbished in 1998 and is currently the Casal de Cultura del Poble (Village Cultural Centre). well as several rafals (country estates). Following the Conquesta (Conquest) in 1229, it represented part of the royal portion in the distribution and it was ceded to Ramon Saclusa. Around 1242, the Alanzell Farmhouse was transferred to the powerful Order of the Temple (Knights Templar) who converted it into a feudal kingdom and named it Sant Martí d’Alanzell. After the definitive dismantlement of the Knights Templar, in 1314, King Sanç de Mallorca disputed its ownership with the heirs of the Knights Templar, the Sanjuanista Knights; in 1318, King Sanç donated it in exchange for 500 sterling pounds and an annual census fee of 10 sterling pounds to this Treasurer, Nicolau de Santjust. According to J. M. Bover, the son of Nicolau, Guillem de Santjust, in 1391 sold the possession to Arnau Sureda, however, it appears that it was the batle (Mayor) of Mallorca who put the property up for sale, at the request of the creditors of the aforementioned Guillem. The branch of the Sureda family that purchased the property named it Sant Martí, in honour of the ownership which they held. One of the most famous Lords of Sant Martí was Salvador Sureda Safont (1415-1495), son of Arnau, a Knight famous for his Tornament match against the Catalan Knight, Francesc Vallseca, celebrated in Napoles in the presence of King Alfons the Magnanimous in 1444. His motto was a ferret’s lair (a basket which contained a ferret to hunt rabbits) with an inscription that read:”Dins és lo qui’l pren”. This motto became part of the Coat of Arms of the family, Sureda de Sant Martí, which is reproduced in numerous occasions in this house estate. Salvador Pau Sureda, the nephew of the above, was the heir; in the inventory which he ordered to be carried out Pla de Mallorca Es Cremat Public School (Escola Pública Es Cremat) (C/ Joan Miró- C/ de ses Escoles) It was designed in 1927 by the Architect Guillem Forteza and inaugurated in 1930. It has undergone various refurbishments and expansions on diverse occasions. The façade has a central block with three semi-circular arches and three Ionic style columns, flanked by lintel apertures, with the corresponding attached pilasters also Ionic style in the ends. On each side, there is a quadrangular block with a height of two floors. Vilafranca de Bonany >> Vilafranca de Bonany_Points of Interest >> Vilafranca de Bonany_Points of Interest >> Patio of the Sant Martí d’Alanzell Possession The Sant Martí chapel or oratory has an entrance from the patio by a lintel door with embedded circular section doorjambs, with a late Baroque style (end of the 18th Century), open on the West side of the Chapel. The Oratory has a rectangular floor plan; to the left, at the foot of the nave, we highlight the Gothic doorway with an Ogee arch and floral decoration, crowned by the Quadripartite Coat of Arms of the Sureda, Zaforteza, Desbrull and Olesa family, and in the centre of the Ogee angle, the Sureda Coat of Arms with an angel. In the spandrels sheltered by the curb stones, there are reliefs of the Heraldic ferret-lair. The nave roof has a coffered wood ceiling while the Presbytery has a groined vault roof; its keystone has a multicoloured ferret-lair. The vertical wall of the nave has ceramic tiles with the stations of Via Crucis (Stations of the Cross). The Presbytery has a floor with Medieval tiles, while the altar is buttressed with little columns that came from the old coronella windows The altar piece has an early Baroque style with the date 1637; it is presided by a painting which represents Sant Martí as the Bishop of Tours, with the mitre and staff, performing the resurrection miracle of a child; in the attic, there are images of Sant Sebastià, the Immaculada, and Santa Bàrbara; the altarpiece is by Gaspar Oms II (1598-1648). Behind the Presbytery, there is the Sacristy, a square space with a groined vault roof with a keystone that has the Sureda Coat of Arms. There is a small wash basin on the right wall, with a set of multi-coloured tiles which represent the Virgin image: Mare de Déu de Bonany. Vilafranca de Bonany curbstone with circular base, with a forged iron frame with the sculpted reliefs of dragon heads which may be NeoGothic. 273 >> Cloister of the Sant Martí de Lanzell Possession The main façade has three floors. The main doorway has a semi-circular vaulted arch, elevated on a stone ramp and appears crowned with a spectacular relief of Sant Martí; the former Bishop of Tours appears represented as a Knight in the characteristic scene of delivering part of his cape to a poor man. In the lower left angle of the sculpture, there is the Coat of Arms of Sureda de Sant Martí, which shows typical holm oak of the Sureda surname, as well as the addition of the “huronera” (ferret-lair) of Salvador Sureda de Sant Martí Safont. Specifically, the Coat of Arms dates back to 1736, it is quadripartite and has the Coats of Arms of the surnames: Sureda, Zaforteza, Desbrull i Olesa, corresponding to Francesc Sureda. To the right of the façade, there is an even higher block, which was the tower of the houses; it has a height of three floors, a lintel doorway which connects to the quadrangular room buttressed by the pointed diaphragm arch, which is characteristic of early Christian Gothic style, with the remains of the extending beams that support the roof. On the other side of the façade, there is a more rural structure, with an exterior stairway that leads to a lintel doorway. The arches which comprise the façade windows are irregularly distributed, highlighting the four on the first floor, one on the left of the doorway and three on the right; there are also four windows on the second floor, one to the left of the door, another above it, and the other two are on the right. The main doorway connect to a foyer with a groined vault roof with the vault keystone and the Sureda Coat of Arms and two ferret-lairs. A segmental arch leads to a portico, with a groined vault roof and seven segmental arches, buttressed by octagonal pillars with a wide base and moulded capitals (6 isolated pillars and two attached to the sides). The entrance to the patio is by means of this porch. The patio is rectangular and leads to the different rooms of the houses: The oldest architectural wing is on the left, possibly from the 14th Century, with two semi-circular vaulted arch doors and the remains of a sealed Gothic window, which in turn was a small elevated doorway, with convex moulding; according to oral tradition, it was used as the prison of the Knights Templar; in any case, it is welldocumented that the Curia and the Barony prison was located here. Further to the North on the right, is the land-owner’s house, with entrance by semi-circular arch doorway. Further to the right of this house, the height reaches three floors, with a porch that has scenic rectangular windows, while a porch with three segmental arches provides access to the stairway of the main floor. Inside this porch, it has conserved a cart which was pulled by cattle, and diverse artifacts of Roman ceramics such as amphoras and an interesting piece which was used as a beacon for ships. Above the central arch of the porch, there is a relief which represents Santa Bàrbara, with the Coat of Arms of Sureda Zaforteza and the date 1746. On the right side, there are three sealed segmental arches where we highlight the Chapel doorway, crowned by a quadripartite shield with the Coat of Arms of Sureda, Fortuny, Verí i Verí. In the centre of the patio towards the right, there is a well Pla de Mallorca current owners of Sant Martí are the children of the above, Joan Miquel Ferrer de Sant Jordi i Montaner and his wife. Pla de Mallorca_Vilafranca de Bonany >> Façade of the Sant Martí d’Alanzell Possession To the right of the stairway’s porch of the main floor is the grain storeroom entrance; a lancet arch connects to a foyer with two sections of barrel vault roof. This space is connected by means of a segmental arch to the Farm room called the “Quartera”, a grain storeroom with four sections of groined vault roof and separation segmental arches; to the right there is a lancet arch while on the right, we highlight several engravings with drawings which represent saints, knights, peasants, demons, etc. perhaps from the 19th Century. The wine cellar is an extensive space with two naves and six sections of groined vault roof per each nave (a total of 12 sections), separated by square section pillars four sections. At the end of the wine cellar, there is a room which is accessed by a stair with five steps; this is the cheese room; it has barrel vault ceiling and a press which was used to make the cheese. The East façade has a major gallery or logia located on the first floor, with six semi- circular arches, with Tuscan style columns and balustrade with an Italian-inspired Baroque style, possibly from the second half of the 18th Century. To the right of the lateral façade facing Northeast, there is a pointed arch which leads to the wine vat, which internally connects to the wine cellar. This East side is built in front of an esplanade with tall pine trees, centralized by a water wheel which has a wood wheel; the water wheel is a decorative element, since this space was used for this purpose. 275 The stairway which extends from the patio porch leads to the main floor of the houses, it is attached to the walls; it has two landings and a “naia” (upper landing, which is larger) and has a wood handrail; in the vertical section of the lateral walls, it has two painted Coats of Arms that show the Coat of arms of the families: Sureda and Bàrbara Sureda Fortuny (i Verí Verí). In the stairway’s upper landing in the room’s entrance wall, it conserves the shields of the participants in the Napoles Tournament in 1444, as well as a helmet and lance. The main room of the Lord’s house has a quadrangular floor plan and is very high, with three sections of beam roof with two large transversal main beams. Vilafranca de Bonany >> Vilafranca de Bonany_Points of Interest Pla de Mallorca >> Pla de Mallorca_Bibliography >> Pla de Mallorca_Bibliography Bibliography · V.A.: Guia dels pobles de Mallorca (guies d’Algaida, Ariany, Costitx, Lloret de Vistalegre, Llubí, Maria de la Salut, Montuïri, Petra, Porreres, Santa Eugènia, Sant Joan, Sencelles, Sineu i Vilafranca de Bonany). Palma, Hora Nova, S.A., 1999 – 2003. · V.A.: Història de Muro. Mallorca, Town Council of Muro, 1989-94 (4 Volumes). · Albertí, J.; Rosselló Vaquer, R.: Història de Costitx (1600-1868). Costitx, Town Council, 1997. · Aramburu, J.; Garrido, C.; Sastre, V.: Guía arqueológica de Mallorca. Palma, Olañeta, 1994. · Barceló Crespí, M.: Porreres. Contribució a l‘estudi d‘una vila mallorquina a la Baixa Edat Mitjana. Porreres, 1984. · Berard, J.: Viaje a la villas de Mallorca (1789). Palma, 1983. · Bover, J. M.: Nobiliario mallorquín (1850). Palma, Olañeta, 1983. · Byne, A.; Stapley, M.: Cases i jardins de Mallorca. Palma, Olañeta, 1982. · Barceló Crespí, M.: L‘església parroquial de Porreres (Notes històriques). Palma, 1989. · Consell Regulador D. O. Pla i Llevant de Mallorca: Vins del Pla i Llevant de Mallorca. Denominació d’Origen dels vins del Pla i Llevant de Mallorca http://www.plaillevantmallorca.es · Barceló, I.; Bibiloni, P.; Calviño, C.: Tresquem per la muntanya. Un itinerari pel massís de Randa. Llucmajor, Town Council, 1990. · Estelrich Costa, J.: La parròquia de Sant Joan (1900-1993). Palma, 1993. · Estelrich Costa, J.: El pujol de Consolació de Sant Joan. Mallorca, 1993. · Garrido, C.; Ortega, E.: Guía del Patrimonio. Palma, 1995. · Habsburgo- Lorena, L. S.: Las Baleares por la palabra y el grabado. Volume VIII: Mallorca ( Special part). Palma, 1992. · Ibestat: Fitxes estadístiques municipals 2005. Institut d’Estadística de les Illes Balears. http://www.caib.es/ibae/ibae.htm. · Inestur http://www.inestur.es/index.php. · Mulet Ramis, B.: Història dels carrers i places de Sineu. Sineu, 1987. · Mulet Ramis, B.; Rosselló Vaquer, R.; Salom, J. M.: La capitalitat de Sineu. Segles XIII i XIV. Sineu, Town Council, 1994. · Mulet Ramis, B.; Rosselló Vaquer, R.; Salom, J. M.: La crisi de la vila de Sineu. Segle XV. Sineu, Town Council, 1995. · Mulet Ramis, B.; Rosselló Vaquer, R.; Salom, J. M.: Sineu aixeca una nova església. Segle XVI. Sineu, Town Council, 1996. · Mulet Ramis, B.; Valero Martí, G.: La vila de Sineu: itinerari cultural i patrimonial. Palma, Documenta Balear- Town Council of Sineu, 1999 · Munar, G.: Història de Lloret de Vistalegre i del seu convent. Palma, Moll, 1975. · Munar, G.: La muntanya dels tres santuaris. Llucmajor, Impremta Moderna, 1991 (2a). · Munar Oliver, G.: Història de Porreres. Volume II. Palma, 1979. · Munar Oliver, G.; Rosselló Vaquer, R.: Història de Porreres. Volume I. Palma, 1977. · Nicolau Bauzá, J.: Vilafranca de Bonany, notas históricas. Palma, Gràfiques Miramar, 1978. · Piferrer, P.; Quadrado, J. M.: Las islas Baleares. Barcelona, 1888. Bibliography · V.A.: Guia del Pla de Mallorca. Palma, FODESMA, 1994. · Andreu de Palma de Mallorca, P.: Vilafranca de Bonany. Un passeig històric pels seus carrers antics i nous. Palma, La Esperanza, 1935 (2. Edition: OCB of Vilafranca, 1997). 277 · V.A.: Gran Enciclopèdia de Mallorca. Palma, Promomallorca, 1989-98. Pla de Mallorca >> >> Pla de Mallorca_Bibliography · Rosselló Vaquer, R.: Vilafranca abans d’esser Vilafranca. Palma, 1995. >> Pla de Mallorca_Notes · Tomas, B.: Guia ecociclista de Vilafranca de Bonany i voltants. Palma, Entorn, 1999. · Rosselló Vaquer, R.;Vaquer Bennàssar, O.: Història de Sencelles i Costitx (1229-1600). Palma, Conselleria de Cultura, 1993. · Valero Martí, G.: Camins i paisatges. Palma, Ed. Olañeta, 1992-93. · Rotger Niell, J.: Orígens de Sineu. Palma, 1939. · Valero Martí, G.: Conèixer Santa Eugènia. Santa Eugènia, Town Council, 1996. · Rubí Darder, S.: La villa real de Petra. Algunas de sus raíces. Petra, 1987 · Valero Martí, G.: Sencelles: guia de passeig. Palma, Documenta Balear- Fundació Mn. Bartomeu Oliver, 1999. · Sastre de sa Torreta, A.: Quaderns d‘Història d‘Algaida. Randa i les seves possessions.· Algaida, La Mata Escrita, 1983. >> Notes >> Pla de Mallorca_Notes >> Notes