The Sunday Guardian

SPANISH DUKE’S palace OPENS FOR COMMON public

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MADRID: One of Madrid’s hidden cultural gems, up to now only accessible to private guests or art aficionado­s willing to endure a near three-year waiting list, the neoclassic­al Palace of Liria will open its doors to the general public from 19 September.

Home to the 19th Duke of Alba, a Grandee,it boasts paintings by Francisco Goya, Diego Velazquez and Peter Paul Rubens and a unique library with letters penned by Christophe­r Columbus and a first edition of Don Quixote.

“You can feel the weight of history the moment you enter this house,” Alvaro Romero Sanchez-arjona, head of the culture department at the Casa de Alba Foundation, told Reuters.

“Visitors will realise they’re not in a convention­al museum, they are in a palace, in an inhabited house,” Romero added while taking receipt of Goya’s portrait of the 13th Duchess of Alba, which was returned after a temporary lease to the Thyssen museum.

The 18th century building is the third palace the Albas have opened to visitors since 2016 in an effort to maintain the heritage of the family, which is restricted from selling many of its heirlooms due to their historic importance for Spain.

The House of Alba dates back to the 1400s and its wealth is estimated to be between 600 million euros and 3.5 billion euros ($663 million-$3.87 billion).

The Palace of Liria, where France’s last empress and wife of Napoleon III, Maria Eugenia de Montijo, died in exile 1920, will allow groups of 20 visitors to tour its ground and first floors every 30 minutes for a 14-euro ($15.50) fee.

Duke Carlos Fitz-james Stuart and his family will continue to live on the second floor of the palace, which was extensivel­y rebuilt after suffering heavy damage from bombing in Spain’s 1936-39 Civil War.

 ??  ?? The Palace of Liria.
The Palace of Liria.

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