Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

3 sumptuous palaces to explore on your Spanish vacation

- ANDREW FERREN

One of the most important cultural events in Madrid in recent years was the public opening, just before the pandemic, of a collection that had been sitting behind the closed doors of a private palace for about 200 years.

The Palacio de Liria, the grand 18th-century home of the Alba family — among Spain’s (and Europe’s) oldest and most storied aristocrat­ic families — is set in a tranquil garden just steps from the bustling Plaza de España in central Madrid. Often compared to the Prado Museum and the Royal Palace of Madrid for the masterpiec­es it contains and the noble residents who lived there, the house is filled with works by Titian, Rubens, Velázquez, Goya and other artists favored by the Spanish court. There are also vast literary and historic archives, as well as letters written from the Americas by explorers Christophe­r Columbus, Francisco Pizarro and Hernán Cortés.

Since assuming the title in 2014, the 19th duke, Carlos Fitz-James Stuart, through the Casa de Alba Foundation, decided to share his family’s treasures with the world — an effort that began in 2015 with the opening of other singular family properties like the Palacio de las Dueñas in Seville and the Palacio de Monterrey in Salamanca. Here is a tour of those three sumptuous palaces, along with a stop in the small town of Alba de Tormes.

A LITTLE BACKGROUND

The Duchy of Alba, created in 1472 when King Henry IV of Castile elevated Don García Álvarez de Toledo from count to duke, takes its name from an early family seat in Alba de Tormes, near Salamanca. Over the centuries, the dukes and duchesses of Alba have distinguis­hed themselves in various ways. In the 16th century, the third duke, sometimes called the Iron Duke, was known for his military campaigns in the Eighty Years’ War. In the 18th century, the 13th duchess beguiled the painter Goya, who portrayed her several times.

Along the way, the Alba lineage became deeply entwined with the lineages of other noble families. Titles were amassed. The 18th Duchess of Alba — whose name was Maria de Rosario Cayetana Paloma Alfonsa Victoria Eugenia Fernanda Teresa Francisca de Paula Lourdes Antonia Josefa Fausta Rita Castor Dorotea Santa Esperanza Fitz-James Stuart y Silva, Falcó y Gurtubay — had more noble titles (more than 40) than first names. Doña Cayetana, as she was called, was the most titled aristocrat in the world and, until she died in 2014, kept the Alba name in the public eye, mostly by doing and dressing exactly as she pleased, sometimes scandalizi­ng an adoring public.

Her eldest son has kept a lower profile and so the three palaces he has opened retain the imprint of his mother’s passion for displaying family photos and tiny precious objects, enhancing the sense of home versus museum.

PALACIO DE LIRIA, MADRID

Screened from the street by towering cedars and ancient magnolias, the crisp, colonnaded Baroque facade of Liria can be glimpsed only when one is inside the garden. Designed primarily by architect Ventura Rodríguez in the late 18th century and largely rebuilt in the 20th, according to plans by British architectu­re heavyweigh­t Edwin Lutyens, Liria Palace is the grandest Alba home and continues to be the duke’s principal residence, with family cars in the driveway and dogs frolicking on the lawn.

For €15 euros (about $16.40), visitors get a 65-minute audio tour of 14 glorious rooms, including the library, which houses, among other treasures, the oldest Bible in the Spanish language, a second edition of Cervantes’ “Don Quixote” and nearly half of Columbus’ extant correspond­ence — including his hand-drawn maps of Hispaniola from his voyage in 1492.

Beneath a luminous dome, the main staircase leads up to a gallery hung with portraits highlighti­ng the family links to the Stuart monarchs of Britain. An enfilade of connected rooms reveals in astonishin­g succession the Alba family’s rich history as illustrate­d through a splendid art collection.

There’s a Flemish Room, with works by Rubens, Jan Brueghel the Elder and Jacob van Ruisdael, and a portrait of the third duke by Anthonis Mor, all of it illuminate­d by a Meissen chandelier dripping with pendulous clusters of deep purple porcelain flowers. The Italian Room stars Perugino, Palma Vecchio, Titian, Luca Giordano, Guercino and Andrea del Sarto beneath an equally stunning Murano chandelier. The Spanish Room has works by Velázquez, Zurbarán and Ribera, and the Goya Room has several works by the artist, including his portrait of the 13th Duchess of Alba, his friend and muse, perhaps the most famous work in the collection.

PALACIO DE MONTERREY, SALAMANCA

The 16th-century Palacio de Monterrey (€9.50 euros — about $10 — for a 50-minute audio tour) illustrate­s the vicissitud­es experience­d by many noble dwellings. Its imposing facade suggests a splendid family home, albeit one a fraction of the size it was intended to be as financial constraint­s meant that only one wing was built. Marriage brought it into the Alba family around 1700.

The facade is among the finest examples of the Spanish Plateresqu­e architectu­ral style, with its carved floral and figural motifs that animate the towers, cornices, windows and entrance.

The palace was used as a school in the 19th century and then left derelict until the interior was restored in the 1940s and ’50s by the 18th Duchess of Alba and her father. It is now the coziest and most unpretenti­ous of the three houses.

There are museum-quality works in virtually every room — including 17th-century Flemish tapestries and a pair of paintings found in a basement labeled “Italian school” that turned out to be the only two known landscapes by Spanish Baroque master José de Ribera.

ALBA DE TORMES

Little remains of the once splendid 16th-century Renaissanc­e palace in Alba de Tormes, where operas and plays premiered for the third duke and his guests.

Today only a tower with some frescoes can be visited (entrance, €3 euros, about $3). A climb to the top offers sweeping views of the gently rolling Castilian plains and the broad, slow meander of the Tormes River, suggesting what life may have looked like in 1582, when St. Teresa of Ávila, the Carmelite nun, mystic and philosophe­r, was summoned by the third duchess to bless the birth of their son. Heeding the duchess’s call despite being ill, St. Teresa died soon after arrival and was buried in Alba de Tormes. Church fathers in Ávila insisted she be interred in her hometown and the body was returned.

However, at the request of a later duchess of Alba, a papal decree was granted for returning the saint to Alba de Tormes, where her body remains. On each transfer of her corpse, multiple body parts were taken to satisfy a flourishin­g market in saints’ relics. Her fingers, arms and heart and part of her jaw are all enshrined in far-flung churches. Her tomb in Alba de Tormes draws thousands of faithful visitors every year and requires five separate keys to open it, one of which is owned by the Duke of Alba; another is kept at the Vatican.

PALACIO DE LAS DUEÑAS, SEVILLE

The bougainvil­lea facade of the Palacio de las Dueñas (entrance, €12 euros, about $12) is a mind-blowing expanse of intensely colored papery purple flowers clinging to the guest wing — and with more than 30 guest rooms, it adds up to a lot of purple. Within a year of its opening in 2015, Dueñas became one of the top five most visited sites in Seville.

Built between the 15th and 16th centuries in the Renaissanc­e style, it features Gothic and, especially, Moorish influences — most notably the concept that houses should appear fortressli­ke on the outside and paradisiac­al within. The palace’s layout includes 11 patios and gardens and nine fountains, including two tiled ones that have been gurgling away for nearly 500 years. Inside are works by 16th-century artists like Sofonisba Anguissola and Jacopo Bassano.

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