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Museum of Santa Cruz

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Location
  
Toledo, Spain

Criteria
  
Monument

Reference no.
  
RI-51-0000082

Province
  
Province of Toledo

Artwork
  
La Verónica

Type
  
Non-movable

Designated
  
1902

Opened
  
1961

Phone
  
+34 925 22 14 02

Architect
  
Enrique de Egas

Museum of Santa Cruz

Address
  
Miguel de Cervantes, 3, 45001 Toledo, Spain

Hours
  
Open today · 9:30AM–6:30PMWednesday9:30AM–6:30PMThursday9:30AM–6:30PMFriday9:30AM–6:30PMSaturday9:30AM–6:30PMSunday10AM–2PMMonday9:30AM–6:30PMTuesday9:30AM–6:30PMSuggest an edit

Similar
  
Alcázar of Toledo, El Greco Museum - Toledo, Monastery of San Juan de l, Iglesia de Santo Tomé - Tol, Toledo Cathedral

Bolivia tourism guarani museum of santa cruz


The Museum of Santa Cruz (Spanish: Museo de Santa Cruz) is a building of the 16th century of the city of Toledo, Spain), which originally was an important hospital, although it was converted into a museum in the 19th century.

Contents

The hospital was founded by Cardinal Mendoza at the end of the 15th century to centralize assistance to orphaned and abandoned children in the city. It has a remarkable Plateresque portal, work of Alonso de Covarrubias. The building has a Greek cross plant and four courtyards, two of which were completely completed. The first is of Covarrubias and gives access to the upper floor through a three-ladder staircase.

The museum has two floors. The cruiser covers the two floors and is covered with ribbed vaults. In the north arm was located the chapel. The museum has sections of Archeology, Fine Arts and Decorative Arts. The Fine Arts funds are distributed on the first and second floor of the building, and those of archeology, in the Noble Cloister and in an underground floor. The Decorative Arts have a sample of Toledan folk handicrafts, which is also located on the floor of the basement.

Artistic description

It was conceived with six cradles that intersect forming four courtyards for ventilation and for that high windows are used. It is still unfinished (not two courtyards were made, as they were conceived) and was devised as an exempt building. The altar is located in the center and the courtyards are devised seven of which are made four and those four, only one was finalized by Alonso de Covarrubias.

There are four large cradles, which connect with the courtyards, on two floors made by Enrique Egas and in the center is the table with the altar. The arches are carpaneles and on pillars with litter and cherubim in the coat of arms of Mendoza.

In general there is a symbiosis of the Moorish tradition with Flemish art. Cover of pair and knuckle in framed wood of casetones. The wood has decorative and utilitarian function. The ashlars are well carved and the portal was made by Covarrubias, made it entintelada, the entablature flanked by pseudocolumns paired and with niches and doseletes; and decoration Grotesque in the fustes.

The pediment is round classic that houses the discovery of the Lignum crucis by Saint Elena. It supports the entablature with another body. An archivolt was broken to place a niche representing charity. At the top are the Virgin's wedding dresses with dolphins.

The windows are symmetrical with bulbous order and edicts with the emblem of Mendoza. The last body, later, is mannerist.

References

Museum of Santa Cruz Wikipedia