Countries<Spain<Comunidad Valenciana<Alginet< Castillo de Alginet

Castillo de Alginet(Alginet)

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Description

The construction of the castle began in the 16th century by Jeroni Cabanyelles, Governor of Valencia and Lord of Alginet, who began to build the palace-castle next to the royal road, with two crenellated towers in its north and south corners for defence. With the passing of time, the current town of Alginet took shape from the Cabanyelles castle. At the end of the 17th century, the construction of the church began, and the bell tower was built in the 18th century, starting in 1702 and finishing in 1775. The Communion chapel was built between 1737 and 1744. Since 1812, there is evidence of the municipality's interest in transforming the castle into a Town Hall. Of the configuration of the primitive castle, only the plan of the "Proyecto de Ensanche", from 1870, exists, which partially shows the perimeter of the castle. In 1875 the Town Hall bought the castle from the Marquis of Monistrol to build the Town Hall, and two years later the works for the new use were completed by the architect Vicente Constantino Marzo. The moat surrounding the castle was covered, the crenellated tower in the north corner was lowered to the height of the street and the south tower had been demolished beforehand.


The complex is made up of the current Town Hall built on the remains of the castle, the Parish Church of San Antonio Abad, the building that joins them, and the market located behind the Town Hall. The current Town Hall has a quadrangular ground plan (two octagonal wings), with a quarter of the ground plan being an enclosed courtyard. An underground vaulted gallery has been preserved from the old castle under the enclosure wall of the courtyard, and the existence of a perimeter moat and a circular tower in the southeast corner is known from a sketch provided by the Marquis of Monistrol for the Plan de Ensanche at the end of the 19th century. The architectural language used on the south façade is noteworthy, in which the neoclassical mannerism of Vicente Constantino Marzo stands out. The interior has a main staircase that leads to the upper floors, on the main floor is the assembly hall, and the interior follows the same style. The east façade was built by José María Cerveró in the same style as the previous one. The west façade, also by Cerveró, was designed in 1952.

The archaeological remains of the palace were found in 2009, as a result of the remodelling work carried out in the Town Hall square in Alginet. Since then, the Consistory has carried out the necessary works to rehabilitate these archaeological elements. Two years after discovering part of the town's heritage, Alginet recovered the moat and keep of the castle, symbol of the municipality.

Image of Castillo de Alginet