Casa del Cordón, Santo Domingo
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The Casa del Cordón (Spanish for "House of the Cord") is a property located in the
In 1586, During the Francis Drake's incursion, the balance was installed inside this house with which the belongings that the inhabitants of the city had to deliver to the English pirate were weighed.[2][3]
This is an Isabelline Gothic and Mudéjar style building.
It is part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site "Colonial City of Santo Domingo".
History
It was built between 1502 and 1503
In 1509 the viceroy Diego Columbus with his wife María de Toledo, niece of Ferdinand II of Aragon, they left the city's Homage Tower to Francisco de Tapia and lived briefly in the Casa del Cordón before moving to their official residence.[3][4][2] In turn, the Real Audiencia of Santo Domingo was located in this building. Miguel Díaz, alcaide of the Ozama fortress founded by Bartholomew Columbus in the eastern part of the Ozama River, also lived there when the city of Santo Domingo was founded.
It was owned by Manuel Jimenes Ravelo who in turn was the son of President Manuel Jimenes González.
Architecture
The house has two courtyards, in one of which its brick arches are preserved. The distribution of the interiors is similar to that of late-fifteenth-century Castilian palaces,[4][2] and on its front, on top, is topped with a Mudéjar-type window sill. In the same place it preserves the coat of arms of Francisco de Garay.
It was restored and leased to a banking institution, the Banco Popular Dominicano, which does not allow visitors beyond the hall dedicated to currency exchange, however the building is under state protection.
The chiseled sash-and-cord
The chiseled sash-and-cord that decorates the house has numerous examples in Spain, such as the Palacio del Cordón in Zamora or the Palace of the Constables of Castile in Burgos, and this decoration belongs to the last quarter of the 15th century.
Azulejos
The
See also
References
- ^ a b José Enrique Delmonte (2006). Santo Domingo, an architectural guide. Spain: National Council for Urban Affairs, Erwin Walter Palm Foundation, Regional Government of Andalusia.
- ^ a b c d e f Carmenchu Brusíloff. "Casa del Cordón, testigo de los pagos a Drake". Listín Diario newspaper.
- ^ a b c d "Casa del Cordón". Lonely Planet.
- ^ ISBN 9788439981343.
Bibliography
- Emilio Gómez Piñol, Sevilla y los orígenes del arte hispanoamericano University of Seville. 2003. Pages. 55–56.