Puerta de Alcalá

Alcalá Gate
Native name
Spanish: Puerta de Alcalá
Location Madrid, Spain
Built 1778
Official name: Puerta de Alcalá
Type Non-movable
Criteria Monument
Designated 1778
Reference no. RI-51-0005028
West side, front view

The Puerta de Alcalá ("Alcalá Gate" or "Citadel Gate" (from the Arabic word al-qal'a القلعة for fortification or citadel)) is a Neo-classical monument in the Plaza de la Independencia in Madrid, Spain. It is regarded as the first modern post-roman triumphal arch built in Europe,[1] older than the similar monuments Arc de Triomphe in Paris and Brandenburg Gate in Berlin.[2]

It was a gate of the former Walls of Philip IV. It stands near the city center and several meters away from the main entrance to the Parque del Buen Retiro. The square is bisected by Alcalá Street, although the street does not cross through the monument, and it is the origin of the Alfonso XII, Serrano and Olózaga streets. Its name originates from the old path from Madrid to the nearby town of Alcalá de Henares.

Madrid in the late 18th century still looked like a somewhat drab borough, surrounded by medieval walls. Around the year 1774, king Charles III commissioned Francesco Sabatini to construct a monumental gate in the city wall through which an expanded road to the city of Alcalá was to pass, replacing an older, smaller, gate which stood nearby. It was inaugurated in 1778.

Notable events

References

  1. Boletín Oficial del Estado, del 10 de marzo de 1976, Decreto 427/1976 de 6 de febrero por el que se declara monumento histórico-artístico de carácter nacional la Puerta de Alcalá, con su entorno de la Plaza de la Independencia. nº 60, pág. 4980
  2. Cousido, Pablo (2013-01-01). Madrid Monumental (in Spanish). Lulu.com. ISBN 9781291207118.

Coordinates: 40°25′12″N 3°41′20″W / 40.42000°N 3.68889°W / 40.42000; -3.68889

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