Iglesia San Juan del Hospital
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"De 9.30 a 13.30 h, respetando los horarios de culto."
@mfiammal
"In it the underprivileged were cured (or tried to be cured with little success); it has burials, crypts and even the rotting place of a Byzantine empress. The place where there is an Arab fountain is marked. A movable stone slab allows you to enter, like Indiana Jones, in a basement where there is a fragment of the Roman circus of Valentia. There are paintings that slept for centuries in a layer of lime that was intended to prevent the plague. There are Roman slabs and pantheons of nobles or professionals of Valencian trades. "It is a church full of mysteries" recognized the restorer Mar Sabaté. San Juan del Hospital is a church that, being the oldest in the city, was on the verge of being demolished after years and years of looting and degradation. It was a cinema, bar, tailor's shop and printing press during Franco's regime. There was even Mickey Mouse graffiti on its ancient walls. It has been a constant restoration, which had its last great episode with the opening of the South Patio, the old cemetery, with which the plastic of the complex has multiplied. The land was donated by King Jaime I during the conquest, to the order of San Juan del Hospital and Malta who, as well as the church, built a hospital, a convent and a cemetery. The church was built in 1261. In a small corner of the Church, in a side chapel next to the presbytery, is a small jewel that was hidden for approximately 700 years under successive layers of lime and covered with neoclassical plaster since the 17th-18th century. We speak of the Mural Paintings of the primitive chapel of Romanesque trace (transition Gothic), dedicated to San Miguel Arcángel, where if we raise the sight in her, we will be able to see one of the scarce testimonies of mural paintings of transition of the Romanesque to the Gothic. It is believed, almost with exactitude, that these paintings were made around 1270 to, later, be covered in 1348, when the interior of the temple was whitewashed, thus covering the paintings until arriving to our days in a good state of conservation when they were discovered last century (XX)."
@albamc