The Miramar Palace is a late 19th-century palace located on the La Concha Bay of the city of San Sebastián, Basque Country, Spain. It was built in 1893 commissioned by the Spanish Royal Family, based on an 1889 project by English architect Selden Wornum.HistoryThe close relationship between San Sebastián and the Spanish Royal Crown began with Isabella II of Spain, who, in the mid-19th century, began to summer in the city in order to take sea baths. The bond became stronger when Maria Christina of Austria, consort of Alfonso XII of Spain, moved the court's summer location to San Sebastián when she was widowed. The Royal Family's summer visits required a Royal Summer House, which was ordered by Maria Christina to English architect Selden Wornum. The site chosen for the Palace was a large estate over La Concha Bay where the Monastery of San Sebastián El Antiguo had been located; the Queen bought the estate from the Count of Moriana. The estate was enlarged with an adjacent estate where El Antiguo Church was located -the Church had to be moved to a nearby site-, and some other small estates. The Palace was finished in 1893, although a new building named the Pabellón del Príncipe (Prince's Pavilion) was added in 1920. The construction of the Palace required a false tunnel for the crossing of the trams -the tunnel passes under the Palace gardens.After Maria Christina's death in 1929, the Palace was inherited by Alfonso XIII of Spain, and afterwards confiscated by the Government in 1931 with the advent of the Second Spanish Republic. In 1933 it passed into the hands of the San Sebastián City Council with the condition that it would serve as the summer retreat of the President of the Republic and that part of the facilities would be used for educational and cultural purposes.
"El Palacio de Miramar fue construido en 1893 a petición de la Reina María Cristina de Austria, quien veraneaba en Donostia/San Sebastián.Diseñado por el arquitecto inglés Selden Womun y construido por el maestro José Goikoa, durante años estuvo en manos de la realeza española, siendo su residencia de verano y también el colegio de Juan Carlos de Borbón.En 1973 el Ayuntamiento adquirió el Palacio de Miramar y desde entonces se ha convertido en sede de los Cursos Universitarios de Verano de la Universidad del País Vasco, ha sido escenario de conciertos de la Quincena Musical, y lugar de celebración de numerosos eventos tanto públicos como privados."Agregue este mapa a su sitio web;
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