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Casa de Cervantes

Now a museum, this house was once occupied by Miguel de Cervantes, author of Don Quixote, who did much of his writing in Valladolid and remained here for the last years of his life. Behind its white walls the house is simply furnished, as it was in the author's day.

Read about Cervantes - the man

 
 It's half a block south of the cathedral, 2 blocks north of the city park, Campo Grande.
 
To the east of the Plaza de Zorrilla, in the short Calle del Rosario, can be found the Casa de Cervantes, a little gem lost in a rather unattractive part of the city. Calle Miguel Iscar, going east from the square, runs past a high wrought-iron railing through which there is a glimpse of a small garden with a fountain in the center. On the far side of the garden is the house, overgrown with ivy and wild vines, in which Cervantes lived from 1603 to 1606 and probably wrote the first part of ''Don Quixote''. The Río Esgueva, spanned by a small bridge, once flowed past the house; but of this no trace is left in the modern town. On a conducted tour of the house (in Spanish only) visitors are shown the dining room, Cervantes's desk, the alcove, the kitchen and other rooms, giving them an idea of the way of life in a better-off 16th century Spanish household
 
The house is situated in the old quarter of Alcalá de Henares.

It was Luis Astrana Marín, author of Vida ejemplar y heroica de Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra (Madrid, 1948) who brought the house to public notice as the writer's birthplace. Thanks to his testimony, the Town Council of Alcalá de Henares purchased the property in 1954, with the purpose of creating a Cervantes museum there, and in the same year ceded the house to the then Ministry of National Education. The initial restoration work was carried out by the Directorate General of Fine Art.

The present museum, inaugurated in 1956 as the Museo Casa Natal de Cervantes, is the result of the renovation of the original property, work that also involved the creation of gardens at the front of the house as well as the substitution of the old entrance at Nº 2 calle de la Imagen for the one currently in use on calle Mayor.

In line with Royal Decree 680/1985 of 19 April, which devolved power and resources from the Central Government to the Autonomous Region of Madrid, with regard to cultural matters, responsibility for the Cervantes Birthplace Museum was transferred to the Autonomous Region of Madrid. The considerable number of visitors, averaging ten thousand visits monthly, confirmed a demand for further cultural options and activities. In response, a number of renovation and extension projects were then carried out to equip the museum with the necessary administrative, scientific and exhibition infrastructure.


Below is a summary of these projects, completed between 1997 and 2003.


The addition of the adjacent two-storey property, first purchased by Alcalá de Henares Town Council and subsequently ceded to the Autonomous Region of Madrid, provided over two hundred square metres of new areas for cultural events and information:
new rooms for the exhibition of documents
a new multi-purpose room for activities, talks and educational workshops
new office space
a library
a lift for the disabled
The restoration and refurbishment of the original Birthplace Museum: coinciding with the extension work, the old cellar and access to it were renovated to house an audiovisual exhibition on the life of Cervantes. Air-conditioning has been installed, the roof has been reconditioned, the skylight over the courtyard has been replaced and the frescoes adorning Rodrigo de Cervantes' apothecary or dispensary have been restored.
A multidisciplinary team has revised the permanent exhibition. All the rooms, which portray daily life in the times of Cervantes, have been adapted in keeping with the ambience of the Spanish Golden Age.
Visitors can also view a theatrical set with puppets, which retells the well-known episode of Master Pedro's Puppet Show (Don Quixote, Part II Ch. XXV and fol.)
 

Valladolid Things to do
 
 

The Cervantes Birthplace Museum is a monographic museum owned and run by the Autonomous Region of Madrid, and housed in the building where, the scholars tell us, the writer was born. It brings to life the various areas of an affluent household during the 16th and 17th centuries, recreating an environment intended to provide visitors to the rooms with a sense of the former residents as they went about their daily lives

http://www.museo-casa-natal-cervantes.org/english/default.asp

 

 

Address
C/ Mayor, 48
28801 Alcalá de Henares
Tel.: 91 889 96 54 – Fax: 91 881 87 52

Opening Hours
Tuesday to Sunday: 10 am until 6 pm (last visit: 5.30 pm).
Closed on Mondays, also 1 January and 24, 25 and 31 December.
Admission free




Group Visits
Group visits must be arranged with the museum in advance. In the interests of safeguarding the collections, groups are limited to 20 persons and must be accompanied by a group leader.


Gabinete de Prensa de la Consejería de Cultura y Deportes (Press Office of the Department for Culture and Sport)
C/ Alcalá, 31
28014 Madrid
Tel.: 91.720.82.12 - Fax: 91.720.82.10