Parador of Merida, Spain

The Parador of Merida was inaugurated in 1933, one of the oldest in Spain. It was originally an 18th-century Convent, built on top of a Roman temple dedicated to Augustan Concorde. The temple was later remodelled by the Visigoths and converted into a mosque during Islamic rule. It displays Roman, Visigothic and Mudejar remains used to build a Franciscan Monastery in the 15th century. This latter building was remodelled in the 18th century. After the extinction of religious orders in Spain, the building was used as a home for the poor, a hospital and an asylum. It was finally converted into a Parador.

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