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Christ of Monteagudo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Christ of Monteagudo
Cristo de Monteagudo
Map
38°01′13″N 1°05′53″W / 38.020282°N 1.097969°W / 38.020282; -1.097969
LocationCastle of Monteagudo [es], Murcia, Spain
DesignerNicolás Martínez Ramón
Height14 metres (46 ft), 34 metres (112 ft) with its pedestal
Opening date28 October 1951

The Christ of Monteagudo is a colossal statue of Jesus located on top of the Castle of Monteagudo [es], in Murcia, Spain.

History and description

There was a previous statue of Jesus on top of the hill, sculpted by Anastasio Martínez Hernández and inaugurated on 31 October 1926.[1] It was demolished after an agreement voted by the Municipal Council in November 1936, in the midst of the Spanish Civil War.[2]

The second and current iteration of the sculpture was a work by Nicolás Martínez Ramón, son of Anastasio Martínez Hernández.[3] 14 metre high and placed on a 20 metre plinth,[2] it stands 4 metres higher than its predecessor.[3] It was unveiled on 28 October 1951.[2]

Built on a public plot, in 2010 a requirement was filed by two lawyers before the Directorate-General of State Patrimony, dependent on the Ministry of Economy and Finance to ask for the removal of the monument as they considered a public space was being used for religious purposes, arguing that "that Christ is an intruder and an attempt against the religious freedom and the non-confessionalism of the State" and considering a "provocation" the existence of a reproduction of Jesus Christ on one of the landmarks better representing the splendour of the Islamic period of Murcia.[4][5] The requirement was eventually dismissed by the High Court of Justice of Madrid in 2015 on the basis the monument was "part of the cultural tradition of Murcia".[5]

By 2018, the monument presented a bad state of conservation, with pieces of concrete falling from the fingers of the statue and gaps in the joints of the pieces.[6]

References

  1. ^ Soler, Pedro (10 February 2010). "El Cristo de Monteagudo: historia de un símbolo". La Verdad.
  2. ^ a b c Botías, Antonio (2 June 2018). "El Cristo más grande de España". La Verdad.
  3. ^ a b Montes Bernárdez, Ricardo (30 July 2011). "El Cristo de Monteagudo". La Opinión de Murcia.
  4. ^ "El Ministerio de Hacienda responde a Mazón que la retirada del Cristo de Monteagudo compete a Cultura". Europa Press. 20 April 2010.
  5. ^ a b "El Cristo de Monteagudo seguirá vigilando la huerta desde su cumbre". La Opinión de Murcia. 3 March 2015.
  6. ^ Botías, Antonio (29 April 2018). "El Cristo se cae a pedazos". La Verdad.
This page was last edited on 20 September 2023, at 02:40
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