The emperor’s chambers
These new rooms are communicated through an internal corridor and are organized around an irregular patio. This arrangement differs from the typical Islamic structure of a Palace, where we find independent chambers organized around patios, without that internal corridor.
The first room, Known as the Emperor’s Study, preserves a fire place and a wooden ceiling, both designed by Pedro Machuca. Following, we see an antechamber through which we reach the royal bedrooms. Above the entry door to the study there is a commemorative marble plaque placed in 1914 in memory of the famous North American writer Washington Irving, who lived in the so-called Fruits hall of this chambers. Between 1535 and 1537, Juilo Aquiles and Alejandro Mayner, closely related to Raphael, painted the frescos of these chambers. Renaissance frescos covered all these walls, though very little remains since the walls were plastered over a number of times in history after the XVIII century.