Spanish royal family residence
The Royal Residence of La Mareta is a Spanish royal family residence located in the municipality of Teguise, in the island of Lanzarote. The residence has also been used as a holiday residence by some Spanish prime ministers.
The palace-house was commanded to build by King Hussein of Jordan in the late 1970s and was designed by Spanish architect César Manrique. Its name is due to the fact that in the same place there was a mareta, that is to say, a cistern that served to collect rainwater and as an animal drinker.
History
King Hussein of Jordan ordered the construction of this residence by the sea in the town of Costa Teguise, in the municipality of Teguise, northeast of Lanzarote. Hussein never stayed in it but one of his sons spent a vacation period there after his wedding. In 1989, Hussein gave the house to Juan Carlos I, king of Spain, who in turn gave it to Patrimonio Nacional.
Since then, the Spanish royal family has frequented La Mareta as a holiday place, although its main holiday destination has been the Palace of Marivent, in Mallorca. The first time the royal family spent the holidays in this residence was after the death of Infante Juan, Count of Barcelona, the King's father, in 1993. In this residence, the King's mother, Princess María de las Mercedes, Countess of Barcelona, passed away in 2000.
In 2015, after assuming the throne, King Felipe VI ordered the Industry Minister, José Manuel Soria, to reach an agreement with the chair of Patrimonio Nacional, Alfredo Pérez de Armiñán, to allocate the residence to promote the tourist interests of region of the Canary Islands and Spain. The main idea of this agreement was to invite to the residence important personalities to promote those interests.[1]
Guests
References
See also