Quinto
Village Territorio Mudéjar
The fifth milestone
Quinto, capital of the Ribera Baja del Ebro, has a Roman past – its name derives from the fifth milestone, the road that went to Caesaraugusta – and was also a Muslim town that, despite urban development, maintains Moorish traces in part of its historic quarter.
At the very top of the village stands the church of the Assumption, which the local residents know as El Piquete, a Mudéjar-style church dating from the 14th century with architectural features of church fortress in which we can see the evolution of the typology from a single nave with a polygonal apse and side chapels along which the path runs of the walkway or parapet for surveillance.
The building is the product of several construction phases, but its powerful volumetry is based on the original Mudejar phase, which extends from the apse to the tower. The Mudejar construction of the church has a close formal and structural relationship with the disappeared church of San Pedro Mártir in Calatayud, a fact which, together with the intervention of Benedict XIII in its construction, leads us to attribute the work to Mahoma Rami, the architect of the ‘Papa Luna’.
Quinto, capital of the Ribera Baja del Ebro, has a Roman past – its name derives from the fifth milestone, the road that went to Caesaraugusta – and was also a Muslim town that, despite urban development, maintains Moorish traces in part of its historic quarter.
At the very top of the village stands the church of the Assumption, which the local residents know as El Piquete, a Mudéjar-style church dating from the 14th century with architectural features of church fortress in which we can see the evolution of the typology from a single nave with a polygonal apse and side chapels along which the path runs of the walkway or parapet for surveillance.
The building is the product of several construction phases, but its powerful volumetry is based on the original Mudejar phase, which extends from the apse to the tower. The Mudejar construction of the church has a close formal and structural relationship with the disappeared church of San Pedro Mártir in Calatayud, a fact which, together with the intervention of Benedict XIII in its construction, leads us to attribute the work to Mahoma Rami, the architect of the ‘Papa Luna’.
Projects Territorio Mudéjar in Quinto
Monuments | View the project
Education | View the project
Project Mudetrad | View the project
Plaster Mudejar | View the project
Mudejar educational, the guide | View the project
“Circular” Walks with the family | View the project
Quinto in the social media
Facebook: @ayuntamientodequinto @museomomiasquinto
Instagram: @aytoquinto @momiasdequinto
Twitter: @momiasdequinto
More information
Town Hall: 976 177 011
quinto.es
Centre for the Development of the Sea Regions of Aragon
cedemar.es
VISIT QUINTO
976 633 296
WOULD YOU LIKE TO FIND OUT MORE?
Tourism in Aragón
turismodearagon.com
Museum of Mummies of Quinto
momiasdequinto. es
Territorio Mudéjar Network
The town council has been a founding member of Territorio Mudéjar since 13 September September 2018.
It is part of the executive committee of the organisation as a committee member.
The mausoleum in “El Piquete”
El Piquete is the main attraction of the municipality and a viewpoint from where you can contemplate the attractive urban layout and its strong link with the river. If on the outside it is striking for its elegant volumetry and masterful use of materials, it is its bell tower that stands out.
With a square floor plan, its walls are covered with Mudejar brickwork with an ornamental pattern of loops.
Its interior offers the visitor a wonderful learning experience, firstly because of the preservation of the vital stages of the building and, secondly because it houses the Museum of Mummies a place unique where there are on display 15 bodies that have been mummified, as well as artifacts and items from the archaeological and intervention campaigns campaigns campaigns a40> the excavation campaigns and from the intervention in the building.
Excavation work in the central nave of the old Church of the Assumption carried out in the spring of 2011 brought to light hundreds of burials that took place in this building between the 18th century and the beginning of the 19th century, some of them exceptionally well preserved due to the special characteristics of the environment and climate of the building.
Quinto is also worth a stroll to discover its interesting town planning and preserved farmhouses, typical of the towns on the banks of the Ebro, such as the Parish House, a 16th century Aragonese brick palace. The portals of the town centre, which conserve the charm of the popular architecture of medieval and military defensive origin. Specifically, the arches of San Roque, San Miguel and San Antón, the remains of the gates of the old wall, which were transformed in the 17th and 18th centuries into chapels overhanging the street.
El Piquete is the main attraction of the municipality and a viewpoint from where you can contemplate the attractive urban layout and its strong link with the river. If on the outside it is striking for its elegant volumetry and masterful use of materials, it is its bell tower that stands out.
With a square floor plan, its walls are covered with Mudejar brickwork with an ornamental pattern of loops.
Its interior offers the visitor a wonderful learning experience, firstly because of the preservation of the vital stages of the building and, secondly because it houses the Museum of Mummies a place unique where there are on display 15 bodies that have been mummified, as well as artifacts and items from the archaeological and intervention campaigns campaigns campaigns the excavation campaigns and from the intervention in the building.
Excavation work in the central nave of the old Church of the Assumption carried out in the spring of 2011 brought to light hundreds of burials that took place in this building between the 18th century and the beginning of the 19th century, some of them exceptionally well preserved due to the special characteristics of the environment and climate of the building.
Quinto is also worth a stroll to discover its interesting town planning and preserved farmhouses, typical of the towns on the banks of the Ebro, such as the Parish House, a 16th century Aragonese brick palace. The portals of the town centre, which conserve the charm of the popular architecture of medieval and military defensive origin. Specifically, the arches of San Roque, San Miguel and San Antón, the remains of the gates of the old wall, which were transformed in the 17th and 18th centuries into chapels overhanging the street.






