Ca la Pruna - Culture Museum

Ca la Pruna is a 16th-century fortified house, in the town of Pals (Baix Empordà region). It is included in the Inventory of the Architectural Heritage of Catalonia.[1]

Ca la Pruna

Description

edit

Ca la Pruna is built on a rocky base and, therefore, adapted to the unevenness of the terrain. The building consists of ground floor, two upper floors and roof tile.

History

edit

"Ca la Pruna" is the current name of Mas Illa, one of the most important houses in the medieval and modern history of Pals. The members of the Illa family appear documented in the early 15th century, linked to the cultivation and commercialization of rice. In fact, old documents reveal the existence of a rice mill on the ground floor of the farmhouse. The building was burned during the First Carlist War (1833) and significantly altered by the restoration of the 1970s. In spite of this, remains of low-medieval walls and different enlargements of the 16th-18th centuries are still visible.

The building was purchased by three neighbors of Pals (Antoni Vila Casas, Francesc Jover and Xavier Millet Tusell) who donated it to the municipality as a Culture House.[2]

Ca la Pruna - Culture Museum

edit

Once the building was acquired by the Town Hall of Pals, the Ca la Pruna Culture Museum was created as a cultural center where several activities are organized. Currently, it offers the permanent exhibition "Viure a pagès", which shows a selection of the pieces related with the countryside. In this way, the exhibition contains a wide variety of farm tools, measures and weights, and it explains the use that was given to animals, the rooms of a Catalan farmhouse, etc.[3]

In addition, in summer, it hosts various exhibitions of painting, sculpture, ceramics ... and during the winter different cultural activities are organized such as conferences, courses, cinema, meetings of other social entities. Also it is the headquarter of two organizations: the Comunitat de Regants and the Associació per a la Defensa Vegetal de l'Arròs.

References

edit
  1. ^ "Ca la Pruna - Ajuntament de Pals". www.pals.cat (in Catalan). Archived from the original on 2017-11-13. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
  2. ^ Direcció General del Patrimoni Cultural de la Generalitat de Catalunya. (2014). "Ca la Pruna".[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ Consell Comarcal del Baix Empordà (2016). "Museums and Collections of the Baix Empordà region" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-08-02. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
edit

41°58′14″N 3°08′40″E / 41.97047°N 3.14449°E / 41.97047; 3.14449