Iglesia de la Encarnación
The church was designed according to the Gothic lexicography of the early sixteenth century. Its plan consists of three naves, separated by cruciform pillars, covered with a Mudejar roof that, in the eighteenth century, was camouflaged with false ribbed vaults. The sacristy is accessed through an interesting Plateresque doorway. Between the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, side chapels and a pantheon were built. The choir and the Mannerist altarpiece, the work of Blas de Figueredo and Cristóbal Téllez, were destroyed in 1936 and restored after the Spanish Civil War. Its prominent tower, erected at the foot of the church at the beginning of the seventeenth century, is an impressive example of Mannerist design. Located in Plaza de la Encarnación.