A "quintana" is a street in a Roman camp, that separates the fifth and sixth maniples and contains the marketplace. The area of Quintana Square was once a cemetery.[1] The square was built around 1611, following the decision of the Mayor of Compostela to convert the medieval cemetery known as Quintana de Mortos into a public square.[2] This is now the "Quintana de Mortos" (English: Quintana of the dead) on the lower level of the square.[3] The cemetery's remains were first moved to the Convent of San Domingos de Bonaval and then to Boisaca cemetery [gl].[3] Masters Francisco Fernández de Araújo and José de la Peña de Toro [gl][4] were commissioned by the Santiago de Compostela Cathedral's canonJosé Vega y Verdugo [gl].[5] At the same time, the construction closed the eastern facade of the cathedral with a running wall, like a screen, that covered the main and the apse chapels.[3]
Description
The plaza is divided by a staircase, which separates the so-called "Quintana de Vivos" (English: Quintana of the living) at the higher level from the "Quintana de Mortos" on the level below.[3]