Relics can unite—or divide. In Sacromonte, texts on lead tested a city’s faith.
Discovery Timeline
- 1595–1606: Lead discs (plomos) with Arabic‑like script appear with bones in caves.
- Claims: early Christian texts linking Granada to apostolic times.
- Later: Rome studies and ultimately condemns them as forgeries; local devotion persists.
Why It Mattered
- Identity: a Catholic city after 1492 sought ancient roots; the books offered them.
- Conflict: language and script blurred Islam/Christian lines—politically charged.
Visiting the Abbey
- Museum rooms explain the finds, debates, and subsequent cult of the martyrs.
- Cloisters, church, and views over the Darro valley and Alhambra ridge.
Reading the Debate
- Faith vs. authenticity: what communities remember vs. what archives prove.
- Heritage lesson: display with context heals divides better than suppression.
Bottom Line
On Sacromonte, devotion and doubt share a hillside—walk it with empathy.