Son Marroig
Son Marroig showcases the obsessive passion of Austrian Archduke Ludwig Salvator, who spent decades documenting every detail of Mallorcan life in the late 1800s.
About Son Marroig
Son Marroig showcases the obsessive passion of Austrian Archduke Ludwig Salvator, who spent decades documenting every detail of Mallorcan life in the late 1800s. You'll walk through his preserved neoclassical mansion filled with original furniture, his extensive collection of ceramics, and walls lined with his own detailed sketches and writings about local customs. The white marble rotunda temple perched on the cliff edge frames the dramatic view of Na Foradada, the pierced rock formation rising from the sea below.
The house feels authentically lived in rather than museum sterile, with the Archduke's personal belongings still scattered about as if he just stepped out. You'll spend most of your time wandering through intimate rooms filled with period furniture and his research materials before heading outside to the famous gazebo. The clifftop setting is genuinely spectacular, with the Mediterranean stretching endlessly and waves crashing against the rocks hundreds of feet below.
Most visitors rush straight to the temple for photos and miss the fascinating details inside the house, where you'll learn about this eccentric nobleman who wrote a seven volume encyclopedia about the Balearic Islands. Entry costs around 4 EUR, making it excellent value compared to other Mallorca attractions. Skip it if you're not interested in history, but the views alone justify the visit for most people.
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