The luxurious Palacio de Linares in Madrid is a splendid palace with a dark legend hanging over it. According to the ghost stories about this place there is the ghost of a small girl haunting the place after her parents murdered her to avoid a scandal to their reputation. 

Castles have always been a fascinating subject and have been an integral part of many cultures throughout the world. Some of them are famous for their beauty, while others are renowned for their history. Amongst them, the Spanish castle is one of the most talked-about places. The story of this place is filled with tales of ghosts and mysterious happenings that have kept people interested and afraid at the same time.

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In the heart of Madrid there is a grand mansion built between 1877 and 1900 at the Cibeles Square. Today it is the headquarters of La Casa America, but it used to belong to Jose de Murga y Reolid and Raimunda, who were the Marquises of Linares and some of the wealthiest people in Spain. 

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The palace used to be known as the Murga Palace in its earlier days and was a luxurious place with only the finest things for the finest folk. Then the Spanish Civil War hit in the 1930s and as with many of the grand old houses, it became abandoned and had no one to take care of it.  

It was closed for almost a century and left almost to its own devices to decay and crumble under its own heavy history. It wasn’t until 1992 it opened again after a long and hard restoration job. 

The Marquise of Linares in the Palace

The Marquises of Linares got married and moved into the house in 1884 in their lavish home. The main staircase of Carrara marble and the ceilings decorated with gold and mythological paintings. There is exotic wood on the floors and French lamps lighting up, Chinese silk and art by famous painters. All this luxury, the gold and the glamor couldn’t hide the dark secret that would ruin them though. 

There was nothing that would suggest that this was nothing more than perfection. And the couple that made it together seemed to be the most in love, far from many of the other marriages that existed at that time. There was only one thought that no gold could save. According to the legend, they were in fact half-siblings and the truth of it made them mad. 

The Dark Legend of the The Marquise of Linares

Joseph of Murga and Reolid was the owner of the palace and he fell in love with Raimunda Osorio who was the daughter of a cigarette maker from Lavapies. That is what the legend says, but the truth is that the father of her is actually not that certain. It really could be anyone, even the one mentioned in the legend. 

File:José María de Murga y Reolid, I marqués de Linares, por Francisco Pradilla.jpg

Joseph’s father was the wealthy businessman Mateo Murga y Michelena and their family had gained a massive fortune from their businesses in Cuba and because of the railways that was all the rage and where the money could be made. He was an educated man and by his height the richest man in Spain with a bright life ahead of him.  

Read more: Check out all of our ghost stories set in Haunted Castles and Fortresses

When his son told about his love, the father was horrified for some reason. Was it her simple status? Her personality or family background? Something else? Without further explanation Joseph was sent to London to study to remove him from the woman. His father hoped that time would make him forget his first love and come back a changed man with a changed heart. 

Joseph never forgot about her though and married her in 1858, and if the legend holds any truth, they are lucky his father wasn’t alice. His father passed away the year before and among his things, there was a letter that told the truth about why he had been so against the two. Apparently He had an affair with Raimunda’s mother and that she was in fact his daughter, and Joseph’s sister. 

When the two newlyweds finally knew the truth, their dreams of a happy marriage came crashing down as there was no way they could ignore this bit of information. They knew that they couldn’t be parted though, as one, they still loved each other, and two, there was no way out, they were already married.  

File:Raimunda Ossorio y Ortega, marquesa de Linares, por Francisco Pradilla.jpg

Because of this predicament they found themselves in, they decided to ask Pope Pius IX for a papal bull called Casti Conviere. That document would legitimize them living together in the eyes of God and the catholic church despite the truth, although they were supposed to live in chastity. 

Their love had gone too far though, and according to the legend, they gave birth to a daughter. To avoid further scandal, they had her murdered in silence without anyone knowing of her existence and her body is said to be somewhere inside of the palace. 

The wife was the first to go in 1976 and he died only five months later. Gossip say that he shot himself although the official chronicles says it was a serious lung condition. 

Although their final testament claims they died without any children, the legend says otherwise. According to tumors there is a dollhouse inside of the palace, and it is said it belonged to their daughter. 

It is said that the daughter, often called Raimunda, is haunting the fine palace to this day. She can be seen walking the halls of the palace as she sings nursery rhymes, almost like living through her childhood she never got to have. She is also heard calling out for her parents that cast her aside. 

The Truth to the Rumors

Were they in fact siblings? Did they have a daughter they ended up murdering? There have been no evidence and many that have tried to refute the rumors, there are also those that keep the legend alive. 

Especially the part where the palace is haunted to this day by their daughter they got rid of to escape scandal. The palace is mentioned on most haunted houses lists in Spain all the same, whatever the truth really is.

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References:

José de Murga y Reolid – Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre

Palacio de Linares – Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre

Road trip through the gloomiest haunted houses in Spain

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