This pair of tombs was created after two mummified bodies were discovered in the 16th century. The mummies were believed to belong to the legendary “Lovers of Teruel.
The story goes that two early 13th-century childhood sweethearts, Diego Martinez Marcilla and Isabel Segura, were prevented by Isabel’s father from marrying. Isabel’s wealthy father did not want her marrying into the Marcilla family because Diego’s father had fallen out of favor with Isabel’s father at that time.
Isabel was able to persuade her father to wait five years before marrying her off to someone else. During these years, Diego was meant to leave town and make his fortune elsewhere. Isabel’s father agreed, and the five years passed without a word from Diego.
The citizens of Teruel who know the story of the two childhood sweethearts insist that they lie buried together. The 16th-century discovery of two mummies added fuel to the legend.
Despite modern evidence that these two bodies could not be the two lovers, people still visit the ornate mausoleum that houses their alleged remains. The two tombs, designed by Juan de Ávalos, depict the couple reaching out to each other in death.