In 1505, the
Jeronimites' monastery was moved to a new
Isabelline Gothic-style building at the present-day site of the
Church of Saint Jerome the Royal. The royal family had a retreat built as part of the new church.
King Philip II (ruled 1556–1598) moved the Spanish court to Madrid in 1561. Philip had the Retiro enlarged under the direction of his architect
Juan Bautista de Toledo, who also formally laid out tree-lined avenues. The gardens were extended in the 1620s, when
Gaspar de Guzmán, Count-Duke of Olivares, gave the king several tracts of adjacent land for the court's recreational use. Olivares, with the king's permission, drew up plans for a royal residence far more grand than the existing villas, which had been built for Roman nobles. Although this second royal residence was to be built in what were then outlying areas of Madrid, it would also be in an ideal location, not far from the existing
alcázar. In the 1630s, the palace buildings were constructed under the supervision of the architects
Giovanni Battista Crescenzi and Alonso Carbonell. Two of the buildings remain today: the
Casón del Buen Retiro, which served as a ballroom, and the
Hall of Realms. The Count-Duke of Olivares commissioned the park in the 1630s. It was designed by
Cosimo Lotti, a landscaper and engineer who had previously worked on the layout of the
Boboli Gardens. The layout of the gardens were defined by key water features, including the great pond, the great canal, the narrow channel, and the chamfered (or bellflower) pond. Buen Retiro became the center of
Habsburg court life for much of the
Spanish Golden Age. During the reigns of
Philip IV and
Charles II, several plays were performed in the park for the royal family and the court. The gardens were initially neglected after the death of Philip IV in 1665, but have been restored and changed on many occasions.
Philip V ordered the creation of a
parterre, the only French-style garden in the complex. During the reign of
Ferdinand VI, Buen Retiro was the setting for Italian operas.
Charles III () ordered the replacement of the old walls with wrought-iron railings. The
Buen Retiro Palace was used until the era of Charles III. Juan de Villanueva's
Astronomical Observatory was built during the reign of
Charles IV (). Most of the palace and its gardens were destroyed during the
Peninsular War (1807–1814) when the troops of the First French Empire built the
Citadel of Madrid on park grounds. The park went through many changes during
Queen Isabella II's reign. More trees were planted and previously unplanted areas were landscaped. In 1868, when Queen Isabella was overthrown in the
Glorious Revolution, the gardens became publicly-owned. In 1883, the park hosted the
Exposición Nacional de Minería. 14 hectares of the park served as fairgrounds of the 1887 Philippines Exposition, which included a human zoo. At the beginning of the 20th century, the
Monument to Alfonso XII of Spain, designed by
José Grases Riera, was built next to the pond. Countless statues, fountains and commemorative monuments have filled the park, converting it into an open-air sculpture museum. New gardens were created during the 1930s and 1940s, attributed to Chief Gardener Cecilio Rodriguez, who also built the rose garden. ==Features==