In 1237,
King Jaume I built a church on this hill, when the priest
Peter Nolasco found hidden under a fallen bell, a Byzantine icon of
Our Lady of the Angels (Nuestra Señora de los Ángeles). Assuming this had survived the Moorish occupation, a church was completed by 1240 and affiliated with the
Mercedarian order. Soon the church was insufficient for the flood of pilgrims seeking favors from the patroness of the Kingdom of Valencia, and in 1300, the present
gothic church was built. In 1588 the imposing monastery was built. From the monastery, one can visit the cloisters; the
Salón Real, used by monarchs on their visits to Valencia; the
Salón Gótico of Jaume I; and the Salón of Ceramics. ==Conservation==