This sets of burial chambers was made after two embalmed bodies were found in the sixteenth hundred years. The mummies were accepted to have a place with the incredible “Admirers of Teruel.”
The story goes that two mid thirteenth century adolescence darlings, Diego Martinez Marcilla and Isabel Segura, were kept by Isabel’s dad from wedding once they grew up. Isabel’s well off father didn’t need her wedding into the Marcilla family in light of the fact that Diego’s dad had run into some bad luck.
Isabel had the option to convince her dad to stand by five years prior to wedding her off to another person. During these years, Diego was intended to leave town and make his fortune somewhere else. Isabel’s dad concurred, and the five years passed without something from Diego.
At the point when he was at long last ready to get back to the town five years after the fact, Diego was upset to find that Isabel’s dad had constrained her to wed the day preceding his appearance. Diego didn’t understand he was one day late, as had not considered the day the arrangement was reached to be essential for the five-year limit.
That evening, when Diego moved into Isabel’s room, she would not kiss him out of dependability to her new spouse, who was snoozing close to her. Despondent, Diego tumbled down at her feet and passed on. Isabel was so distress stricken that she passed on at Diego’s burial service.
The residents of Teruel who knew the account of the two youth darlings demanded that they lie covered together. The sixteenth century disclosure of two mummies added further fuel to the legend.
In spite of current proof that these two bodies couldn’t be the two sweethearts, individuals actually visit the elaborate sepulcher that houses their supposed remaining parts. The two burial places, planned by Juan de Ávalos, portray the couple contacting each other in death.