Abstract

During the XVII and XVIII centuries, the owners of the most important transhumant livestock of merino sheep in Spain developed a new typological pattern of industrial architecture. Large complexes whose purpose was to house all the operations involved in the extraction of wool and its subsequent distribution, as well as giving shelter to every attendee according to their social position and role. Most of these buildings, nowadays shut down or disappeared, were built in the vicinity of Segovia, connected to the Canada Real Soriana Occidental. This particular group of similar complexes in a limited site was an unprecedented phenomenon, an in-depth study of which has, to date, been lacking.

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