 The property, in the middle of this photograph. |  As shown from the village square. |
 The nearby Roman-era church. |  Many storks nestling on the massive church structure. |
 Showing the square. |  Idem, the property is the first red roof on the left. |
 Towards the house again. |  The entrance, with a massive granite bench outside on the right. |
 The bench again. |  Beautiful, wholly intact, slate flooring throughout. |
 The very impressive, fully preserved, domed ceilings (called "bóvedas") throughout the property. |  A nice detail in the entrance hall, just showing the door to the upstairs on the right. |
 Another beautiful detail of the pillars supporting the massive domed ceilings, at least 40 cm thick everywhere. |  Idem. |
 From the entrance hall to the corridor, leading to the garden. |  As seen from the entrance towards the back, two further rooms. |
 Bóvedas again. That means no air-conditioning needed even in high-summer. The house keeps cool always. |  Showing the massively thick walls inside. |
 |  Looking into the garden towards the outbuilding in back. |
 Idem. |  Idem. |
 A detail inside. |  A cold storage closet underneath the stairs. |
 The corridor to the garden. |  Idem. |
 Idem. |  Idem. |
 The upstairs of the outbuilding. |  The downstairs used to be the kitchen. |
 The lovely domed ceiling of the kitchen, showing the brickwork. |  Idem. |
 Idem, including a feeding through for the donkey. |  Idem, plus back entrance. |
 Idem. |  Back entrance. |
 From the outbuilding to the garden. |  Showing the massive rounded cemented structure on the first floor, i.e. the top part of the domed ceiling. |
 Idem. |  Idem. |
 Idem. |  Looking towards the house and garden from upstairs. |
 Idem. |  Idem. |
 Idem. |  City water connected, however this is the only tap (as yet) in the whole house. |
 The pigsty in the garden. |  Inside. |
 Pigsty and chickencoop in the garden. |  Back wall of the house, with upstairs window, where in the old days the granary was located. |
 The electricity meter next to the front door. |  Idem. |
 Going upstairs. |  Idem. |
 Idem. |  Idem. |
 Beautiful cool traditional flooring upstairs as well, in excellent condition still. |  A storage cabinet set in the massive walls, forerunner of the fridge, where the serrano ham and sausages used to hang. |
 Well-preserved wooden ceiling. |  Window in back, looking out on the garden. |
 The garden from upstairs. |  The window of the granary, looking to the garden. |
 The grain bins upstairs. |  Even a "tinaja" or earthenware vat for storing chickpeas, or oil. |
 The roof structure, put in recently to conserve the house. |  Upstairs room. |
 Showing the stairs from first floor. |  FRom the first floor landing, showing entrance to room on the right. |
 A swallow's nest. |  Stairwell again. |
 The roof is in good condition. |  Going downstairs. |
 Another detail of the exceptionally well preserved domed ceilings throughout the house. |  The house on the right, showing its proximity to the outskirts. |
 A closer view of the cemetery outside the village, always known by its cypresses reaching towards the sky. |  The back wall and -entrance. |
 Idem. |  Idem. |
 The little property next door. |  Its garden. |
 Idem. |  The back street |
 Lovely traditional stonework, all in excellent condition. |  From here, showing a few lovely spots elsewhere in the village. |
 A massive "puerta falsa" , i.e., backdoor to farm courtyards of old inside the village. |  A street scene. |
 Showing the bedrock along the walls of the houses. | |