Plaza de la Merced

Plaza de la Merced is a public square located in the barrio La Merced in central Málaga, Spain.

The plaza has been a part of the city since the city of Málaga’s Roman era, and has been operating as a town market place since at least the fifteenth century.

It is one of the largest public squares in Málaga’s city center, and is also known for containing Pablo Picasso’s childhood home.

Since Rome, the area now known as Plaza de la Merced was, as it is today, an open public space.

During the Arabic rule of the city, the plaza fell outside of the city’s exterior wall, and was located near the entrance la Puerta de Granada through which Ferdinand and Isabel entered in 1487 upon conquering the city.

In the 15th century the square operated as a public market. For this reason, it was previously called Plaza del mercado (Market square).

In 1507 Mercedarian friars arrived in the plaza, acquiring a plot of land on which they built a church, the plaza then takes its name from the friars order. The temple stood there until 1931.

In the 1820s it was named Plaza Riego after the General Riego who had resided in building located in the Plaza.