

The statues known as Mariblanca are female figures of uncertain origin which may relate to the fertility goddesses Venus or Fortuna.
The name, which is common in Spanish relates to a statue which was purchased in the year 1625 by a Florentine merchant Ludovico Turchi as a gift to crown the lost Fountain of Faith in Madrid.[1]
It is now the only element that remains of this monumental fountain, which was located on the church of Good Faith, which formerly stood in the Puerta del Sol.
There are now a number of copies and similar statues also known as Mariblanca. The origin of which is uncertain, but may relate to a religious anxiety related to idolatry or pagan representations of purity, fertility and grace other than those associated with the Virgin Mary.
Mariblanca also serves as a female Christian name.
See also
- Fountain de La Mariblanca
- Fountain of the Harpies
References
- ↑ «El museo desconocido». El País. Spanish article viewed 21 October 2013.
40°25′01″N 3°42′16″W / 40.41694°N 3.70444°W