Today, the ruins of the Cathedral of Flesh stand as a skeletal warning in the Valencian countryside. The red tiles are faded and cracked, and the high vaults host owls instead of industry. Vicente Silvestre Mar’s name is a footnote in the history of the industrial revolution—a man who tried to turn the cycle of life into a factory and found that some cathedrals are never meant to be finished. AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more
However, the "Cathedral" began to demand more than just his time. The scale of his ambition created a vacuum. Local legends whispered that the soil beneath the foundations had grown too thirsty. As the business expanded, Vicente’s connection to the townspeople frayed. They saw him not as a provider, but as a high priest of a religion they didn't understand—one where the only god was profit and the only ritual was consumption. The Great Feast and the Fall La catedral de la carne - Vicente Silvestre Mar...
Don Vicente Silvestre Mar was a man of iron will and singular vision. While his peers built cathedrals of stone to honor the divine, Vicente sought to build a temple to the primal. He envisioned a facility so efficient and grand that it would redefine the life cycle of the land. He didn't just see cattle; he saw the raw energy of the earth being transformed into the sustenance of a nation. Today, the ruins of the Cathedral of Flesh