<div class="content"><p>The chapel has been known by different names, such as Església Vella (Old Church), Mare de Déu Antiga and, later, Mare de Déu de les Alegries.</p>
</div><strong>Why go?</strong><p>You cannot miss the Roman bell tower and the fresco paintings by Calandria.
Outside the chapel you can see some centenary cork oak trees and a small display of the future Exhibition of Farming Tools of Les Alegries.</p><br><strong>History</strong><p>The land on which the chapel was built was donated by Lady Sicardis of Lloret de Mar, together with a surrounding area measuring 34 paces in diameter to be used as the cemetery.</p><br><strong>Price</strong><p>Free</p><br><strong>Timetable</strong><p>If you would like to visit, the chapel is open to the public on these days:
For the chapel’s main festival on <strong>8 September</strong> (Mare de Déu de les Alegries day), it is open in the evening and all day on the following Sunday.
<strong>In January</strong>, it is open in the morning on the first Sunday after Epiphany, and the Festa del Traginer (mule driver, or muleteer, festival) is celebrated, steeped in the legend of the same name.
<strong>And in May</strong>, it hosts the Festa de les Flors (flower festival), when the chapel is decorated with flowers and the sacristy is open for visits all day.</p>