The tombstone of the eagle belongs to the floor of the La Torre room. It is made up of rectangular slabs of mud grouped in two, which embody each of the 16th-century heraldic tulles with the emblems of the Torres d’Aguilar family: the tower and the eagle. In this case, we can see an eagle with spread wings in blue on a white background, a Valencian bichrome tradition in this type of tulles.
The Director of the González Martí National Museum of Ceramics and Sumptuary Arts, Jaume Coll, has catalogued a total of 275 typologies in the pavement; the most important ceramics can be found ‘in situ’ in the noble rooms.
Most of the flooring in the gallery, which unfortunately disappeared in the years before the Town Hall took ownership of the building, has been replaced by a new flooring that respects the colours of the 16th century Castle tiles, typically Renaissance, in the different rooms on the main floor.