Very close to the Church of Santa Eulalia is the Church of San Francisco de Palma, which, along with its Gothic cloister, declared a national monument, is one of the most beautiful and best-preserved architectural complexes in the city. They are part of a convent founded with the conquest of the island and affected by Mendizábal's confiscation laws in 1835.
Inside the Gothic church, the monumental Baroque altarpiece stands out, and behind the main altar and beneath the choir is the tomb of Blessed Ramon Llull, a Majorcan philosopher and scholar who lived between the 13th and 14th centuries. The church consists of a central nave and eight side chapels. The apse also has attached chapels, the most recent of which were added between 1445 and 1670. The trapezoidal cloister next to the church forms a very beautiful complex, built between the 14th and 16th centuries. Its fine columns and lobed arches are noteworthy. The north gallery is the oldest, the western one is attached to the church, and the southern construction dates from the 15th century.