(Partida Miracle, 15)
Legend has it that the image of Saint Christopher arrived in Alboraya in the year 683 AD aboard a Phoenician ship. From that moment on, it was venerated until the Muslim invasion, when it had to be hidden in a well. It remained concealed until 1442, when it was rediscovered at the Masía del Mogo and later transferred to the parish church, where it is still kept today.
A chapel and a well were built at the site where the image was found. The current hermitage began construction in 1881, on the same spot as the original one. After suffering damage during the Spanish Civil War, it had to be restored.
The hermitage is a small rectangular temple, with a main structure covered by a gable roof and a sacristy attached to the rear. On its façade, above the entrance, there is an oval ceramic tile panel depicting the saint.
Also on the façade, three ceramic tiles commemorate that the Town Council sponsored the reconstruction of the hermitage in 1881, funded by alms from the faithful. At the time, the mayor was Vicente Martí y Casani, and the works were completed in 1883, when Antonio Martí y Galán was mayor. The façade is crowned with a triangular pediment, featuring a small oculus, and at its peak, a bell gable with a single arch, a bell, and a metal cross.
Inside, the hermitage features a choir loft, accessible via a spiral staircase. On the altar, inside a wooden tabernacle predating the Civil War, stands the image of Saint Christopher carrying the Christ Child.
The Via Crucis paintings can also be seen, along with various engravings and paintings, the most notable being a Virgin of the Rosary, likely from the 17th century. In the sacristy, there is a ceramic panel dating back to 1851, which narrates, in great detail, the legend of the arrival of Saint Christopher’s image in Alboraya.
On the eve of the first Sunday of May, the popular pilgrimage known as "La Passà" takes place, during which the image of Saint Christopher is carried to the hermitage to commemorate its discovery in 1442. The following day, it is returned to the parish church.