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City Overview
Population: 3 million
Location: Central Spain (Comunidad de Madrid)
Madrid is one of Europe's
most vibrant cities. Madrileños are a vigorous, joyful lot,
famous for their apparent ability to defy the need for sleep; they
embrace their city's cultural offerings and make enthusiastic use
of its cafés and bars. If you can match this energy, you'll
take in Madrid's museum mile, with more masterpieces per square
foot than anywhere else in the world; the palaces and boutiques
of regal Madrid; the dark, narrow lanes of medieval Madrid; and
Madrid post-midnight, where today's action is.
Life in Madrid is lived in the
crowded streets and in the noisy cafés, where talking, toasting,
and tapa-tasting last long into the night. Many find the city's
endless energy hard to resist, and its social lifestyle makes it
especially easy for travelers to get involved.
Madrid's other chief attraction
is its unsurpassed collection of paintings bysome of the world's
great artists, among them Goya, El Greco, Velázquez, Picasso,
and Dalí. Nowhere else will you find such a concentration
of masterpieces as in the three museumsthe Prado, the Reina
Sofía, and the Thyssen-Bornemiszathat make up Madrid's
so-called Golden Triangle of Art.
The bright blue sky, as immortalized
in Velázquez's paintings, is probably the first thing you'll
notice about Madrid. Despite 20th-century pollution, that sky is
still much in evidence thanks to breezes that sweep down from the
Guadarrama mountains, blowing away the urban smog.
The skyline has its share of
skyscrapers, but these are far outnumbered by the more typical Madrid
towers of red brick crowned by gray slate roofs and spires. Built
in the 16th and 17th centuries by the occupying Habsburgs, who made
Madrid the capital of the Iberian realm, this architecture gives
parts of Madrid a timeless, Old World feel. Monumental neoclassical
structures, like the Prado Museum, the Royal Palace, and the Puerta
de Alcalá archthe sights most visited by travelersmake
up Madrid's other historic face. Most of these were built in the
18th century, during the reign of Bourbon monarch Charles III; inspired
by the enlightened ideas of the age, Charles also created Retiro
Park and the broad boulevard known as the Paseo del Prado.
Madrid's sophistication stands
in vivid contrast to the ancient ways of the historic villages nearby.
Less than an hour away from the downtown skyscrapers are villages
where farm fields are still plowed by mules. Like urbanites the
world over, Madrileños like to escape to the countryside.
Getaways to the dozens of Castilian hamlets nearby and to Toledo,
El Escorial, and Segovia are cherished by both locals and travelers.
Castilla (Castile), the area
surrounding Madrid, is a vast, windswept plateau with clear skies
and endless vistas. An outstanding Roman aqueduct and a fairy-tale
castle and cathedral make Segovia one of the most popular excursions
from Madrid. The walled city of Ávila was the home of St.
Teresa, Spain's female patron saint, and the university town of
Salamanca is a flourish of golden sandstone. Aranjuez tempts with
the French-style elegance of a Bourbon palace, while enigmatic Toledo
is dramatic and austere, with rich legacies from three religions.
We are confident that you will find
Madrid a wonderful place to learn Spanish and a great jumping off
point for trips around Spain!
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