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Nearby Towns and Day Trips
Toledo
Toledo is located in the center
of Spain, just south of Madrid, and is the capital of Castilla-La
Mancha and of the Toledo Province. The city is protected on three
sides by a gorge cut away by the Tagus River. The most famous industry
is the manufacture of steel and Damascene swords.
Toledo
has many towers, old gates, narrow, winding streets, massive houses,
and predominantly Moorish architecture, which give it a medieval
atmosphere. In the center of the city rises a Gothic cathedral (1227-1493)
with 40 chapels. Other noteworthy architectural features are the
Gothic Church of San Juan de los Reyes and its adjoining convent.
The churches of Toledo contain some of the greatest works of art
in Spain, notably those by the painter El Greco. The highest vantage
point in Toledo is the Alcazar, a vast square edifice with four
towers, which now houses a military museum.
Segovia
The
monumental size of the Roman aqueduct has become the icon of thismillennial
city. Segovia is its walls, its great plaza, its cathedral, its
Romanesque churches, its convents, its narrow streets, and its splendid
mansions. It has been and is the meeting point of cultures down
through the millennia: Roman, Arabic, Jewish and Christian.
The city today vibrates with
the same power and drive that symbolizes the majestic Alcazar of
the Middle Ages. Any traveler will be able to see that once they
are there it was worth the trip. Discover its Muslim architecture,
be amazed at the sheer mass of the aqueduct, and tour the castle
that looks as though it came straight out of a fairy-tale.
El Escorial
Built
at the end of the 16th century the Escorial Monastery sits on an
exceptionally beautiful site in Castile. The austere style of its
architecture, a break with previous styles, had a considerable influence
on Spain for more than half a century. It was the retreat of a mystic
King and was, in the last years of Philippe the II reign, the center
of the greatest political power of that time.
El Valle de los Caidos
Another burial place and
monastery located just 15 kilometers from El Escorial is the Valle
De Los Caidos (Valley of the Fallen). The temple, dedicated to the
soldiers of the Spanish Civil War, is of monumental proportions,
crowned by a huge cross and several sculptures by Juan de Avalos.
The monument was built as a memorial to soldiers from both sides
of the Civil War but for many people it is just a reminder of the
pain and suffering that the dictator Francisco Franco imposed on
Spain.
Chinchón
Chinchón
is one of the most picturesque and best-known towns within theAutonomous
Community of Madrid. The fact that it lies very close to the capital
city has not impinged on it conserving its own personality, with
its dark gray and ochre colored landscapes, bunches of houses grouped
upon hills surrounding its unique main Square and its winding streets
that are a witness to the life and history of the village.
Cuenca
This
medieval town sits high atop a spectacular ridge wedged between
two gorges. The main attraction here is the 15th-century casas colgadas
("hanging houses") are so-named because of their precarious
position on the cliff's edge. The houses have been restored back
to their original condition and are now used for alternate purposes
one of which is the Museum of Spanish Abstract Art. Museums of religious
art and archeology are located near the city's curious medieval
cathedral.
Alcalá de Henares
Alcalá
de Henares was the birthplace of Spain's most famous writer Miguel
de Cervantes Saavedra the writer of the masterpiece Don Quijote.
The city itself was the first planned University City in the world,
founded by Cardinal Jimenez de Cisneros in the early 16th century.
It was the original model for the Civitas Dei (City of God), the
ideal urban community, which Spanish missionaries brought to the
Americas, and also for universities in Europe.
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