Sunday, February 28, 2010

Compansation Claims in Spain

Food Poisoning In Spain

Being taken ill at home is bad enough but if this happens whilst on holiday it can be a nightmare. Food poisoning is the most common complaint by holidaymakers usually caused by the hotel failing to meet the required standards of hygiene.

Many people may put an upset stomach down to a change in diet or water but recently there have been record numbers of claims made against hotels in Spain by British tourists. The types of illness include salmonella and E.Coli which can lead to nasty after effects such as irritable bowell syndrome which can last for a long time.

If the hotel has failed in it`s duty of care in the preparation of food or generally in it`s standard of hygiene and you become ill because of it you will have a claim against the tour operator with whom you booked your holiday. You can also bring your claim in the UK rather than having to make it in Spain.

It is also worth mentioning that if you have suffered food poisoning in Spain then it is likely that other people in your hotel will have suffered the same fate as they will have been eating the same food. You should, if possible, take their details to help you with your claim. You should also make sure you obtain medical treatment and keep your receipts for outlay.

For advice or assistance call us on 08000 154321

Legionnaire's Disease In Spain

This is a particularly nasty illness being an uncommon form of Pneumonia and if you are unfortunate to catch it your holiday will be ruined.

Legionnaires` is spread through aerosols of water containing the legionella germ usually air conditioning systems and cooling towers.

If a hotel fails to properly maintain its water systems legionella can grow and if undetected can affect many people. It is particularly dangerous to older people. The incubation time from infection to illness is 2 to 10 days but usually 3 to 6 days.

The disease is usually transmitted through breathing in aerosols from contaminated air conditioning systems, showers and spas. The disease is not thought to be transmittable from person to person.

The symptoms may not become apparent until you return home. It would be helpful in locating the source if you can contact anyone else at your hotel or ship to see if they know of anyone else infected.

If you have contracted Legionnaires` you may be able to make a claim and we at Worldwide Holiday Claims can assist.

For advice or assistance call us on 08000 154321

Road accident in Spain

Following a change in the law in 2003, if you have a road accident in Spain that is not your fault and you suffer injury and loss you can now bring your claim for compensation in the UK.

The incidence of road accidents in Spain is higher than in the UK and many British drivers are killed or injured in such accidents. All cars insured in Spain are registered on a database and therefore, provided you have kept details of the driver and registration number of the vehicle at fault, it should be possible to obtain the identity of the insurers.

The insurers will nominate someone to deal with the claim in the UK and this will make your claim for compensation easier to make as it can be dealt with by a British lawyer without you having to find and pay for one in Spain.

If you have the misfortune of having an accident in Spain which is not your fault, you must take details of the other vehicle and driver and if possible the name and address of any witness. This will help you in making a successful claim for your compensation claim. You should also keep receipts for all out of pocket expenses which you suffer as a result of your accident such as medical fees.

For advice or assistance call us on 08000 154321

Accidents On Flights To Spain

If you have an accident during your flight to Spain or even when embarking or disembarking from the aircraft you may well have a claim for compensation against the airline or the tour operator who arranged your holiday.

The liability of the air carrier is set out in the 1999 Montreal Convention which states that if a passenger suffers bodily injury during the flight or whilst embarking or disembarking then the airline is liable in damages. This is called strict liability and you do not need to show that the accident was the airline`s fault.

It even means that if you are taken by bus from the terminal building to the aircraft by bus, if the bus has an accident or brakes sharply, and you are injured, then they would be liable.

Common types of accidents on aircraft are:

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Objects falling out of overhead lockers
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Aisle passengers getting hit by food trolleys
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Burns from spilt food and drinks
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Trips and tumbles

If you suffer an injury on a flight to Spain you should make sure that you report this immediately to the staff and keep the flight details.

We at Worldwide Holiday Claims can assist you in your claim for compensation. Our solicitors operate on a no win no fee basis and you keep 100% of your damages. We provide a fast and efficient service and will speak to you in plain English.

For advice or assistance call us on 08000 154321

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Accidents In Hotel Grounds In Spain

Hotel grounds are often the source of accidents for British holidaymakers in Spain usually due to poorly maintained walkways or equipment.

Hoteliers are obliged to provide safe surroundings for their guests but unfortunately often fail to reach the required standard resulting often in serious injury to the victim and thus completely spoiling their holiday.

Reported accidents often involve slipping on unmarked wet floors, tripping on rough and poorly maintained footpaths and falling down stairs. You could also suffer injury due to using faulty equipment provided by the hotel.

Such dangerous conditions can be caused by faulty handrails, inadequate lighting or spillage not cleaned up, or a combination of all of these.

If you have suffered an accident causing you injury which is not your fault you may well be entitled to claim compensation against the tour operator who organized your holiday in Spain.

If you are injured in an accident you should report it to the travel representative and enter details in the hotel accident book. Taking photographs of the location is a good idea and get names and addresses of any witnesses to the accident. You should also of course take medical advice and keep all receipts for any expenses caused by the accident.

Worldwide Holiday Claims can assist you with your claim for compensation. Our solicitors work on a no win no fee basis and you keep 100% of your damages. We will deal with your claim in a fast and professional manner and will speak to you in plain English. For advice and assistance call 08000 154321

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Accidents In Hotels In Spain

If you have an accident in your hotel, then you may be entitled to compensation if you suffer an injury as a result.

The hotel owes a duty of care to it`s guests to provide safe and secure accommodation and if it fails in it`s duty then it will be liable for any injuries and losses suffered by victims.

There are many ways in which someone could sustain an injury but the most common are slips and falls caused by slippery flooring, either in the hotel room or on a staircase.

Faulty electric or gas appliances can be a source of danger to holidaymakers in Spain, a lack of maintenance can have serious or even fatal consequences.

Badly laid out rooms or sharp edges on furniture can also cause nasty injuries.

If the balcony to your room has not been properly maintained this could have disastrous consequences.

If you suffer injury and loss in a Spanish hotel you can bring a claim for compensation in the UK as the tour operator who arranged your holiday is responsible for the failings of your hotel.

If you are injured you should make sure that you report your injury to the travel representative and the hotel manager. Take photographs, if possible, of the site of your accident. You should also take medical treatment and keep details of any expenses that you incur.

At Worldwide Holiday Claims our solicitors operate on a no win no fee basis and you keep 100% of your damages. We provide a fast and efficient service and you will find us sympathetic and approachable.

For advice and assistance call us on 0845 337 0654.

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Granada - A Potted History

Established by the first Iberian tribes to settle the south of the peninsular, Granada's turbulent history has witnessed a host of invading armies from the Phoenicians to the Moors. It has withstood sieges, occupation and destruction to flourish into a vibrant, modern city with a rich blend of cultural influences that continue to attract the hordes; only now they arrive armed with digital cameras and guidebooks rather than swords and chariots.

This, the first of three articles, takes us from the city's foundation to the expulsion of the Moors from their last stronghold in Spain.

Granada, I'm falling under your spell
And if you could speak, what a fascinating tale you would tell
Of an age the world has long forgotten
Of an age that weaves a silent magic in Granada today

("Granada I'm falling under your spell" -Frankie Laine 1954)

Corny it maybe, but the old Frankie Laine song somehow captures the essence of Granada; the feeling that everywhere you look there is magic and a tale to tell.

There was little but bare hillside when the first Iberian Tribes made their home in the area near the present day Albaicin district. They remained for the better part of a millennium, until ousted by the Phonecians who, just 500 years later, were dispatched by the Cartheginians.

In 250BC the might of the Roman Empire descended and, for the next seven centuries, created a thriving municipality which covered the Albaicin, the Alcazaba and the area up to the Alhambra hill. It became a city of two names: Iliberis and the more poetic Florentia (City of flowers and fruits). However, as the Roman Empire began to decline in the 5th century, the Visigoths, never ones to miss an opportunity, moved in and for the next 200 years they ruled over a city that was expanding in population, wealth and influence. The Jewish neighbourhood of Garnatha established itself alongside Iliberis and in 711 their support was a crucial factor in enabling the invading Moors to eject the Visigoths and drive north to occupy the entire peninsula.

The Moors would remain for almost eight centuries, adapting the Jewish name to Karnattah, and creating one of the richest and most forward-looking medieval cities in Spain, attracting traders, artisans and learned men. In 1010 Zawi ben Ziri - the founder of the Ziri dynasty - began to expand the area of the Albaicin and three years later Granada became an independent Kingdom. The Ziris reigned for another 200 hundred years until, in 1238, Muhammad Ibn Yusuf Ibn Nasr took control and the Nasrid dynasty, builders of the Alhambra, came to power.

The city went from strength to strength, creating alliances and changing sides to maintain its position but, as the Catholic armies of Ferdinand and Isabella spread across the peninsula, Granada found itself the last stronghold of the Muslim world. In 1491 the Monarchs, with a united Spain behind them, laid siege to the city. Weakened and isolated, it crumbled within months. Boabdil, the last Nasrid king, having been granted refuge in the Alpujarras, gold and a promise of political and religious freedom for his subjects, surrendered. Ferdinand and Isabella entered Granada with great pomp and ceremony, flags flying and set up court in the lavish Alhambra. Granada was now part of a newly unified Spain.

As for Boabdil, as he fled the city he turned for one last look and the tears flowed. "You do well," said his unsympathetic mother, "to weep like a woman for what you could not defend like a man." The spot from which Boabdil looked for the last time on Granada is still marked, and is known as "The last sigh of the Moor" (el último suspiro del Moro).

In Part 2; Ferdinand & Isabella, the Inquisition, Granada's Golden age and the war with France that almost destroyed the Alhambra.

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Family Fun in Barcelona

When taking children on a trip to Barcelona, you will undoubtedly want to plan your itinerary to include activities to keep the little ones amused. Thankfully, there is a lot to see and do in this wonderful city, even if you're under a meter high!

What family holiday to Barcelona would be complete without a trip to the zoo? Everybody, young and old, will enjoy Barcelona's lovely zoo. The zoo was made famous by Snowflake, the Albino gorilla, but he has now passed away. Today, visitors can see a wide range of exciting and exotic animals, ranging from dolphins to Iberian wolves, from the red panda to the Eurasian otter. There is an impressive conservation centre too, that is bound to be of great interest to the kids.

Continuing the wildlife theme, adults and children alike cannot help but enjoy the wonderful Barcelona Aquarium. With over 10,000 fish and underwater creatures to see, the kids will be absolutely mesmerized watching this secret world unfold before their very eyes in front of the 35 tanks that make up the aquarium. The aquarium regularly holds workshops, theatre activities and story telling sessions, so it is a good idea to check out the upcoming events on its website.

For little boys (and big boys too!) the Barcelona Football Club Museum is a definite must. Absolutely everything about this famous team, from historical photographs to interesting paraphernalia, is housed in this 3,500 square meter complex. There is also an art museum for the girls to meander around while the boys gape at Barca exhibits.

Barcelona's answer to Disneyworld can be found just 90 minutes outside the city in the form of Port Aventura, a wonderful activity park that is divided into five exciting areas for children to enjoy. A full day 'or even longer' can be spent in Imperial China, the Far West, the jungles of Polynesia, Aztec Mexico or in the Mediterranean, enjoying theme-related rides, shows, shops and restaurants. The park caters for kids of all ages from the very little ones who would appreciate gentler rides, to adrenaline junkies who need their fix from rides such as the notorious Dragon Khan or Furious Bacus.

Finally, if Port Aventura is not your style, or you are simply after a slower change of pace, don't miss out on a visit to the nostalgic Tibidabo, a one hundred year old funfair that boasts some of the best views of the city. The park is packed with delightful amusement park offerings, including the must-ride funicular railway. While Tibidabo's rides are reasonably tame compared to Port Aventura, there is something about the charm and historical importance of this park that makes it a firm favourite among children.

As can be seen, there is a great choice of things to do in Barcelona to keep the kids amused. Combined with other natural attractions such as the long stretches of beaches along the coast, no kid should ever go bored in this stunning city.

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Spain's Sporting Success

Whether it's the wonderful climate, Spaniards' innate self confidence or simply exceptional coaching, Spain is one of the world's leading sporting nations and, with Madrid having recently emerged as one of the favourites to host the 2016 Olympic Games, it seems there has never been a better time to embrace sport the Spanish way.

While the failings of Spain's national football team are well documented (they are yet to win a major football tournament), the selección, as they are known, rarely fail to qualify for the big tournaments (unlike all of the Home Nations for the forthcoming Euro 2008) and are often among the favourites to win. Their time will surely come. However, football-mad as Spain may be, the country can still call upon a number of other sporting heroes as testaments to Spain's enduring sporting success.

Had Britain's Lewis Hamilton not choked on the final Formula 1 race of the 2006-7 season, Spain would no longer be able to boast the youngest ever Formula 1 World Champion. But choke he did and, as it stands, Spain's Fernando Alonso retains that accolade, for another season at least. In tennis, with the Swiss Roger Federer sweeping all before him, only one man can ever seriously hope to stand in his way - Majorca's Rafael Nadal. In fact, on a clay surface it is Nadal, not Federer, who is held up as THE man to beat.

Likewise in Basketball - a sport played passionately throughout the globe - it is Spain, not the USA, who are world champions, led by the towering, talented and charismatic Pau Gasol, whose face adorns everything from credit cards to cheese snacks. There are numerous other fields where Spain competes at the highest level, such as volleyball, hockey, handball, water polo and superbikes. And the last two winners of the Tour de France? That's right, Spaniards - Oscar Pereiro and Alberto Contador. With three Spaniards ranked among the top 10 male tennis players in the world, the argument is irrefutable - Spain produces exceptional sportsmen and women. But how?

A combination of national pride, an inviting climate, excellent facilities and supreme self confidence ensures young Spaniards are given a head start in almost any sport. Still riding high off the back of the successful 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona, the whole nation has embraced sport and seen the benefits it can bring, be they physically, emotionally or financially. Should Spain be awarded the Olympic Games for only the second time in its history, other nations should watch out - there might just be no stopping them!

If you are sports mad and are travelling to Spain, you really will be spoilt for choice for things to do. Kids are especially well catered for - take a look at the links below to see which sporting activities are available in your region.

* Madrid will be up against bids from Prague, Tokyo, Chicago, Rio de Janeiro, Doha and Baku in the race for the 2016 Olympics.

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Property in Spain

A Buyers Guide to Costa Del Sol

Buying a property in Spain can be hassle-free provided you follow the correct procedure and appoint an English-speaking lawyer. Areas such as the Costa del Sol and Costa Blanca have been popular with British buyers for decades, but such is Spain's appeal that other costas and even inland regions are now attracting property buyers from the UK. Spain's wonderful weather, varied scenery and excellent infrastructure means finding that home of your dreams is as easy as 1,2,3.

So, once you have found a home you wish to buy, and your (locally-based) lawyer has checked that the property is registered in the Registro de Propiedad (which will outline who the property belongs to, its exact size specifications and any outstanding debts tied to it), you will need to place a deposit on your home to secure it and have it taken off the market. The deposit is 10% for a secondhand property and between 25%-40% for a new build (off-plan) property. At this stage, you will also need to apply for a Numero de Identification de Extranjeros (more commonly known as a NIE number).

Next, a notary will be appointed to draw up the purchase contract (called the contrato de compraventa in Spanish)and oversee the proceedings. This is where the buying process differs to that of the UK and why it is essential to appoint a good, English-speaking lawyer to check all the paperwork. A notary's job is to impartially ensure that every step of the sale process is followed legally and fairly. You can appoint your lawyer with power of attorney to sign the purchase contract if you so wish - this is a good option if it is difficult for you to be in Spain when the contract is ready to be signed.

Property in Spain



If your property is being bought off-plan, you will first receive a deed of declaration of new construction, plus an occupancy permit. You will be required to make staged payments throughout the building process (normally three payments, with the final one due once building work has completed) and, once your home is ready, you sign a deed of sale which, just like with a resale purchase contract, will be witnessed by the notary. For secondhand properties, it normally takes between six to eight weeks from the time you place your deposit to the time you sign the final contract (escritura).

Mortgages are available in both the UK and Spain, with the maximum mortgage currently available being 80%, which means that you have to provide a deposit of 20% of the property's purchase price. It is also important to consider additional legal fees, stamp duty and property taxes before committing to a purchase because these will usually amount to an additional 10% of the purchase price, so be sure you can afford this additional expense before going ahead!

Additional Information

Residencia: You should decide whether you wish to apply for official residence (residencia) in Spain before you proceed with your purchase. Becoming a resident in Spain can help speed up Spanish mortgage applications and also carries additional tax and inheritance benefits. If you plan to spend more than six months a year in Spain, then it is advisable to apply for official residence.

Spanish Will: It is essential to draw up a separate will in Spain, regardless of whether you have one in the UK or not. Spanish inheritance laws differ to British ones, so take the advice of your solicitor and draft a will which covers all your assets in Spain.

NIE: A NIE number is an essential document for anybody buying a property in Spain. It is easy to obtain and you require one to do the following:

* Apply for a mortgage or loan
* Buy or sell a property
* Buy or sell a vehicle
* Obtain a job
* Inherit assets in Spain
* Insure property
* Pay Taxes
* Sign on to social security

To obtain your NIE number, you must attend your local police station and visit the Foreigners Department (Departmento de Extranjeros). This can be a fairly lengthy and arduous process, so be sure that you are armed with all the relevant paperwork - it is not an experience you want to have to go through twice! Take with you the following:

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Your passport and a photocopy of your passport number and photo
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Your full address in Spain (either the address of your rented accommodation, a friend's address or the address of the property you intend to purchase)

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Written reason for applying. This can be either a letter from your bank in Spain or your lawyer, stating that you are purchasing a property, or an employer, if you have a job lined up.

An official will then fill in the paperwork for you and present you with a stamped copy of the application form. Take this copy with you when you return to collect your number, usually between four to six weeks later.

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Saturday, February 27, 2010

About Barcelona

Barcelona is one of the most visited cities in Spain, and it offers visitors a vast range of things to see and do.

Barcelona is unique. It has something for everyone and is one of Europe's top destinations. The only problem you will encounter is that there will never be enough time to explore its many museums and monuments, churches and galleries, its fascinating coastline and its delectable cuisine.

To enjoy your stay to the fullest, you will need to adopt the Barcelonan lifestyle a striking blend of business-like efficiency combined with long alfresco lunches, lazy siestas, ritual evening promenades and an intoxicating nightlife. You will long remember its proud yet generous people, who will welcome you back with open arms when you return, as you surely will.


Inventive and innovative, radical and racy, Barcelona is one of Europe's most dynamic cities. Strolling through its streets is like wandering through a living museum, a legacy of its remarkable 2,000 years of history. From the ancient maze-like Gothic quarter built within the Roman city walls, to the astonishing regimental grid plan of the turn-of-the-19th century Eixample district. Studded with eye-catching jewels of Modernista architecture, the city contains some of the finest and most eccentric art and architecture in the world. Outstanding even by Barcelonan standards is Gaudi's extraordinary Sagrada Familia, which is reason enough to visit the city.

Just as Modernisme the movement that has made Barcelona unique emerged at the end of the 19th century as a desire for change and renovation, so today the city is celebrating its past.


It is restoring its old buildings, introducing new art and architecture and eradicating some severe urban problems, while staying at the forefront of contemporary culture. As a result. Barcelona today is very much alive a city bursting with new pride and self-confidence, which cannot fail to excite and delight.
Barcelona geography


Barcelona is in northeastern Spain, 166km (103 miles) from the French border. The city occupies 99sq km (62sq miles), with 13km (8 miles) of Mediterranean coastline, including 4km (25 miles) of sandy beaches. It is bounded by the mountains of Montjuic (to the south) and Tibidabo (to the northwest), and framed by the rivers Llobregat (to the south) and Besos (to the north).

CATALUNYA (CATALONIA)


The autonomous region of Catalunya (Catalonia) covers an area of 31, 930sq km (12,325sq miles) (6.3 per cent of Spain) and has a population of around 7 million (15 per cent of the Spanish population), 70 per cent of whom live in greater Barcelona. It is Spain's leading economic region, producing 8 per cent of the country's gross national product. Nearly 40 per cent of all visitors to Spain come to Catalonia. No one visiting Barcelona should leave without trying its cuisine, described by the American food critic Colman Andrews as 'the last great culinary secret in Europe'.
Rooted in the fresh local ingredients of the mountains, the plains and sea, the food is delicious and surprisingly subtle in flavor.

MEDITERRANEAN DIET

The main ingredients of traditional Catalan dishes are typically Mediterranean: tomatoes, garlic, olive oil, aubergines (eggplant), courgettes (zucchini), peppers and herbs, which, when blended, to form samfaina, a delicious sauce served with many dishes. Other principal sauces include pieada (nuts, bread, parsley, garlic and saffron), sofregit (a simple sauce of onion, tomato and garlic lightly fried in olive oil) and allioli (a strong, garlicky mayonnaise).
For centuries pork has been the cornerstone of the Catalan diet. Little is wasted even the peus de pore (pigs' trotters) are considered a delicacy. No bar would be complete without its haunch of pernil (cured ham), a popular tapas dish, and you often see a variety of sausages hanging from the rafters of restaurants and delicatessens. Lamb, chicken, duck, beef and game also feature strongly, often prepared a la brasa (on an open charcoal grill) and served with a large serving of allioli (garlic mayonnaise).

MEAT AND SEAFOOD

In Catalan cuisine, meat is commonly combined with fruit, creating such mouthwatering dishes as pollastre amb pera (chicken with pears) and eomll amb prunes (rabbit with prunes). However, it is the unique 'surf'n'turf' combinations that sea and mountain (Mar i Muntanya) produce which differentiates Catalan cuisine from the cookery of other Spanish regions. Se Pia amb mandonguilles (cuttlefish with meatballs) and mar i eel ('sea and heaven' made with sausages, rabbit, shrimp and fish) are especially tasty. Near the coast, fish dishes reign supreme, ranging from simple grilled sardinas (sardines) and hearty zarsuela (seafood stew) to eyecatching shellfish displays Try suquet de peix (fish and potato soup) or the more unusual broudegos ('dog soup') made with fish, onions and orange juice, followed by speciality dishes arras negre (rice cooked in black squid ink), fideua (a local variant of paella, using vermicelli and noodles and not rice) or bacalla (salt cod), which comes a la lIauna (with garlic, tomato and white wine), esqueixada (a salt cod and black olive salad), amb samfaina or amb romesco (a piquant sauce, made from a mixture of crushed nuts, tomatoes and spicy red pepper).

BARCELONA WINES

A short distance south of Barcelona, the Penedes is the main Catalan wine region, producing red (negre), white (blanc) and rose (rosat) wines. Look for the reliable Torres, Masia Bach and Rene Barbier labels. Catalan cava (sparkling wine) also comes from the Penedes wineries, made by the methode champenoise. Famous names include Freixenet and Codorniu, which can be sampled in the cava bars of Barcelona.
To the north, the Alella and Emporda regions produce white wines, while Priorat produces excellent, heavy reds. If you have only a short time to visit Barcelona and would like to take home some unforgettable memories you can do something local and capture the real flavour of the city. The following suggestions will give you a wide range of sights and experiences that won't take very long, won't cost very much and will make your visit very special. If you only have time to choose just one of these, you will have found the true heart of the city.

FLIGHTS TO BARCELONA

Spain's national airline, Iberia, has scheduled flights to Barcelona's EI Prat de Llobregat Airport from major Spanish and European cities. The city is served by over 30 international airlines and has direct flights to more than 80 international destinations.

Airlines operating flights to Barcelona include easyJet, from Gatwick, Luton and Stansted and Ryan Air which flies from Stansted and Luton to Girona (80km/50 miles north of Barcelona) from where there is a bus to Barcelona. British Airways and its alliance partner, Iberia, fly from Gatwick, Heathrow, Birmingham and Manchester. British Midland (bmi) flies from Heathrow, and easyJet also flies from Liverpool. Iberia flies from Dublin, in association with its Oneworld partner Aer Lingus.There are no direct flights to Spain from Australia or New Zealand; connections via London, Frankfurt or Paris are the most common.

BARCELONA BY ROAD

The AP7 highway connects the French border with Barcelona, a distance of only 166km (103 miles), though tolls are expensive. The AP2 connects the Spanish capital of Madrid with Barcelona, a distance of 660km (410 miles); most of the trip is also via toll roads. Well paved and lit multi-lane toll roads are common all over Catalonia, and although free carreteras nacionales provide alternatives, they are generally less safe owing to poorer surfaces and lighting

THE METRO BARCELONA

The metro is the easiest and fastest way of moving around the city. There are two different underground train systems, the Metro with its six lines identified by number and color, and the FGC, an older service which is above ground in outer Barcelona. Both lines have been integrated into the same system.
Buses Barcelona has an excellent bus network; pick up a free plan from any tourist office (or download from www.tmb.net). Timetables are also shown at individual bus stops. Buses run 6am10pm. At night there is a Nitbus with routes centered on Plaga de Catalunya throughout the year the Bus Turistic, a hop-on, hop-off service, circuits the main city sights.

BARCELONA BY RAIL

The main regional, national and international rail station is SantsEstacio. Comfortable, fast, express trains connect the city to Paris, Madrid and Valencia and other destinations in Europe.

TAXIS

Pick up a black and yellow taxi at a taxi rank or hail one if it's displaying a green light and the sign Lliure/Libre (free) Fares are not unduly expensive but extra fees are charged for airport trips and for baggage, and at weekends and after 8.30pm. Prices are shown on a sticker inside.

CAR RENTAL BARCELONA

The leading international car rental companies have offices at Barcelona airport and you can reserve a car in advance (essential in peak periods) either direct or through a travel agent. Local companies offer competitive rates and will usually deliver a car to the airport.

FARES AND CONCESSIONS

Travel cards (called targetas) come in options of 2 to 5 days or for 10 journeys (called a T10) and are available from all Metro stations. They are valid for Metro, FGC, bus and some overland (RENFE) trains; transfers (on the same mode of transport) are allowed. With targetas, you generally end up paying half the price (or less, depending on the amount of travel you do) of a single journey.
Most museums and galleries offer a 50 per cent discount on entrance fees to older people.

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Tuesday, February 23, 2010

New Ryanair routes from Malaga Airport 2010

Ryanair will be opening its new Malaga Airport base in June, 2010.The budget airline will now be operating over 360 flights per week from Malaga Airport to international and Spanish destinations. New routes include:

• Aarhus (from 23rd June)
• Berlin Schoenefeld (from 25th June)
• Bratislava (from 23rd June)
• Eindhoven (from 23rd June)
• Gothenburg (from 23rd June)
• Krakow (from 24th June)
• Maastricht (from 23rd June)
• Memmingen (from 24th June)
• Oslo Torp (from 23rd June)
• Paris Beauvais (from 23rd June)
• Pisa (from 24th June)
• Santander (from 24th June)
• Santiagho (from 23rd June)
• Stockholm Skavsta (from 24th June)
• Tampere (from 25th June)
• Valladolid (from 23rd June)
• Venice Treviso (from 24th June)
• Wroclaw (from 25th June)
• Zaragoza (from 24th June)

The new routes will follow the opening of the new terminal at Malaga Airport, which has been under construction for the past three years, and the expansion at Malaga will offer passengers many new routes worldwide with Ryanair.
Along with cheap flights, cheap car hire can be pre-booked from Malaga Airport, and all other airports throughout Europe, to avoid delays and hassle when you arrive

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Saturday, February 6, 2010

The best festivals in Spain

In Spain, the calendar year is a kaleidoscope of celebration, a constant whirl of dancing, drinking, and devotion. There are festivals to honor saints, bulls, horses, flowers, grapes, and shellfish. There are symphony orchestras and blaring local bands, dancers in ballet slippers and on stilts, and evenings lit by chandeliers or fireworks.

The festivals provide a chance for young Spanish men to show off their skillsand the original machismoin climbing poles, wrestling bulls, or standing on each other's shoulders to form Catalonia's six-story castellers, or human towers. Each festival bears the trademark of its town, like the stomp, strum, clap, and yodel of Granada's Festival IntemacionaL de Musica y Danza (International Festival of Music and Dance) or the flowers and frills of Seville's Feria de Abril (April Fair).

Most festivals coincide with Catholic holidays, Camava Fiesta de Corpus Christl, and Semana Santa (Holy Week, the week before Easter) are celebrated everywhere but many still show traces of their pagan roots - the Hogueres de San Joan (St. John's Bonfires, celebrated in Alicante) mark the summer solstice. For a complete listing of events, contact the National Tourist Office of Spain.

A word of caution to those planning to hurl themselves into the merriment at one of Spain's frothiest celebrations: Crowds are very much a part of most festivals, so be prepared for crowded hotels, crowded restaurants, crowded streets, and crowded auditoriums. Advance planning will mitigate much of the discomfort so reserve rooms ahead of time but it's still necessary to be prepared mentally for being jostled, for waiting in line, and more for a can of warm cola all part and parcel of festival going.

For details on the most important festivals in Spain's major cities, including Pamplona's Fiesta de San Fermin; Semana Santa and Feria de Abril in Seville; Valencia's Les Falles de Sant Josep (Feast of St. Joseph celebration); and the Festa do ApostoL (Feast of St. James the Apostle) in Santiago de Compostela, visit the tourist office in Spain.

The Mystery of Elche Alicante Spain

The residents of Elche have been staging this religious dramaa celebration of the Assumption of the Virgin for more than six centuries, making it the world's longest. running play. Performances take place in the 17th century Iglesia de Santa Marfa (Church of St. Mary). While the songs feature an ancient dialect akin to Catalan, the action is actually fairly easy to follow, especially with the added benefit of breathtaking special effects (the descent of the angels from the church's lofty blue dome is a definite emotional highlight), Admission is free though competition for seats is keen.

The El Rocio Pilgrimage Spain

Pilgrims pour through the fields and olive groves of Andalusia in a slow stream of flower-festooned horses and beribboned oxen, converging on the rural sanctuary of EI Rocio, 40 miles (64 km) from Seville.

As in the grand finale of a Broadway musical, the white covered wagons and little surreys with a fringe on top trundle westward, flanked by extras in wide-brimmed hats and brightly colored, flouncy skirts, dancing to the music of flutes and tambourines. The festival mixes equal parts of fervor and fun. Pilgrims march silently at night over the candlelit marshes, then break out into foot-stomping, finger-snapping seguidillas. The climax comes with the parading of the statue of the Virgen del Rocio, hoisted on the shoulders of the faithful in a brilliant scene painted in sun, sweat, and tears.

The Horse Fair Jerez de la Frontera Andalusia

Jerez is famous for sherry and horses, and even has a museum devoted to both, but during May's Feria de Caballo, the steeds steal the show. Straightbacked riders in felt hats and embroidered uniforms canter through the streets, and carriage drivers guide harnessed teams through the myriad maneuvers of dressage.

All around the city, horses jump, trot, whinny, rear, gallop, spar with bulls, or simply stand still to be admired. The preening white Cartujanos with cottony manes are the graceful stars, descended from the horses the Moors rode during their conquest of Spain, and bred through the centuries in Andalusia. The fair is still faithful to its 13th-century origins as a livestock market; you may have come for the costumes, parades, and bullfights that are part of any Spanish festival, but if in a Walter Mitty life you ever cast yourself as a cowboy, or if you have a weakness for gambling, you just might ride away on your own, newly purchased, horse.

Santa Cruz Carnival Tenerife Canary Islands

Rooted in an ancient pagan rite, and mixed with the apocalyptic Catholic bingeing before the severity of Lent, this carnival has the flavor of a Spanish Halloween. It is celebrated for 12 days in February throughout Spain, but nowhere more extravagantly than on the island of Tenerife, where tradition melds with a Greenwich Village sense of fashion to produce wild parades and costumes that would have made Liberace look staid.

It is an orgy of purple make up, leopardskin leotards, sequined hats,
masks, feathers, capes, and wigs. Ornate carts function as mobile bandstands, stages, and puppet theaters, and the air is filled with strums and songs and wheezing clarinets.

Semana Santa in Castile La Mancha

This celebration froths over the sides of its cliff, leaving a frozen dribble of houses hanging in the gorge above the Rio Huecar (Huecar River). During Semana Santa (Holy Week), which leads up to Domingo de La Resurreccion (Easter Sunday), trumpets echo between the sheer, rock walls eerie calls from the Middle Ages to the modern world below. Above, austere processions, silent except for the solemn fanfares, wind slowly through the narrow alleys. Penitents carry sculpted and painted scenes from the Passion story, and members of religious brotherhoods (cofradas) march together in the forbidding robes and pointed hoods of the Spanish Inquisition.

A rowdy procession of Los borrachos (the drunkards), accompanied by drum rolls, is well attended by the local youth. Each evening, in a new auditorium built into the cliff, orchestras and choirs from all over Europe perform recitals of religious music ranging from somber motets to Wagner's mystical Tannhiiuser. Every year, a new work commissioned for the festival is played here for the first time.

Sacred Spain

All over Spain, every invasion, migration, and wave of conversion left its signature in stone, much of which has been all but erased by time and the furor of the Reconquest. As generations of Catholics poked at the hegemony of the Moors, finally pushing them back into North Africa in 1492, they destroyed mosques and erected huge cathedrals in their place. And despite the recently named calles de la juderfa (streets of the old Jewish quarter) that crop up in medieval neighborhoods, the statues of Maimonides, and the Star of David pendants for sale in trinket stores, not many traces remain of the thousands of Jews who, until their expulsion or forcible conversion that began in 1492, lived in Spain for centuries alongside Phoenicians, Romans, Visigoths, Berbers, Arabs, and Christians.

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Spain travel information

The Iberian Peninsula is like a hypothetical aisle marked Experience in a choice-laden supermarket full of good things that come in a variety of enticing packages. So just as sherry comes in fino, amontillado, manzanilla, and dulce, flamenco can be either raucous sidestreet strumming, a tourist sideshow in Granada's Cuevas de Sacromonte (Sacromonte Caves), or a whirl perfect spectacle on a limelit Madrid stage. Gazpacho can be eaten with a spoon or drunk with a straw, and there are endless varieties of seafood, from the hearty cod stews of the Basque Country and octopus of Galicia to the elaborate mussel and shrimp paella of Valencia. Nor do all Spaniards speak only Castilian.

There is a language similar to Portuguese spoken in the region of Galicia, a different form of Catalan in each of the regions of Catalonia including on each Balearic Island and the exotic (and impenetrable) tongue of the Basques, called euskera, that apparently isn't related to anything else on this planet.

The San Fermin Festival Pamplona

Iberia's range of flavors comes from its capacity for absorption. One of Spain's most notable painters, El Greco, was a Greek (as is the current queen, Sofia); the Bourbon dynasty was French; and an American popularized Pamplona's Fiesta de San Fermin (in recognition of which the city named a square for himPlaza Hemingway). The Americas contributed tomatoes, potatoes, chocolate, coffee, and the gold that decorated Toledan swords and made Madrid one of the most powerful cities in Europe. Africa gave Spain an architectural heritage and the microtonal wail of Spanish flamenco.

And Mother Nature bestowed on many parts of the country an often crushing heat that spawned such relaxing institutions as the afternoon siesta, the eveningpaseo, the strategically placed cafe, and the evening gathering around the motor scooter in a small town square.

Bullfighting Spain

Still, there are several experiences that capture the special spirit of this singular country, and provide a visitor with an insight into its irresistible personality. Bullfight in Pamplona, Navarre The corrida de toros, a Sunday ritual heralded by fanfare and pop, is an assault on all the senses: the ocher turf glaring in the late afternoon sun; the band's tinny blare; the gaudy, spangled costumes of the procession; the bandilleros' ballet; the coarse, feverish crowd watering its passion with warm wine squirted from bulging skins; the bull's thundering fury; the graceful arrogance of the matador; the swirl of the fuchsia and yellow muleta; the flash and plunge of the sword.

This celebration of life and death and grace under pressure, as Hemingway described it, is watched on television in living rooms and bars all over Spain. The president of the corrida (usually a local public official) sits in box seat high above the arena with a group of advisors, and decides when to begin each phase of the event. The matador's artistry and daring determine whether the president, like an emperor decreeing mercy or death for a gladiator, will award him one or two ears.

The crowd plays a major role by wildly waving white handkerchiefs at the president to show their support for the matador. An extraordinary performance will bring two ears and a tail. Each morning during Pamplona's Fiesta de San Fermin in July, the bulls for the day's corrida are sent galloping down narrow, barricaded streets on a 2mile route to the Plaza de Taros. The animals receive a measure of revenge when they gore some of the hundreds of brave (or crazy) men and a few women who, dressed in the red and white colors of the festival, race before the bulls (in 1994 more than 50 people were gored or otherwise injured).

Castles of Andalusia

It takes a car, a sharp eye, a love of detours, and a wellstocked picnic hamper to find the romantic, weed-strewn ruins of castles that once guarded every hill and port in Moorish Al-Andalus. Perched on cragtops, these worn, but still stern, battlements formed a Maginot Line along the tense border between the Muslim and Christian worlds of long ago, where the names of towns bore the epithet de la frontera (on the border). But this martial past acquires a latter-day peaceful haze if the scant remains are contemplated with the benefit of a bottle of wine, a hunk of manchego cheese, some smoky slices of jamón serrano, and a handful of Spanish olives.

Because the road to the top can be nearly vertical, it's probably best to leave the car in the olive grove or by the cluster of whitewashed houses that invariably cower in the castle's shadow. Count on being alone at the top, except perhaps for a state employee who is likely to be as lonely as the ruins he guards and will be more than happy to point out the storerooms, the water drains, the narrow L-shaped passageways meant to thwart a battering ram, the direction from which the Christians finally came, the best angle for a snapshot, and the precise plot in the distant cemetery where his grandfather is buried.

Tapas and patios in Cordoba Spain

Andalusia - The glare of the southern sun and the heady odor of orange blossoms are everywhere in Cordoba, settling on the city, seeping from the cobblestones, sliding through the painted shutters, making everyone sleepy and sultry and hot. A tapas bar is the perfect refuge for sodden sightseers and lounging locals, who gather in the grudging breeze from a creaking electric fan, nursing chilled sangria and gazpacho.

Beneath the glass counter are countless accompaniments to a glass of beermarinated mushrooms, shrimp in garlic sauce, olives seasoned with thyme, fried squid, bits of sausage, roasted sweet peppers with olive oil, smoked ham, spicy meatballsall available in the mouthfulsize portions that make them tapas and not a meal. Throughout the day, the floor becomes littered with shrimp tails, toothpicks, and crumpled paper napkins (it's traditional for patrons to let them fall to the ground).

For those who can bring themselves to step out into the sticky Andalusian summer, occasional cool gusts of comfort come from the patios not quite hidden behind wrought-iron grilles or wooden doors left ajar just enough for one to peer in and breathe deeply. Geraniums, jasmine, and lemon trees lovingly arranged against patterned, tiled walls offer sunstroked visitors a fresh, perfumed caress. The lushest and most colorful patios win prizes in Cordoba's twoweek Fiesta de los Patios in May.

Flamenco in Seville

The impromptu stomp, strum, snap, clap, and growl gets going around 1 or 2 AM in the working class district of Triana. The patrons of the earthy bars along the Calle Betis bring their own guitars and tambourines, the dancing is unrefined and improvised, and the singing is soulful and throaty. Flamenco grew out of a mixture ofsevillanas, liturgical chants, the call of the Moorish muezzin, and plaintive Gypsy folk tunes, catalyzed by the Inquisition into a music of guttural sounds lamenting the fate of the heathen in brutally Catholic Spain.

Although the song and dance performances tablaos in the more gentrified Barrio de Santa Cruz (where foreigners pay pricey cover charges) are filled with high artistry, this, with its rough edges and drinking and picking of pockets, is the real thing.

Extremadura Spain

The name means beyond the Douro River, where the local specialties are blackbull steaks and cured hams made from snake-fed pigs. Ride here in the spring, before the heat has burned away the tapestry of flowers and turned the rich, red soil a cracked and sunbaked brown.

At a leisurely canter, you can't help but savor the cork woods and chestnut groves that motorists mostly miss on their way to the hilltop monasteries of Guadalupe and Yuste. In some parts, you and your mounts will be the only visitorsfew cars ever make it up the stomachchurning curves through the forests of Las Hurdes, the northernmost part of Extremadura. There is some poetic justice in the stares you will attract as you ride into a dusty shepherd town, for it was Extremaduran peasants-turned-conquistadores who rode the first horses off Spanish galleons and into places like Mexico and Peruand were taken for half-equine gods.

The Royal Trail Castile Leon

Like children romping in a playroom shin-deep in toys, the kings and queens of Spain scattered palaces, gardens, and summer retreats all over Castile. They all can be visited, but take it slow, because if you try to retrace the dainty steps of royalty in one whirlwind day, your tour will melt into a sumptuous haze of polished wood and tarnished mirrors and the very chair where Carlos the Somethingth sat. Start at the Prado, once the storehouse for the king's art collection, to see court life through Diego Velazquez's keen, cruel eye for the pomposity, frills, and formalities of the 17th century.

His portraits of the royal family and paintings such as Las Meninas (The Maids of Honor) seem like sociological studies of how the other half a handful lived. The itinerary then spirals out from King Juan Carlos's current throne room in Madrid's Palacio Real, swooping through extremes of opulence: the once suburban, still idyllic Parque del Buen Retiro, a couple of uphill blocks from the Prado; the tapestried walls of El Prado, 9 miles (14 km) from Madrid on the road to the royal monastery of El Escorial; the passionate austerity of El Escorial itself, in the mountains above Madrid; the weave of graveled walks and marble stairways at Aranjuez, on the La Mancha plain 30 miles (48 km) south of Madrid; and the bursting geyser fountain at La Granja de San Ildefonso, outside Segovia.

Paradors in Spain

No visit to the Iberian Peninsula is complete without a visit or an overnight stay in a Spanish parador. Imagine sleeping where kings and queens lay their heads, walking corridors and chambers where medieval Franciscan monks trod, and dining in elegant rooms where nobles and aristocrats sat down to countless formal meals over the centuries. Many Spaniards pride themselves on their rich sense of such traditions, and for more than a half-century their government has been building a network of impeccably restored and converted ancient landmark castles and monasteries into magnificent hotel accommodations, offering travelers a return to the past, complete with modernand often luxurious facilities.

Spain's first parador (an inn that offers food and shelter to travelers) was introduced west of Madrid in the Sierra de Gredos in 1928, when King Alfonso XIII opened a lodge to be used primarily as a base for hunting excursions. This concept of lowcost accommodation (often in areas that, though lovely and historic, were considered unpromising by many commercial hotel concerns) became so popular that it eventually expanded into the world's most successful program of transforming long-abandoned national treasures.

Many of the paradors are restored convents, palaces, manor houses, monasteries, and castles, filled with original decorations and antique furnishing. Other paradors are constructed of gleaming marble and boast the latest modern touchesincluding swimming pools (mostly outdoor), golf courses, and other sports facilities. All have good or even fine restaurants serving breakfast, lunch, and dinner, and featuring regional specialties and wines. All also carry the red, white, and rose wines bottled under the parador label by a quality Rioja winery.

Not all paradors are for everyone. Most of the rooms are doubles furnished with twin beds. Travelers who want a double bed should request a room with a cama de matrimonio, but be advised that normally there are only a few per parador. Some paradors are remote, located on the outskirts of town (requiring a car to get to most sightseeing stops). Travelers unable to climb stairs should inquire about elevators, since some paradors do not have easy access to all rooms and public areas. Rooms are equipped with TV sets and minibars, though not all have radios or air conditioning.

Although it is possible to travel through Spain from parador to parador by hire car, without reservations, this practice is not recommended. Ask the parador concierge to call ahead to determine availability and to make reservations. Rates are seasonal in the majority of the paradors, but some have one price structure yearround. Low season runs from November through March, midseason is from April through June, and high season is from July through October.

Car hire at the airport in Spain

If you are planning a trip to Spain, hire a car from the airport before you fly. Car hire at Malaga Airport, Madrid Airport, Alicante Airport, Murcia Airport, Valencia Airport and Barcelona Airport can be pre-booked which will save you time and money when you arrive at your destination.

The Parador del Golf Torremolinos

This parador (built in the 1970s), between the resort centers of Torremolinos and Malaga on the Costa del Sol, is a golfer's paradise. The 18-hole course was designed by English architect Tom Simpson, and it has a resident professional and a well-stocked pro shop. Besides 60 air conditioned rooms, it also boasts an ocean-front location, a circular swimming pool, tennis courts, a playground, a library, and gardens. Thanks to its nongolf facilities, this place is also popular with vacationing families.

The Parador de Almagro Castile La Mancha

Don Quixote loved the region of La Mancha, and so will any guest staying in this former 16th-century Franciscan convent. The air conditioned rooms are built around no fewer than 16 galleried inner patios, and the building abounds in decorative touches that recall its original function. It also features gardens, a wine cellar, a swimming pool, and a convention hall. The parador's popularity often exceeds its room capacity, so make reservations well in advance.

The restaurant is especially good, featuring imaginative presentations of the region's raw materials, fabulous desserts, and an excellent selection of reservas from the wine co-operative of nearby Daimiel. From May through October Almagro's main square becomes an open-air theater for classical work performed by topnotch national and international companies. The town is also famous for its lace.

Parador de Chinchon Castile la Mancha

This lovely village, a half hour's drive southeast of Madrid, is primarily known for its anisette liqueur, its Semana Santa (Easter week) recreation of Christ's crucifixion and res. urrection, and its summer amateur bullfights in the main square. Fourteen years ago, the town's 17th-century convent was transformed into a parador with 38 air conditioned rooms. The interior is adorned with murals, wall 'tapestries, and other ornate furnishings, and there's a wonderful glass.

walled circular hallway overlooking a beautiful court yard a perfect Spot for afternoon tea. The parador also boasts a chapel, a garden with winding paths and goldfish ponds, a swimming pool, and a convention hall.

Parador San Marcos Castile Leon

One of the most impressive hostelries in the country, this converted 16thcentury monastery hosted pilgrims on their way to Santiago de Compostela for centuries. Travelers making the trek from Madrid to northern Spain today find this parador, with its 16th-century coffered ceiling, Plateresque exterior, and grand staircases, a perfect stop. The 256 air conditioned rooms make it the largest property in the parador network. Facilities include gardens, a nightclub, a hair salon, a childcare center, and a convention hall.

Parador Virrey de Toledo Castile la Mancha

According to legend, this massive medieval stone castle was built by Hercules' army, and later housed powerful Spanish and Moorish lords and kings. Today it looms over a valley of squat olive trees and small farms, about 72 miles (117 km) from Toledo.

A short walk from Oropesa's Plaza Mayor, this 48-room air conditioned parador is just 2 miles (3 km) away from the small town of Lagartera, famous for its lacework. Local women still can be seen sitting outside their homes and practicing this centuries-old craft. Facilities include gardens, a swimming pool, and meeting rooms.

Parador Zurburan Guadalupe Extremadura

Adventurous travelers should take a ride south from Oropesa to the town of Guadalupe in the province of Caceres to visit the Monasterio de Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe (Monastery of Our Lady of Guadalupe) and the 40room parador now occupuying a former hospital adjacent to the monastery.

The unearthing in the late 13th century of a long-buried statue of the Virgin Mary was the reason for the construction of the monastery (the statue is now enshrined on the altar). Queen Isabella stayed here in fact, the building was used for the signing of contracts with explorers setting out for the Americas.

Today the parador offers magnificent sunset views of the town and monastery grounds nestled in the mountains. The air conditioned rooms look out over a central courtyard with Moorish-style gardens.

Parador Gil Blas Santillana del Mar Cantabria

This peaceful manor house and former home of the local Barredabracho family, helps visitors to envision what life was like centuries ago in Cantabria, a verdant region next door to the Basque Country, on Spain's north coast. The building is made of heavy stone walls and arches, and the 56 rooms feature woodbeamed ceilings, tile floors, rustic furnishings, and all the amenities.

Shopping in Spain

No mattcr where the pound stands relative to the euro, the temptation of shopping in Spain is irresistible. Colorful handpainted tiles and lovingly sewn handicrafts are eyecatching, easily luring the visitor into the country's many stores and openair marketplaces. Although there are no great bargains anymore, the quality is high and there's a wide array of leather goods, embroidered items, jewelry, fine porcelain, and fashion ranging from very basic handicraft sweaters and clothing to haute couture.

Spaniards are traditional strollers

They take to the streets as a pastime, particularly for browsing in the plethora of small specialty shops found in most cities. But the relaxed ambience and threehour lunchtime shop closings (except for major department stores) mean that visitors must make careful shopping plans. Standard shopping hours in Spain are weekdays from 9 AM to 1 or 2 PM, and following an afternoon break, again from 3 or 4 to 7 or 8 PM. Many shops also stay open on Saturdays from 9 AM to 1 PM. In smaller towns and cities, some shops may close one day a week in addition to Sunday (most typically on Monday).

Department stores are open Mondays through Saturdays from 10 AM to 8 or 9 PM. Many shops are closed in August, but department stores remain open year-round.

What to buy in Spain

The following is an item by item guide to what to buy in Spain. For listings of recommended shops in Spain's major metropolises.

Antiques Spain

Spain is an excellent hunting ground for antiques, with a wide range of dealers, auction houses, and non-commercial institutions that offer many items at bargain prices. For additional details, see Antiques and Auctions in this section.

Books and maps Spain

Even if you're not able to read Spain's treasured old books, it's still fun to browse. Many bookstores have dozens of shelves and stalls filled with books both old and new from around the world; some stores specialize in reducedrate and secondhand books, old editions, and rare titles. Much of Spanish literature is printed in both Spanish and English; for students of Spanish, there are few better ways to practice than by reading one of the classics in its original language.

Spanish ceramics and tiles

The diversity of Spain's regions is highly evident in the country's wide range of ceramics. The 700-year Moorish domination prevails in ceramic designs of the southern regions, where wall plates are enameled and trimmed in 24-karat gold. Later, when the English settled in the area around Cadiz, florals and busy scenic designs became the preferred style. One major ceramics center is the town of Talavera de la Reina, an hour south of Madrid and 45 minutes to an hour west of Toledo.

Designer Clothes Spain

Spain demonstrates a cosmopolitan flair for fashion, especially in the cities and towns close to the French border. Spanish designers have emerged as strong rivals to French and Italian creators. Their fashions are provocatively alluring and au courant, yet usually keep a classical line. Whatever the latest trend, visitors can rest assured that the fashions are up to date in Spanish cities.

Embroidery and lace Spain

In Spain, embroidery prices are determined by the intricacy of the stitch, not by the size of the item. Look carefully: Stitches made by a human hand cannot duplicate themselves over and over, and will therefore lack consistency; the more perfect the stitch, the more likely that an item was machine made.

Palma de Mallorca, on the Balearic island of Majorca, is known for its beautiful handmade embroidered items. Toledo and the nearby village of Lagartera are famous for their embroidery, lace, and needlework. In Lagartera, where the best La Mancha embroidery originates, every cottage has its own display of the freeform floral stitching, which decorates silk hangings, tablecloths, peasant bonnets, and full skirts.

Food and wine in Spain

Food shopping in Spain is a pleasure, probably because local customers are so demanding. Everything is fresh - sometimes so fresh that food stores hang unskinned rabbits in their windows. Unskinned rabbits and most non-canned meat products, however, cannot be legally brought back to the US (nor can soft cheeses or fruits and vegetables).

Some typical Spanish foodstuffs that can, though, include olive oil; turron (nougat candy), found all over Spain, especially around Christmas; mazapan (marzipan), found all over and a particular specialty in Toledo; azafron (saffron); mojo picon (hot sauce) from the Canary Islands; queso manchego, a hard goat cheese from Castile's La Mancha region but sold throughout Spain; and, of course, alcohol (Spain also is well known for its wines, especially Catalan champagne, Andalusian sherries and cognacs, and table wines from the northcentral Rioja region east of Burgos).

Spanish souvenirs

Spanish porcelain pieces, particularly the LJadro figurines, are collectors' items. The Lladro factory is located in Valencia, along the Mediterranean coastline. There is also a factory store that sees hard to distinguish seconds for one third to one half off retail. Spanish ceramic and porcelain tableware and giftware are well made and exported worldwide.
Spanish jewellery

There are excellent jewellery bargains in Spain. Look for the famous Majorca pearls, but watch out for imitations. There is only one authentic brand. Look for the official agency seal and for the unique l0-year International Certificate of Guarantee that comes with each piece. Sizes run from 4 to 14 millimeters in diameter, in hundreds of combinations. The pearls can be found throughout Spain, but the factory is in Manacor, on the island of Majorca. Cordoban silver filigree pieces are another favorite souvenir item. Pieces of bronze, gold, and silver in contemporary designs are also widely available. Fine gold jewelry, by law, is 18 karat.

Leather goods in Spain

Spanish leather items are subtle, soft, and a good value. Most leather on the Iberian Peninsula comes from sheep and lambs; cows produce a heavier quality skin that's made into jackets and coats. There are thousands of stores selling leather jackets, coats, gloves, pocketbooks, wallets, and other items. Generally speaking, shoppers can tell the quality of the leather by the feel. The softer it is, the better (and the more expensive).

Spanish vineyards

Spain has a longstanding enological tradition. Since the days of the Phoenicians and Greeks, sweet wine has been made in southern Spain. Under the Romans, wine production spread throughout the country and was eventually brought to the Americas along with the Spanish conquistadores.

Today, Spain is the world's third-largest wine producer. Until recently, Spain had more acreage devoted to vines than any other European country, but due to an excess of wine in the European Union, many Spanish vineyards have been uprooted or abandoned under an EU incentive plan. Much like Italy, production is fragmented and spread over a wide area, with 65% of it managed by 600 cooperatives comprising more than 100,000 members.

Running the full range from the aperitif and dessert wines of Andalusia to the brut cavas of the Penedes and a fine assortment of brandies, Spain's viniculture is a vast and varied adventure in good drinking. In addition to the famous Rioja reds, Spain produces a large assortment of other vino tinto (red wine), the best hailing from the temperate northern climes.

Navarre wine Spain

East of the Rioja region, Navarre makes full-bodied, fruity red wines from the same Rioja grape varieties; south of the Rioja along the Duero Valley, the Ribera del Duero appellation is gaining increasing cachet; and Catalonia's Penedes and Lleida areas produce some of the country's best red wines from native grapes, as well as from such acclimatized varieties as the cabernet sauvignon, merlot, and pinot noir. Less sophisticated, but still eminently drinkable, are the reds of the central La Mancha plateau and the regions around Valencia and Alicante.

Though vino blanco (white wine) is produced throughout Spain, the vintages of Rioja and Catalonia have earned international renown. The Rioja whites, often made with the native viura grape, were formerly matured in oak but are now mostly cold-fermented in stainless steel to retain the crisp freshness of the fruit. La Mancha now produces a flowery white from the airen grape, and the fastrising Rueda appellation relies on verdejo or sauvignon blanc.

In Galicia, the whites have a light, natural effervesence, while Jerez produces a small amount of table wIne from the sherry grape. Admission fees are rare at Spanish wineries, and the bodegas (wine cellars) are accustomed to receiving visitors. Even those that have regular visiting hours tend to close for a couple of hours each day between noon and 3 PM. Many wineries sell a selection of their products on the premises; if not, local wines can usually be obtained at nearby shops.

(light reds or roses) and dry whites. There are dozens of vineyards in the Rioja, with the most important ones found in Logrono (the region's cap: tal), Haro, Cenicero, and Fuenmayor.

Bodegas Herceo

Established in 1872, this winery in Haro, some 30 miles (48 km) from Logrono, makes fresh, fruity whites and roses, fruity young reds with good color, and well rounded reserva reds with body and acidity. Visits must be arranged in advance.

Bodegas Campo Viejo

Visitors to the regional capital will enjoy wines from the eel. lars of this enormous bodega. The whites and roses are young and fruity; the reds, mature, aromatic, and light on the palate. Visits must be arranged in advance.

Bodegas Marques de Caceres

This Cenicero winery, located 14 miles (22 km) from Logrono, has made quite an international name for itself since opening in 1970. Its whites and roses are fresh and fruity, and its reds are full-bodied, smooth, and long. Visits must be arranged in advance.

Catalonia Wines

This region in the northeast corner of Spain borders the Mediterranean and produces a great variety of wines; the best known are those of the Emporda (reds and roses), Alella (dry or sweet whites), and the Penedes (whites and reds). But the Catalan pieces de resistance are the champagnelike sparkling wines known as cavas, produced in brut, see, and demisec varieties. Since 1872, when Spain produced its first bottle of cava, the country has become one of the largest producers of sparkling wines in the world. Although cava is made by the methode champenoise, or Champagne method, it is not a budget substitute for champagne, since the native parellada, macabeo, and xarello grapes give it its own distinctive regional characteristics. About 95% of Spanish cava comes from the Penedes, with the majority of producers grouped around the town of Sant Sadurni d'Anoia.

Penedes wines Spain

Table wines are also produced in Penedes, which spreads across the south of Barcelona province and the northeast of Tarragona province. The careful harvesting and elaboration of base wines to create sparkling wines have given rise to highquality whites that are fruity and fresh and have an alcoholic strength of between 9% and 13%. The roses are similar to the whites, and the area also produces light, smooth reds.

Bodegas Miguel Torres

Founded in 1870, this winery makes premium wines from cabernet sauvignon and chardonnay grapes, as well as fine popularly priced red, whites, and roses. A 30seat tour bus transports visitors around the winery and through the vineyards. Open daily.

Codorniu Spain

Since 1551, the Codorniu family has been producing still wines. In 1872, it produced Spain's first cava. Now a national monument welcoming more than 200,000 visitors a year, the winery produces more than 45 million bottles of cava annually in its underground wine cellar network extending 15 miles on five levels. These pale yellow sparkling wines have a flowery aroma and lovely flavor. The winery is closed Friday afternoons, weekends, and August.

Jerez wines

Among the world's most popular aperitif wines, genuine sherry comes only from the region of Jerez de la Frontera at the southern tip of Spain. Produced in great cathedral-like bodegas, these wines are continuously blended, the younger and older wines mixing in a series of casks that constitute the solera (blending). The result: virtually no vintage sherries and a quality that is absolutely consistent from year to year.

The predominant grape varieties are palomino fino, palomino jerez, Pedro Ximenez, and muscatel. The four standard styles of sherries are finos (pale, dry, and light, often with a hint of bitter almonds), manzanillas finas (very dry, with the tang of the sea air of their native Sanlucar de Barrameda), amontillados (amber sherries with more depth and body, and a nutty flavor), and olorosos (dark and fragrant, dry in their natural state, but often sweetened with Pedro Ximenez wine to achieve the rich, raisiny creams that elegantly top off a meal). In addition, pale cream is a new stylea light, medium sherry with a touch of sweetness.

Gonzalez Byass Spain

Established in 1835, this winery produces a fine range of finos olorosos, and sweet sherries. It also offers a unique ritual, featuring a mouse that climbs a miniature ladder to sip a daily dram of sherry from a glass Set out expressly for it. Visits are on weekdays only, and must be arranged in advance through the public relations department.

Pedro Domecq

A maker of wines since 1730, Domecq produces the full range of sherries in its vast facilities. All visits must be arranged through the public relations department; the winery is closed on weekends and during August.

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Airport car hire in Valencia Spain

Airport car hire in Valencia, Spain can be pre-booked from the airport before you travel. You can also pick up a map of Valencia at the car hire office at the airport, to help you navigate your way around the region.

Things to do in Valencia Spain

Valencia is known the world over as the home of paella, possibly the most international of all Spanish dishes. But this city, an agricultural capital that is Spain's third largest population center, offers far more than seafood, sausage, and rice. The city has, as its local cheerleaders say, mucha marcha - lots of life. Like nowhere else in Spain, the residents of Valencia took to the Moors' love for flame and fireworks, still evidenced in the city's falles, riotous celebrations that draw tens of thousands of visitors every March. The cafes of the Ciutat Vella (Old City) abustle with people year-round, and the economy thrives.

But Valencia is a rose with thorns. The Ciutat Vella, set along an elbow of the Rio (River) Turia, is surrounded by a depressing sprawl of working-class housing blocks, and many travelers bypass it in favor of the better-known sites to the north and south. However, it's in the Ciutat Vella that you find the architecture, museums, and unusually rich historical heritage of what once was one of Spain's most powerful kingdoms. Valencia lies at the heart of the huerta (orchard), a crescent of alluvial plain made fertile by a complex irrigation system that has been in use for some 2,100 years.

History of Valencia

Water has transformed the area into an agricultural paradise: a flat, rich plain covered with millions of orange trees and numerous market gardens, flower nurseries, and nut tree orchards. Everything depends on the precious water of the Rio Turia, and the elected judges of Valencia's Water Tribunal have been meeting every Thursday since the Middle Ages outside the cathedral to settle disputes. The proceedings are open to the public and are held in Valencia (Valencian, a dialect of the Catalan language).

The Romans founded Valentia in 137 BC on the site of the previous Greek settlement of Thuris (Greeks, Phoenicians, and Carthaginians sailed the coast in this area and traded with the native Iberians long before the Romans arrived on the scene; the name Turia is still in evidence today, attached to the local river, streets, and some publications). The city eventually fell into the hands of the Visigoths and, in the 8th Century, the Moors (some of whom were Arabs but most of whom were North African Berber tribesmen), who invaded the peninsula from northern Africa.

El Cid and the Moors in Valencia

It was the Moors who gave the region many of its most trademark features - its orange groves, the palm trees that line its avenues, the glazing techniques that made its ceramics famous, tremendous improvements to the irrigation system still in use today, fireworks, silk, and rice, which is grown in paddies to the south. In the centuries following the Christian reconquest of Valencia, all Moorish landmarks were razed, leaving only a bathhouse that today is closed to the public. The first of the Catholic liberators was El Cid, the legendary hero from Burgos who took the town in 1094 and died here five years later. Following his death, his brave wife, Doña Jimena, was unable to maintain the Christian hold on the city, and it slipped back under Moorish control for another 150 years.

Valencians regard King Jaime (James) I of Aragon, known as the Conqueror, as their true liberator. Following a five month siege, the warrior king marched into the city in triumph one September day in 1238, granting its Christian inhabitants special rights, or costums, in return for their allegiance to the crown of Aragon. During the Middle Ages, the Black Death ravaged the city twice, and a violent pogrom in Valencia's old Jewish quarter set off popular attacks on Jews and converted Moors.

Vicent Ferrer, a brilliant but virulently bigoted Valencian cleric who was later saint d and made patron of his native city, delivered inflammatory anti-Semitic diatribes and helped frame discriminatory laws aimed at religious minorities. When the Holy Inquisition came to the city in 1482, at least 100 Valencians were burned at the stake for refusing to convert. This sad story of religious intolerance would be brought to a climax about 130 years later, with the expulsion from Spain of the last remaining 170,000 converted Moors in 1609

The Bourbons in Spain

The Bourbons (called los borbones in Spanish) came to rule Spain in the early 18th century via the War of the Spanish Succession, in which Valencia, along with Aragon and Catalonia, backed the defeated Habsburgs. The city paid for its mistake with the Nueva Planta decree of 1707, which stripped it of its ancient rights and generated resentment that still exists today. The kingdom became a province; its viceroy, a captain general sent from Madrid.

For better or for worse, Valencia has since been involved in just about every war and rebellion in Spain, winning a gritty reputation for independence and liberalmindedness. In 1808, led by one Father Rico, the populace stormed the city arsenal and rose bloodily against Napoleon's occupying troops; Marshal Louis Gabriel Suchet managed to restore French rule only four years later. Over the following decades, Valencia was a hothouse of conspiracies, plots, and failed uprisings, notably the Republicaninspired insurrections of 1856 and 1864. A rebellion during the Revolution of 1868 was settled only with an artillery bombardment of the city.

True to its liberal past, Valencia fought on the losing side during the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939). For most of 1937, with Madrid under siege, Valencia became the Republican capital. It was shelled and bombed until it finally fell to Generalissimo Francisco Franco's Nationalist rebels. In the decades of repression that followed, the local language was almost stamped out; but after Franco died, it made a strong comeback and is now widely spoken. The city is now the capital of the comunidad valenciana, also known as Valencia, one of Spain's 17 comunidades autonomas (autonomous Communities). It comprises Valencia province along with Alicante (Alacant in valencian) and Castellon de la Plana.

The city today of Valencia has the feel of an overgrown agricultural capital, despite its heavy industry and sprawling development. Although past its age of glory, Valencia boasts one exceptional and famous 20th century writer: Vicente Blasco Ibanez (1867-1928), best known to English speakers for Sangre y Arena (Blood and Sand), possibly the finest novel ever written on bullfighting.

One of the great attractions of Valencia is precisely that it is not a major tourist attraction. With its many industries (furniture and ceramics foremost among them), and the grim industrial port of El Grao, it can be offputting to the casual passerby. But visitors soon find it to be a charming, a place with a good deal of local character. Valencians are less affecte than most residents of the Mediterranean coast by the onslaught of tounSln in recent decades, so most have a genuine desire to show the visitor why their city deserves a second look. Valencia At aGlance
Places to see in Valencia.

For those who don't mind a grueling, 207 step climb, a perfect view of the city can be had from Valencia's most popular monument, El Migueleze (in valencia, Micale!), the cathedral's 14th century octagonal belltower on the Plaga de la Reina. Clustered around the tower are all the principal buildings of the Ciutat Vella, and the visitor sees a vista of bridges over the Rio Turia bed, bluedomed churches, and the fertile huerta stretching beyond the ends of the city's streets.

Special places to visit in Valencia

Valencia's last set of city walls was torn down in 1865, but almost all af the city's main monuments and museums are within the relatively small area they once enclosed, now called the Ciutat Vella. The quarter is defined to the north by the bed of the Rio (River) Turia (which has been rerouted farther away from the city to solve the chronic flooding that had long plagued the Ciutat Vella), and on the west, south, and east by Avenida de Guhlem de Castro Calle de Xativa, and Calle Colon, respectively.

Keep in mind when planning visits that in Valencia, as in other Spanish cities, churches, museums, historic sites, and other places of touristic interest are usually open from 9:30 or 10 AM to 1 or 2 PM and then again from around 4 or 5 to 7 or 8 PM; schedules may change with the seasons. Some museums are open mornings only, and weekend hours are also often abbreviated. Closing days tend to be Sundays or Mondays. If possible, it's best to call for exact hours.

Valencia Cathedral

Angled oddly into a corner of the Plaza de la Reina, the main square of the Ciutat Vella, the cathedral (also known as La Seu) is a mixture of styles, as reflected in its three portals, which are Romanesque, Gothic, and Baroque. Construction was begun in 1262 on the site of a mosque razed by the Catholic conquerors. Although the basic structure of the cathedral was completed towards the end of the 13th century, the main chapel and some side chapels were not completed until the 18th century.

Highlights include the tower, the Gothic dome, the chapter house, and the main altarpiece, which depicts the life of Christ on six panels. The main chapel contains the pulpit used by Vicent Ferrer to give some of his apocalyptic orations, and one of the leading Spanish candidates for the true Holy Graila muchrevered agate cup, set with emeralds and pearls on a base of pure gold. The church also boasts some fine paintings, including the Baptism of Christ by Juan de Juanes, but the real art treasures are housed in the Museo de La CatedraL, which contains works by Zurbaran, Juan de Juanes, and others. Notice also the Goya paintings in the museum.

The Basilica in Valencia

An arcade connects the cathedral to this eliptical building, which was completed in 1667 and is said to have been the first mental asylum in the world. The structure contains fine frescoes by Antonio Palomino on the interior of the dome, and a sculpted image of the Virgin of the Forsaken, the patroness of Valencia, that was supposedly sculpted by angels. On the Festa de La Verge (Feast Day of the Virgin), the second Sunday in May, and during the Festa de Corpus Christi, the Virgin is carried through nearby streets in processions marked by showers of rose petals and other flowers. Plaza de la Verge.

The Provincial Fine Arts Museum Valencia

Many people come to this first-rate art museum, one of Spain's best (but least-visited), just to see the small, brooding self-portrait painted by Velazquez in 1640. While this is its single unquestioned gem, the museum also houses an interesting collection of Valencian religious primitives of the 14th, 15th, and 16th centuries.

These paintings are remarkable for their graphic, naive vigor: Blood gushes from Christ's sword wound into a goblet in one painting; the lactating Madonna spouts milk fro her swollen breasts ito he mouth of the infant Christ in another. Downstairs, there are early Iberian and Hispano-Roman artifacts. There is also a small treasure of works upstairs from Francisco Ribalta (who died in Valencia in 1628), Ribera, Murillo, El Greco (St. John the Baptist), Van Dyck, Hieronymus Bosch, and Goya, who once taught at the fine arts academy that runs the museum.

Nex door to the fine arts mseum, this small paradise of rose gardens, bouganvillea, palms, mimosas, jacarandas, cypress, and myrtle trees also has a diminutive but pleasant zoo. The gardens and the zoo are open daily.

The Silk Exchange Valencia

This structure in the heart of the Ciutat Vella is the finest example of Gothic architecture in a city renowned for the genre. In addition to an array of gargoyles, the facade features a series of fantastic and often even erotic small figures. The first room is the main Lonja de La Seda, a great vaulted hall supported by 24 twisting columns reminiscent of massive hanks of silk; on Fridays from 1 to 3 PM, fruit wholesalers hold auctions reminiscent of 16th-century silk fairs here. Next to this hall is the tower of La Lonja, said to have once served as a prison for bankrupt silk merchants. A remarkable circular stairway, with no central support, leads from a courtyard of orange trees to an upstairs hall noted for its elaborately gilded and carved wooden ceiling.

The Central Market Valencia

One of the finest and largest market buildings in Spain is made even more delightful by the colors and smells of the products of the huerta, along with the azulejos (glazed tiles) showng Valencian citrus fruits and vegetables. Built in 1928, the market is a fine example of Valencian modernism, and is visually similar to a turn-of-the-century railroad station, with glass skylights supported by an elaborate framework of iron girders. The market offers a quick taste of modern Valencian life.

The Natural Ceramics Museum Valencia

The amazing facade of this 18th-century rococo palace was designed by the painter Hypolito Rovira, who died in a Valencian mental aylum in 740. Its main entrance is a riotous alabaster fantasy of crocodIles, Cupids, a Virgin with Child, and two men spilling jugs of water the two waters of the Marques de Dos Aguas. The building now houses the Museo Nacional de Ceramica, Spain's leading ceramics museum. The gilded and tiled interior of the building, a kind of Hollywood version of a European palace, is a showcase of centuries of excellent pottery and azulejos from the outlying towns of Paterna, Alcora, and Manises, beautifully glazed work that was widely sought across Europe in the late Middle Ages.

In other rooms, there are works by Picasso, a Valencian tiled kitchen, and pottery from other regions of Spain and abroad.

The Bullfighting Museum Valencia

Almost hidden away in a covered concourse next to the bullring, one of Spain's leading taurine museums is filled with bullfighting memorabilia. The collection includes examples of 19th-century bullfighting garb; savage-looking lances, swords, and pics; the suits of lights worn by some leading toreros when they were gored; and the stuffed heads of some of the bulls. Valencia was for many centuries a leading city for bullfighting, though its reputation has fallen off in recent decades.

North Station Valencia

Many visitors, whether arriving by train or not, take the time to visit this charming railroad station, one of the most beautiful in Europe. Both the interior and exterior are decorated with azulejos bearing such Valencian motifs as oranges, the huerta, and barracas, the region's traditional thatch-roofed houses. The ticket counters and the cafeteria are especially delightful.

The Serranos Towers Valencia

The 14th-century gate next to the northern Puente Serranos (Serranos Bridge) was fully restored in 1930 and remains an imposing fortified arch. A second gate, another remnant of the medieval walls, is the 15th-century Torres de Quart, nearby on Avenida de Guillem de Castro. Like a proud old warrior, it still bears the scars of French cannonballs from the Peninsular War (1808-1814), waged by Napoleon against the British, the Portuguese, and the Spanish guerrillas.

The Institute of Modern Art Valencia

Hard by the remnants of the old city walls (in fact, a vestige of the medieval ramparts protrudes into one of the galleries) not far from the Torres de Quart, this is one of a recent crop of museums in Spain devoted exclusively to modern art. The collection is housed in two locations - an ultramodern stone and glass building called the Centre Julio Gonzalez and, in complete contrast, a nearby restored 13th to 16th century Carmelite convent called the Centre del Carme.

In addition to the permanent collection of some 1,400 pieces (paintings, drawings, and sculpture by Julio Gonzalez, a lifelong friend of Picasso, form the nucleus), the Centre Julio Gonzalez has an auditorium, a restaurant-bar, and a bookshop. It's also host to a year-round schedule of changing exhibitions and special cultural events.


The Music Palace Valencia

Across the Puente Aragon (Aragon Bridge) from the Ciutat Vella, Valencia's concert hall, built in the now dry bed of the Rio Turia in 1987, is a rather bizarre mix of reflecting pools, palm trees, small temple-like structures, and a main building that resembles an exceptionally swank greenhouse. It is known to locals as the micro ondas (microwave) because of its initial lack of air conditioning, and its designers also failed to 'include a system to clean its vast glass surfaces leading the city to hire mountaineers to do the job. Apart from performances, the building is open for group tours if arrangements are made in advance.

Places to visit near Valencia

The town of Manises was a major pottery center in the Middle Ages, when emissaries from the richest courts of Europe vied to buy its fine wares, characterized by distinctive blue and white patterns. While otherwise unattractive, the town today is packed with ceramics factories and retail shops, many of which sell good reproductions of pieces in Valencia's Museo Nacional de Ceramica at bargain prices. Manises is about 41 miles (7 km) west of Valencia, and is well served by city buses.

Sagunto near Valencia

In 219 BC, the Iberians, the first inhabitants of this fortified rocky ridge, set their possessions and themselves afire rather than surrender to the Carthaginian general Hannibal. The Romans eventually rebuilt the town, and it was successively held by the Visigoths, the Moors, and, in the 19th century, the French. Today, the archaeological site at Sagunto has an impressive 8,000seat amphitheater, as well as an ancient castle acropolis, and nearly half a mile of mostly Moorish medieval walls and ramparts.

An old Roman forum is marked by a huge broken stone marked with the letters FORV. The long ridge occupied by the fortifications provides a dramatic 360-degree view of orange groves, the surrounding mountains, and the Mediterranean.

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Things to do in Toledo Spain

Cervantes hailed Toledo as that rocky gravity, glory of Spain and light of her cities. Indeed, throughout its history, the city has been a shining center of scholarship and spirituality. The Romans founded the city of Toletum in 193 BC on a site originally settled by a tribe of Celtic Iberians. The city was part of a Visigoth kingdom in the 6th and 7th centuries, then was invaded by the Moors in 712. For centuries it flourished as a city of silk and steel where clergy, merchants, and the military peacefully coexisted under Moorish rule.

Even when King Alfonso VI and El Cid recaptured the city for Christendom in 1085, a cosmopolitan tolerance endured. Christians, Muslims, and Jews cooperated in intellectual exchange and trade, and for nearly five centuries, Toledo enjoyed a reputation throughout the Mediterranean as a center of learning. Alfonso the Wise, King of Castile, grew up in this heady cultural mix and founded the influential Escuela de Traductores (School of Translators) here during the 13th century.

The history of Toledo Spain

Under his rule, Castilian Spanish became the official language, replacing Latin. His court of Jewish scholars made esoteric Greek and Arabic science (as well as Islam and Judaism) accessible to the people of northern Europe. Alchemists studied and worked alongside mathematicians and philosophers. Prosperity brought commissions for mudejares (pronounced mooday harace), or Mudejars, who were Moors staying on under Christian rule. Their exquisite craftsmanship is characterized by intricately ornamental plaster ceilings and sumptuously patterned tile and brick wallsmuch of which can still be seen in Toledo's chapels, synagogues, hospitals, and palaces.

The city, however, was also the seat of the Catholic Church in Spain, and eventually the full weight of the church pressed down to obliterate or banish rival religions during the Spanish Inquisition. An abrupt pogrom in 1355 and a 1391 massacre at a synagogue subsequently turned into a church called Sinagoga Santa Maria la Blanca (White St. Mary) were early warnings that Toledo's tolerance would not last, regardless of local traditions.

After Ferdinand and Isabella summarily expelled unconverted Jews from Spain in 1492, the Jews of Toledo who refused to be baptized were either banished or killed. Seven years later, 4,000 Toledan Moors were baptized as Christians. After Queen Isabella's death in 1504, her husband, the aging King Ferdinand ruled from Toledo. When the new king, Carlos I of Spain, inher ited the mantle of Holy Roman Emperor in 1519 and became Charles V Toledo became an imperial city.

In addition to Spain, Charles commanded Naples, Sicily, Sardinia, Germany, FrancheComte (Burgundy), and the Low Countries, as well as the American lands newly plundered by the Conquistadores. But resentment quickly grew against the king and his Court of foreigners. Between 1520 to 1521, Toledo's Juan de Padilla joined with Juan Bravo of Segovia in a local citizens' revolt, known as the Comuneros uprising, which was quickly crushed.

In 1556, just five years after he assumed the throne, Felipe (Philip) II, son of Charles V, moved the capital to Madrid. Toledo, however, remained the spiritual center of Spain. To distance himself from the established church, Philip decided to build a state palace north of Madrid that would overshadow the great ecclesiastical splendors of Toledo. Eager artists from all over Europe competed for commissions at El Escorial, but one Cretan painter, Domenikos Theotokopoulos, soon fell from Philip's favor and was dismissed. He set up his studio in Toledo, where he became known simply as El Greco (the Greek).

Today, it is El Greco's skewed, Mannerist vision of Toledo, with its rolling clouds over elongated figures and startling clashes of color in almost geometric compositions, that most visitors come to see. Indeed, the skyline has not changed measurably since he completed his View of Toledo. The artist's adopted hometown has no shortage of his work. In fact, it's rare to find so many of a major artist's paintings still in the place they were created.

After the capital was moved to Madrid, Toledo's status as merely the capital of La Mancha province and the fact that far more politically significant prizes were within striking distance spared this city from the worst of the battles that ravaged Spain in succeeding generations. But the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) was fought here with full fury. The huge restored Alcazar, which dominates the highest ground in Toledo and was once rebuilt by Charles V as a royal residence, was besieged for a grim two months in the summer of 1936. Francisco Franco's Nationalist rebels held out against the Republican government forces despite blasts of dynamite that collapsed much of the fortress, formerly the most prestigious military academy in the nation.

Fortunately, today Toledo faces no more threatening an onslaught than the hordes of visitors who inevitably get lost in its tangle of narrow alleyways. City residents resolutely provide directions, respond to queries in countless languages, and rarely lose their graciousness. When the last tour bus pulls away at dusk, however, Toledo is returned to the toledanos and, it seems, to its past. This is the best time to explore the twisting byways of this ancient city, finding the way back by remembering the coats of armS carved in stone on the buildings along your route.

Car hire in Toledo

To explore Toledo, take a hire car from Barajas Madrid Airport, which can be pre-booked before you travel, saving you time and money. Cheap airport car hire is available online, and you can visit most of the attractions of Toledo and plan your route with a map of Toledo from the tourist office or car hire company.

What to see in Toledo

For an overall perspective, drive along Carretera de Circunvalacion, following the banks of the Rio Tajo (Tagus River), which surrounds Toledo like a moat. As the road climbs the hillsides, it passes close to a little hermitage called Virgen del Valle, and provides a sweeping view of the city. Close by is an outcropping called Cabeza del Moro (Moor's Head). Anywhere on the hillside offers a good view. Just to the left is the Parador Conde de Orgaz, the best place to watch the sunset, a drink in hand on the patio, with all of Toledo stretched out below.

Just above the Puente de Alcantara (Alcantara Bridge) is the Castillo de San Fernando, a monastery converted into a school, which offers a panorama from a different angle. For a more intimate view over Toledo's tiled rooftops and spires, climb the cathedral's belfry. A door on Calle Hombre de Palo (Stick Man Street) opens onto stairs in the cloisters that ascend the tower. In the neighborhood known as Miradero (the name literally means lookout), not far above the Puerta del Solon the Cuesta de las Armas, cafes offer a fine vantage point out over the river and beyond. From nearly any strategic spot along the old walls, there is a sentry's view of the surrounding countryside.

Special places to go in Toledo

Toledo has so many points of interest that tourists would be hard pressed to view even the exteriors of all historically important monuments on a single visit. If time is especially limited, pick up the free brochure from the tourist office at the Puerta de la Bisagra and follow its essential itinerary, which is arranged in a very convenient sequence.

The Alcazar Toledo

Despite numerous sackings, torchings, and even bombings, this strategic building has been re-girded, patched up, and continually put back into service. The Moors re-fashioned the Visigothic citadel, which had been built over an old Roman fort, and El Cid reputedly served as the city's first governor here. The present structure dates from the time of Charles V, who converted it into a palace, though most of it is now a product of reconstruction.

The north facade, with its Plateresque portal, was designed by Alonso de Covarrubias, as was the east facade, which is by far the oldest. Since the imperial court left the building almost 500 years ago, it has been wracked by misfortune. The palace became a state prison in 1643, and German, British, and Portuguese troops burned it in 1710, during the War of the Spanish Succession. After restoration by Cardinal Lorenzana, it stood only 35 years before being gutted by French troops during the Peninsular War. The Alcazar later re-emerged as the national military academy, though it suffered another blaze at the hands of careless cadets and again had to be overhauled.

Its worst days were during a civil war siege in 1936, when a band of Nationalist rebels under Colonel Jose Moscardo, along with over 600 women and children, holed up inside for two months until Republican government bombs again reduced the structure to ruins. The building also houses the Museo de Armas Blancas de la Real Fabrica de Armas (Royal Arms Factory Museum of Hand Weaponry; ).

Cathedral of the Primates of Toledo

For such an enormous building, the cathedral can be surprisingly difficult to locate. Boxed in by other buildings, on approach it seems to disappear. In the main (west) facade, between the tower and the dome, there are three lovely Gothic portals: the Puerta del Perdon (Gate of Forgiveness) in the middle, flanked by the Puerta del Juicio (Gate of Judgment) on the right and the Puerta del Infierno (Gate of Hell) on the left. The 14th-century Puerta del Reloj (Clock Gate), also called Puerta de la Chapineria (Shoemakers' Gate, because it was financed with help from the shoemakers' guild), in the north wall, is the cathedral's oldest, and is lavishly adorned with Gothic pointed arches and ornaments.

The Puerta de Los Leones (Lions' Gate), on the south, is the most flamboyant, with great bronze doors. The modern entrance is a plain doorway to the left of the Puerta de Mollete, just off Calle Hombre de Palo.

Inside, the architectural styles run the gamut from Gothic to Mudejar (which combines Moorish and Gothic elements) to flagrant rococo. The wrought-iron screens are magnificent, and 800 stained glass windows from the 15th and 16th centuries help light the vast space. Yet even the glorious rose window looks ordinary next to the skylight that directs a single celestial beam onto the altar.

Known as the Transparente, the altar which stands behind the Capula Mayor (Main Chapel) is a bit of Baroque heaven, a swirl of saints and chubby angels created by Narciso Tome in 1732. Some of the paintings have three-dimensional appendages, innovations that have remained controversial throughout the centuries. The polychrome retable above the altar is exquisitely carved, and the walnut choir stalls are also exceptional.

The sacristy contains a wealth of paintings, including 28 by EI Greco, as well as works by Velazquez, Titian, Van Dyck, and Goya. The Capilla Mozarabe (Mozarabic Chapel) beneath a dome designed by El Greco's son, is the only place on earth where the ancient Arian Christian rituals of the Visigoths, dating from the 5th and 6th centuries, are still observed (Christians who were allowed to live and worship under Moorish rule were called mozarabes).

The chapel is open for these daily services in Latin and Spanish. The 16th-century octagonal Sala Capitular (chapter house), which combines Gothic, Mudejar, and Plateresque styles, has a series of paintings of Toledo's bishops and wall frescos. The Tesoro (treasury) displays the gold and silver Arfe monstrance, which is carried through the streets on the Fiesta de Corpus Christi.

Standing 10 feet high and weighing 450 pounds, this elaborate reliquary incorporates gold from Columbus's first shipload back from the Americas. The cathedral is still in use, and visitors often encounter a mass or a lavish wedding in progress. Next to the sacristy is the Capilla de Los Reyes Nuevos (New Kings' Chapel), built in the 16th century for Enrique II and containing a multitude of tombs and likenesses of Spain's kings. Open daily.

The Church of St Thomas Toledo

This unremarkable 14th-century Mudejar church, whose name is an arcaic form of Tomas, is usually crowded with visitors because of one masterpiece, El Greco's El Entierro del Conde de Orgaz (Burial of the Count of Orgaz). The famous canvas was painted some 250 years after the funeral of the count, who had funded the church's first major reconstruction. The scene is split into heaven and earth, with a row of mourners marking the divide. Their faces are portraits of prominent Toledo citizens, all in 16th-century dress.

EI Greco's own face is supposedly just above that of the young St. Stephen, and the boy in the foreground is the painter's son, Jorge. The monogram on his pocket handkerchief is El Greco's signature.

The Moors Workshop Toledo

This almost palatial 14th-century building was once used as a workshop by Moorish masons completing cathedral commissions. Displays are mostly of carpentry and tiles. The Mudejar style of the building, with its artesonados (inlaid wood ceilings) and plasterwork, is exemplary.

The El Greco House and Museum Toledo

The name is a misnomer, for El Greco never lived here, but this was his old neighborhood, and this house did belong to his landlord. Admirably restored to its 16th-century state, the house is charming due to the small scale of the furnishings, especially the tiny kitchen, and its quaint, cobbled courtyard, surrounded by a woodcarved gallery, Renaissance porticos, and intricately carved Mudejar friezes. Spectacular views of the surrounding hills, dotted with patrician villas that have changed little since El Greco's day, can be had from the southfacing balconies on the upper floor. The garden is very pleasant, and there's a fine collection of the painter's later works, particularly noteworthy for its bold portraits of the apostles.

Synagogue of the Thoroughfare Toledo

This major synagogue, built in 1366 as a palace for Samuel Halevy, treasurer to Pedro I of Castile (and later executed by him), was converted into a monastery after the expulsion of the Jews, but many of the original trappings were preserved. Rich cedar carvings grace the 39 foot high artesonado (inlaid ceiling) and the lacy Mudejar plasterwork.

Exhibits at the Museo Sefardi (Sephardic Museum) installed here include a marble pillar from the 1st or 2nd century with carved Hebrew inscriptions, alongside silver manuscript cases, robes and wedding costumes, amulets, and elaborate objects used in Jewish festivals. It takes its name from the street on which it stands.

The Santa Maria Synagogue Toledo

This architectural gem, built in 1180, was once the primary Jewish synagogue in Toledo and was later converted into a church and renamed by the Christian Knights of Calatrava (after a supposed apparition on the premises, to a stable boy, of the Madonna clothed in purest White). The facade is rather drab, but inside, white horseshoe arches and delicately carved white columns shimmer with light. The polychrome altarpIece was added in the 16th century.

Demoted in 1791 to a shelter for reformed prostitutes, then a barracks, until a general commanded its makeover into a quartermaster's warehouse and saved it from further abuse, the synagogue is now a museum and has been remarkably restored to the original splendor it had under the Almohad Moors. About a hundred feet east of the synagogue are the remains of a 14th century mikvah, or ritual bath.

The Monastery of San Juan

The outside walls of this grandiose monastery are hung with chains once worn by Christian slaves in Moorish Granada. The chains were brought here after the slaves gained their freedom in testament to a faith that fueled the final Christian victory of the Reconquista (the centuries-long reconquest of the Iberian Peninsula from the Moors). Inside, the great church is done in soaring Isabeline style, and incorporates Mudejar and other Gothic touches with Renaissance art. Construction began in 1476 and wasn't completed until the early 17th century.

An important center for the Franciscan order, the monastery was originally planned as the mausoleum of King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella (they were actually buried in Granada). The initials F&Y (for Fernando and Ysabel) appear repeatedly throughout the building, along with the shields of Castile, Leon, and Aragon; the pomegranate of Granada; and the royal yoke and arrows motif. The Flemish architect Jan Guas designed most of the interior, with its massive round columns and the great shields supported by haloed eagles.

The Hospital of Santa Cruz Toledo

Cardinal Pedro Gonzalez de Mendoza initiated plans for this elaborate orphanage and hospital just off Plaza de Zocodover in the early 16th century, and the project was completed by Queen Isabella after his death. The building now houses the Museum of Fine Arts and the Provincial Archaeology Museum showcasing swords and scimitars, ceramics, vestments, furniture, tapestries, and paintings, including 25 by El Greco. Off the lovely Plateresque patio is an archaeology exhibit of mostly Roman finds.

A display of prehistoric items is in the basement. The intricate ceilings, lavish stairways, and spacious rooms are typical of 16th-century hospitals, where pleasant surroundings were considered vital to the cure.

Church of the Christ of the Light Toledo

Also known as the Mezquita, this minuscule mosque, perhaps intended originally as a sepulchral chamber, was built in 980 AD, and is one of the most venerable Moorish buildings on the Iberian Peninsula. Near the Puerta del Sol, it was erected on top of Visigothic ruins and later became a Mudejar church. Delicate horseshoe arches inside are supported by more ancient Visigothic capitals, and paintings in the Mudejar annex, though worn, are rare surviving examples of Toledan Romanesque art.

Cristo de la Luz is shrouded in legend; according to one, EI Cid's charger fell to its knees here during a post reconquest victory parade and refused to rise until a Visigothic crucifix, with a votive candle still flickering, was miraculously uncovered in a brickedup niche. Opening hours are erratic. No admission charge. Calle Cristo de la Luz.

Hospital de Tavera Toledo

This large 16th-century hospital located outside the city gates contains Cardinal Juan Pardo de Tavera's extensive collection of paintings and also features apartments furnished by the Duchess of Lerma in a lavish 17th-century style. The cardinal's magnificent tomb and the family crypt of the Dukes of Medinaceli are in the chapel off the double patio. Impressive portraits by Titian, including the huge Portrait of Charles V, hang in the vast dining hall, but Jose Ribera's odd Bearded Woman is stashed in a side room, camouflaged by bland cityscapes on either side. Upstairs are works by Tintoretto, Zurbaran, and, of course, El Greco, most notably his enormous last canvas, the Baptism of Christ by St. John. Open daily. Admission charge. Calle Baja.

The Roman Circus Toledo

Not much remains of the Roman arena, only a few mosaics and a reconstructed building in an open area outside the gates north of town. Still, this is a pleasant place to stroll after the cramped and twisting streets of the city, and its size hints at the strength of the Roman settlement of Toletum. Open daily. No admission charge. Off Avenida de la Reconquista.

Places to see near Toledo

South and west of Toledo, along either the C401 road or the N401 highway and the local routes branching off of them, rise the harsh uplands that were long celebrated in troubadors' couplets. Streams interlace the scrubby bush cover of rock roses, heather, and cork oaks. The area is best explored by car.

Picnickers should be aware of the wild game deer, wild boar, lynx, foxes, and even wolvesthat lives in the area, mostly in the heights. Much of the land is private hunting ground, particularly in the southern stretches near Los Yebenes, but there are prehistoric sites scattered throughout the region. The towns of Calancho, Los Navalucillos, and Hontanar all boast curious megalithic relics. Ciudad de Vascos, near Navalmoralejo, is an ancient HispanoMoorish ghost town protected by a fortress.

Odd stone boars or bulls called verracos can be seen at the castles Castillo de Bayuela and Torrecilla de La Jara, outside Talavera de la Reina. The town of Guadalerzas is spanned by an impressive late Roman aqueduct with 24 arches. One of the prettiest valleys, reached by heading west toward the higher sierra behind Guadalupe, is Robledo del Mazo, where the locals still wear traditional straw hats decorated with baubles and tiny mirrors.

Route of the Castles Toledo

The area surrounding Toledo is littered with castles, most constructed during the time of the Reconquista. About 8 miles (13 km) southwest of Toledo (local road 401) lies Guadamur, a small town dominated by a magnificent 15th-century castle that was restored in the 19th century. The rooms, occupied for a time by Queen Juana la Loca (Joan the Mad) and her son, the future Emperor Charles V, are furnished with Spanish period furniture, and can be toured on the 10th, 20th, and 30th of each month (for more information contact the Toledo tourism office). Leaving Guadamur and continuing south, take the first right turn toward, and then pass by, San Martin de Montalban.

The next right turn will bring you to the hamlet of Melque, which contains one of the most beautiful and least known castles in Spain, a jewel of mozarabe (MoorishChristian) architecture. The Melque castle, which also shows traces of Visigothic influence, boasts one of the largest pointed Gothic military arches ever built. Close to the castle lie the ruins of two Roman dams.

Other noteworthy monuments on this southwest circular route are the Gothic Renaissance chapel at Torrijos, the 15th century Mudejar castle at Maqueda, and the turreted edifice at Escalona on the banks of the AJberche River. Except for Guadamur, for the most part these sites are semiruins, and generally open to the public with no fixed schedule. El Greco lovers will want to head north 21 miles (34 km) on N401 to this village for a visit to the Convento deL HospitaL de La Caridad (Convent of the Hospital of Charity). The 16th-century convent contains five El Grecos, including a magnificent Coronation of the Virgin.

Traditional handicrafts in Toledo

Talavera de la Reina and Puente del Arzobispo, both traditional ceramics centers, are an easy day's excursion from Toledo via C502. Talavera is 49 miles/82 km from Toledo) and is the largest city in the province, so don't expect a quaint potter's village. The traditional pottery here features multicolor designs; browse along the main street, where vendors sell shelf after shelf of platters, vases, and bowls. On the fringes of the city, just past the main park, is the Ermita de la Virgen del Prado (Hermitage of the Madonna of the Meadow), a showcase for the famous azulejos, distinctive blue and yellow glazed picture tiles, which date back to the 14th century and were the preferred decorations for the finest palaces and monasteries.

To reach Puente del Arzobispo, popular for its more subdued, green-toned pottery, drive west from Talavera on the NY highway to Oropesa, then south for 9 miles [14 km) to a fortified bridge across the Rio Tajo (Tagus River). Shops and vendors in the village sell ceramics for less than the equivalent items would cost in Toledo, but since quality here is consistently high, there are no astonishingly inexpensive wares. Yaldeverdeja, a smaller and prettier village, lies just 4.5 miles (7 km) to the west and sells distinctive unglazed red earthenware. Farther west on the NY highway, just past Oropesa, is a turnoff to Lagartera, the village where the best La Mancha embroidery originates.

Special events in Toledo

Holy Week
Semana Santa (Holy Week), preceding Pascua (Easter), has subdued beauty in Toledo; especially moving is the Procesion del Silencio (Procession of Silence), which winds through the streets On Viernes Santo (Good Friday). A more boisterous procession the carrying of the Virgen del Valle (Madonna of the Valley) around the hillsides near her hermitage on the far side of the river occurs during the local Romerfa, on Primero de Mayo (May Day, the first of the month) afternoon. Enormous excitement is unleashed for the Fiesta de (Feast of) Corpus Christi (June), when the townspeople dress up in folk costumes and the precious Arfe monstrance from the cathedral treasury is carried through the city streets.

This has been Toledo's ultimate celebration for eight centuries; it takes place on the Thursday of the ninth week after Easter. Check with the tourist office for full details and the traditional parade route. Fireworks light the August skies during the Fiesta de la Virgen del Sagrario (Feast of the Madonna of the Shrine), held annually in August.

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