Tren a los Balnearios de Ourense desde 40 ciudades de España
¿Y si le contaras a tus padres o a tus seres más queridos esta maravillosa historia de trenes, balnearios, rica gastronomía, rutas culturales y paisajes inolvidables?
Tren a los Balnearios de Ourense, la provincia termal, desde 40 ciudades de España con estancias de 5 noches/6 días
Más detalles de la historia en el vídeo y en trenbalnearios.com
Convent of San Paio de Antealtares, Santiago de Compostela, Galicia, Spain, Europe
The Royal Monastery of San Pelayo de Antealtares (Monastery of San Paio de Antealtares in Galician) is currently a Spanish convent of cloistered Benedictine nuns located in Santiago de Compostela, belonging from its foundation to the Benedictine Order. It is located in the old town, opposite the head of the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela, closing the square of the Quintana. Antealtares was originally monastery of monks under the invocation of San Pedro. By the middle of the twelfth century, apparently, it ended up relieving San Pedro as titular Pelayo, the Galician boy martyr. His community was an essential part, since the High Middle Ages, of the devotional and cultural nucleus of the Locus Santi Jacobi founded by Alfonso II of Asturias, the chaste in the first quarter of the ninth century. His work focused on the care of the Altar of the Apostle, the liturgical service and the attention of the first pilgrims. With the delivery of the monks of Antealtares, Compostela became a great focus of spirituality and culture. In 1499, the reformer Fray Rodrigo of Valencia, by order of the Catholic Monarchs, decided that this monastery was the center of the reform of the female monasteries of the order in Galicia, confirming the foundation and endowment by papal bulls of Innocent VIII and Alexander VI and the authority of the General Chapter of the Congregation of Valladolid on July 23, 1499. Five hundred years after such an event, the Followers of the Saint of Nursia continue in Antealtares as the only monastic presence, but in continuity, of those of the Order that had the city of Santiago from its very beginnings at the beginning of the ninth century.