Top 10 Best Things to do in La Coruna, Spain
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List of Best Things to do in La Coruna, Spain
Tower of Hercules (Torre de Hercules)
Monte de San Pedro
Cabo Finisterre
Plaza de Maria Pita
Avenida de la Marina
Museo Militare Regionale
Iglesia de Santiago Apostol
Colegiata de Santa Maria do Campo
Playa de Riazor
Castle of San Anton
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A Coruña Tourist Attractions: 15 Top Places to Visit
Planning to visit A Coruña? Check out our A Coruña Travel Guide video and see top most Tourist Attractions in A Coruña.
Top Places to visit in A Coruña:
Camino de Santiago, Santiago de Compostela. Casco Historico, Refugio de Verdes, Botafumeiro, Camino de Finisterre, Parque Natural Fragas do Eume, Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela, Castro de Barona, Plaza del Obradoiro, Faro de Fisterra, Tower of Hercules, Cabo Vilan, Museo Naval, Monte de San Pedro, Salto De Xallas-Ezaro
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Finisterre Day Tour from Santiago
Join our wonderful day trips to Finisterre and experience the 'end of the world', where pilgrimage throughout history has found their mussel as evidence of completed pilgrimage. Book your pilgrimage at spainismore.com and get your day trip to Finisterre included in the trip.
Galicia Vacation Travel Video Guide
Travel video about destination Galicie in Spain.
Our journey through romantic northern Spain travels south through Galicia along the Atlantic coast. A Coruña is the region’s largest industrial city and shipping harbour and it thought to have been founded by the Phoenicians in 60 A.D. The Romans conquered this harbour city that has always been associated with the sea and it was from A Coruña that the invincible Spanish Armada set sail in1588 to invade England. Santiago De Compostela is the capital of Galicia and since the Middle Ages it was, apart from Jerusalem and Rome, the most important pilgrimage destination in Christendom. Half a million pilgrims came here each year from all over Europe and Spain’s most religious city continues to attract the faithful. Some centuries ago each of the large villages of the Rias Baixas prospered due to fishing, as did Pontevedra. However, all this changed when its harbour was engulfed by sand some three hundred years ago. In contrast to Spain’s many other harbour cities, the old town of Pontevedra is almost the same now as it was in bygone times with cobbled streets, intimate squares and the residential palaces of the city’s former elite. Across a huge chain bridge that spans the mouth of a deep river is Galicia`s largest city, Vigo. Its name is of Roman origin and it is believed that Vicus Spacorum was the starting-point of Caesar’s campaign against Britannia, as well as a storage area for his Empire’s oil, fish and wine. For many centuries A Guarda, ‘the Female Guard’, has watched over the river border with Portugal and in the wooded mountain city of Monte Santa Tecla the Celts established a settlement that contained more than a thousand buildings that dated back to the 6th and 3rd centuries B.C. and formed part of a prehistoric settlement. Throughout the centuries life in Galicia was not representative of that in the rest of Spain and both Romans and Moors considered it to be too remote for their interests. Maybe that’s what makes it such a special place to be!
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Vigo Tourist Attractions: 10 Top Places to Visit
Planning to visit Vigo? Check out our Vigo Travel Guide video and see top most Tourist Attractions in Vigo.
Top Places to visit in Vigo:
Islas Cies, Playa del Vao, Pazo Quinones de Leon, Parque Monte del Castro, Playa Samil, Casco Vello Vigo, El Monumento a los Caballos, Monte da Guia, Iglesia Santa Maria, Museo do Mar de Galicia
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30 PLACES to visit in SPAIN before DIE
Siurana ( Tarragona), San Pedro del Pinamar Saltworks ( Murcia), Chulilla (Valencia), Laguardia ( Álava), Almagro ( Ciudad Real), Cabárceno Natural Park (Obregón de Villaescusa, Cantabria), Mallos de Riglos ( Huesca, Aragón), Besalú ( Girona), Grazalema Natural park ( Andalucia), Orchilla Lighthouse ( Canary Islands), Fuencaliente Saltworks (Tenerife), Roques de García ( Tenerife), Anaga ( Tenerife), Caldera de Bandama ( Great Canary), Timanfaya (Lanzarote), Formentor Cape ( Mallorca), Dalt Vila (Ibiza), Barbaria Cape ( Formentera), La Mola (Menorca), Duratón (Segovia), Sil Canyon ( Ourense, Galicia), Finisterre Cape ( Coruña), Lugo Cathedral and wall ( LUGO, Galicia), Redondela viewpoint ( Pontevedra), Mendoza Castle (Madrid) Montserrat Monastery ( Barcelona), Mutriku, Deba and Zumaia cliffts ( Guipúzcoa), Peñas Cape ( Asturias), Cabañeros National Park ( Ciudad Real), Trujillo ( Extremadura).
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NORTHERN SPAIN - SO UNDERRATED ❤️North Coast of Spain | Asturias Travel Vlog
Holidays in Spain are common, but what about the North of Spain? This travel vlog from Asturias shares the coast, beaches &...⬇ Click 'Show More' ✈ Learn to travel full-time:
We spent 48 hours on a mini holiday in the North of Spain, an area known as Asturias, and staying in the city centre of Oviedo. The next few travel vlog will show exactly why we think you should take your next holiday or weekend to Northern Spain!
Principado de Asturias as it's known to the locals is still so strictly Spanish, full of tradition, culture and an incredible lifestyle... there's also an insane amount of things to do, beaches, coast, nature and more.
This was our first time seeing the North coast of Spain and we loved it - it feels untapped, there's less people, less tourism and so much more to appreciate without the hustle. For a full read on what to do with 48 hours in Asturias check out our blog post:
Northern Spain Tours should be the next thing you Google, find a way to get here soon!
Thanks to Spain Tourism and Turismo Asturias for inviting us to explore the North of Spain and share how amazing it is!
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Places to see in ( Galicia - Spain ) The Roman Walls of Lugo
Places to see in ( Galicia - Spain ) The Roman Walls of Lugo
The Roman walls of Lugo were constructed in the 3rd century and are still largely intact today, stretching over 2 kilometers around the historic centre of Lugo in Galicia.
The fortifications were inscribed on UNESCO's World Heritage List in late 2000 as the finest example of late Roman fortifications in western Europe. The walls have also held Spanish monument status (Bien de Interés Cultural) since 1921. In 2007, the walls were twinned with the Great Wall of China during a ceremony attended by China's then-ambassador to Spain, Qiu Xiaoqi.
A walkway over the walls now allows visitors to stroll along the entire length. The town also has a visitor's centre dedicated to the walls, the Centro de Interpretación de la Muralla. Since the inscription of the walls on the World Heritage List in 2000, Lugo holds a popular festival called Arde Lucus each year to celebrate its Roman past.
The city walls were built between 263 and 276 A.D. to defend the Roman town of Lucus Augusti (present-day Lugo) against local tribesmen and Germanic invaders. The walls formed part of a complex of fortifications which also included a moat and an intervallum (the clearing between the walls and the city). The entire length of the walls is around 2,120 m, enclosing an area of 34.4 hectares. Not all of the town was enclosed by walls: much of the southeastern part of the town remained unprotected, while in other places unused areas were enclosed by walls.
The width of the walls is around 4.2 m and the height of the walls varies between 8 and 12 m. The walls consist of internal and external stone facing with a core of earth mixes with gravel, pebbles and worked Roman stone recycled from demolished buildings, cemented with water.
There are 10 gates in the walls: five dating to Roman times and five added after 1853 to accommodate the expanding town population. The best preserved of the five original gates are the Porta Falsa and the Porta Miña, the latter of which still has the original vaulted arch set between two towers. Five stairways and a ramp provide access to the parapet walk over the walls. Within the walls, a number of double staircases provide access to the towers from the parapet walk.
Of the original towers, 49 are still intact, and another 39 have partially survived. The towers were built at irregular intervals along the walls. They consist of two storeys and are mostly semicircular; a few are rectangular. The gaps in the wall for the towers vary in length from 5.35 m to 12.80 m. Different materials were used for the construction of the towers. Often the base of the tower was constructed of dressed granite, with the remainder in slate. During the Middle Ages, pilgrims passed through the gates of the Lugo walls, particularly Porta Miña, on their way to Santiago de Compostela.
( Galicia - Spain ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Galicia . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Galicia - Spain
Join us for more :
10 - Days Pilgrimage to Marian Shrines, Fatima, Lourdes & Spain
5 special Camino places to experience Easter | CaminoWays.com
Easter or 'Holy Week' is widely celebrated across Spain, with many cities and towns along the Camino de Santiago hosting impressive processions. Here are five special places along the Camino where you will discover unique centuries-old Easter traditions:
-Sevilla -- Vía de la Plata
Enchanting Seville, starting point of the Vía de la Plata, is home to the most impressive and world-famous Holy Week in Spain.
Easter, along with the colourful Feria de Abril, is the most important and unique festival of the year in this stunning city. Processions and floats with religious sculptures representing the Passion of Christ, called 'pasos', parade around the streets, with the most dramatic 'pasos' on display for Holy Thursday and Good Friday (or Holy Friday).
Also along the Vía de la Plata Camino de Santiago route, the cities of Salamanca (Vía de la Plata sections 5 and 6) and Zamora (Vía de la Plata sections 6 and 7) host important Holy Week processions.
-Ferrol -- English Way
Most towns and cities in Galicia also celebrate Easter week and Ferrol hosts one of the most traditional ones.
The port city of Ferrol is the starting point of the English Way, a Camino de Santiago route traditionally followed by pilgrims from Britain and Ireland. Easter would be the perfect time of the year to start the English Camino in Ferrol, experiencing the city's most important event of the year and walking to Santiago de Compostela, where there are also colourful Easter processions all week.
-Santiago de Compostela
As capital of Galicia and destination point of the Camino de Santiago, Santiago de Compostela also hosts its own Holy Week processions with religious imagery hitting the streets for locals and visitors to admire in the beautiful setting of Santiago's Old Town.
-Lugo -- Original Way
Another city on our list for a very special Easter week is Lugo. Holy Week parades in Lugo take place in the old town, nestled within the city's famous Roman wall, the best preserved Roman wall in Europe and a UNESCO World Heritage. Lugo is the starting point for the second section of the Original route of the Camino de Santiago.
-Fisterra -- Fisterra Way
For a Camino Easter with a maritime feel, you should head to Fisterra and experience Holy Week in the heart of the Costa da Morte. The focal point of celebrations is the Church of Santa María das Areas and the Saint Christ of Fisterra, popularly known by the locals as 'The Golden Beard Christ'. Locals also reenact some of the scenes of the Passion as part of the week's proceedings.
*2014 Holy Week starts on Palm Sunday and finishes on Easter Sunday (13th -- 20st April 2014). Holy Thursday and Holy Friday (Good Friday) are usually the most important dates. Some towns might have additional events before Palm Sunday and on Easter Monday.
*Contact the CaminoWays.com travel specialists to book your Easter Camino holiday.