Burgos Cathedral

The Route of Santiago de Compostela

Atapuerca

Los monasterios de San Millán de la Cogolla

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Burgos was founded in 884, and its historical heritage is always evident to the visitor. The Old Quarter preserves Renaissance churches and palaces. It is a monumental town, with a typical medieval castilian feel to it. The city's remarkable Gothic cathedral is a building of exceptional beauty, and one of the country's largest. It is here the the tomb of 'El Cid' lays. There are many more important monuments such as the Cartuja de Miraflores or the Monastery of Las Huelgas. The town is quiet and very clean, and famed for exquisite cuisine. It also has excelent shopping, where you can find everything from english newspapers to Cheddar Cheese.






Guggenheim Museum Bilbao

The Basque Country

Castilla and Leon Tourist Board Site

Santo Domingo de la Calzada (Spanish)

La Rioja (Spanish)

Burgos (Spanish)









La Sierra de la Demanda

Castile and León History & Culture

Castile and León (Castilla y León) is the heartland of Spain -historically, aesthetically and culturally- and is the region that shaped the nation's history. Its lofty central plains with open skies was frontier land, where castles and walled towns marked the slow push south of Christian forces in their struggle against the Moors. Spain's legendary hero, El Cid, was born here and was instrumental in the expulsion of the Moors from the region.
Castile's vernacular language emerged as the literary language of the nation, and epic poems were penned to celebrate Spain's heroes, like El Cid. The age of discovery brought forth soldiers and priests with the banner of the Castle and the Lion to create a Spanish empire overseas. Castilla y León is a mystical land where there are as many churches as there are fortified ramparts. "Castile," the famous sixteenth century mystic Saint Teresa of Ávila used to say, "is where you are closer to God." Teresa, quintessentially Castilian, combined mysticism with sound common sense, and indeed the men and women of Castile and León have been shaped by harsh winters and seeringly hot dry summers into people of forbearance and fortitude that are known for their austerity and innate sense of pride. Castilian villages of stone and wood with porticoed central squares are equally austere but nevertheless enchanting.


Once made up of several kingdoms, Castile and León today forms the largest autonomous region, composed of nine provinces: Avila, Burgos, León, Palencia, Salamanca, Segovia, Soria, Valladolid, and Zamora. Each has its own marked identity but all share an extremely rich heritage. The capitals of all nine provinces were well established cities in the early Middle Ages and each boasts a cathedral and scores of monasteries and convents from the past. The pilgrims' route to Santiago de Compostela, which passed through the provinces of Burgos, Palencia and León, introduced Romanesque and then Gothic architecture and art forms into the region, and a magnificent cultural legacy emerged that combined new aesthetic ideas with the region's inherent spirituality.


In gastronomy, Castile and León is renowned for its baby lamb and suckling pig, its superb chorizo sausage, hearty bean stews and garlic soup. The region is also a premiere producer of splendid wines that come from the Ribera del Duero, Rueda and Toro wine regions.

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