West Facade of Cathedral of Ávila (Catedral del Salvador de Áv

Photos of the Cathedral of Ávila

The Cathedral of Avila was constructed throughout an architectural transition period from Romanesque to Gothic, and is thought to be the first Gothic cathedral in Spain. Construction began on the apse in 1091, when Gothic design was in its infancy in Spain. But more than the interesting melding of Romanesque and Gothic is the melting of the militaristic and ecclesiastical in the temple. The apse of the cathedral is built into the city wall, incorporating a fortified, crenelated eastern facade.

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Western Facade of Iglesia de San Pedro in Ávila

Photos of Iglesia de San Pedro

Iglesia de San Pedro in Ávila was built from the early-mid 12th century until the 13th century, with periodic work stoppages evidenced by changing architecture and decoration. The church has a Latin cross plan, with three naves that terminate in semicircular apses. It lies outside the city walls, separated from from the turret fortification of Ávila’s cathedral by Calle de San Segundo and Plaza de Santa Teresa.

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Booms, Bones, and Boondoggles in Valencia

Valencia wasn’t originally on our list of cities to see, so it’s funny that it was our longest non-Madrid stay in Spain. However, we were looking to slow down a bit and also kill a little bit of time in Spain before we had to be back in Madrid to pick up our foreigner identity cards, and a beach town seemed like as good an option as any.

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Cathedrals Old and New in Salamanca

The star attraction in Salamanca, at least for us, was the cathedral, or more accurately, cathedrals. When the parish outgrew their 14th-century cathedral, they decided to leave it standing and just build the much larger “new” cathedral. The Cathedral of the Assumption of the Virgin (Catedral de la Asunción de la Virgen), more commonly known as the New Cathedral (Catedral Nueva), was built between 1513-1733 (consecrated in 1733). The cathedrals share a wall, and it was really neat to see the two styles literally next to each other.

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Photos of La Catedral de Santa María de Salamanca (Catedral Vieja)

Construction on La Catedral de Santa María, now known as the “Old Cathedral” of Salamanca, was started in the 12th century and completed in the 13th. Owing to the availability of space for a replacement and the need for a place of worship, the Old Cathedral was saved from destruction when the New Cathedral (Catedral de la Asunción de la Virgen) was built starting in 1520 (and lasting until 1733). The New Cathedral was built astride the Old Cathedral, and so share a wall; the Old Cathedral lost its northern transept and width in its left aisle (Evangelical nave).

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