Madrid: A huge, pulsating, vibrant, colorful, exciting city! Madrid makes the emphatic statement that it is the capital of Spain. There is a building around each corner that has a 'national' or 'royal' somehow entangled in its name, leaving visitors in no doubt about the city's status as the political as well as geographical heart of Spain.
The vibrant nature of the city starts at the very center: the Puerta del Sol, where the famous Madrid Bear marks the so called 'Kilometer Zero' of Madrid and of Spain. From here radiate paths to everywhere, and once you you manage to extricate yourselves from the souvenir shops, the cafes, the people selling beer cans on the street, the people handing out leaflets and jabbering away in Spanish you can slowly start taking in the wonders that Madrid has to offer.
Everything,
everything in Madrid is worth seeing! The crazy melee of the El Rastro street market on a Sunday which almost supersedes Mumbai fashion street, the wonderful square of Plaza Mayor with its outdoor restaurants (and its staring japanese tourists), the broad Paseo del Prada street lined with a number of top class art museums of the world, the Las Ventas Bullring - the largest in Spain, the spanish royal palace with its mere 2800 rooms, the innumerable pubs, restaurants, cafes, discos, tablaos - and at least as important as the buildings and the monuments, the atmosphere and the people!
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| Puerta del Sol |
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| Puerta del Sol |
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| Paseo del Prada |
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| Plaza Mayor |
I always appreciate the interactions with Spaniards I have had so far. In France and also Italy, when people know you don't speak their language you are treated with thinly veiled impatience, bordering on disdain. Travelling in Spain too means meeting people who don't speak a word of English. The difference I find here though, is that there is no resentment about the fact that you don't speak Spanish. People go on chattering away in such an unaffected way, its fascinating. Then the last resort of course is the universal language: hand gestures!
A two and half hour train ride on the super-fast AVE express train brings you 600 km south from Madrid and into the province of Andalusia - the erstwhile Muslim stronghold in Spain, later the Spanish gateway to its colonies in the Americas, today the southernmost of the 17 provinces of Spain, and a traveler's paradise..
Andalusia has tremendous diversity in physical features - it has two coasts, the Atlantic and the Mediterranean, it has numerous hills and mountains, notable among which is the Sierra Nevada, and a number of river plains and hillsides perfect for olives, oranges and the like. It has its strong cultural identity within Spain as well, and is the birthplace of flamenco and bullfighting.
The Moorish rule still has its remnant effects, with inner courtyards of houses remind you very much of Morocco, even though the town on the whole might look essentially Spanish.
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| Doorway in Seville |
We actually managed to see a good deal of the province considering the short time of 4 days we spent there. We made our way through the capital city of Seville, and also other culturally important places like Cordoba, Granada and Ronda, before finishing off in Malaga on the Mediterranean coast.
Cordoba was in the middle ages the largest, most sophisticated, and most cosmopolitan city in the world. The great mosque of Cordoba, erected in is period, stands witness to those days. After the 'Reconquista' by catholic Spain, this mosque was converted into a cathedral, known now as the Mezquita. It is a massive, impressive structure, with its famous double arches with the 'Candy look' enhancing the feeling of Infinity.
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| The Mezquita: Cordoba |
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| The Mezquita: Cordoba |
Seville is today an exciting, charming, beautiful city, though very different to what it must have been in ages past - first as a Moorish stronghold, then as the monopolistic port for trade with the Americas. The Giralda is the erstwhile mosque minaret, now the bell tower of the Seville cathedral. The Plaza de Espana, built is the 1920's, is a comparatively newer addition in Seville's already impressive heritage monuments list, and today houses a number of offices of the government of Andalusia.
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| Giralda: Seville |
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| Giralda: Seville |
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| Giralda from the gateway of Seville Fortress |
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| Plaza de Espana: Seville |
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| Plaza de Espana: Seville |
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| Plaza de Espana: Seville |
The jewel of the city of
Granada is the magnificent Alhambra palace, overlooking the city from its lofty hilltop perch. The fabulous Nasreen palace, the fortified battlements, the vast gardens - and all with the incredibly serene motif of running water everywhere - is an absolute treat to the senses.
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| Nasreen Palace, Alhambra: Granada |
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| Nasreen Palace, Alhambra: Granada |
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| Alhambra Gardens: Granada |
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| Alhambra Gardens: Granada |
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| Alhambra Gardens: Granada |
Ronda, set in the hilly Andalusian countryside, has some spectacular and dramatic views. The city is literally of a cliff edge, with a dramatic arched bridge at the city center, with the city sloping off on either side of the bridge and a view of kilometers of wilderness on the other side.
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| Ronda City center |

Spain!
Indeed a
Puerta - a Gate - to unlimited fascination for an avid traveler!