Saturday, July 28, 2012

Improvements must-see attractions in Girona, Costa Brava Near The


Girona, Girona in Catalan is also the official name of the city, the capital of one of the four provinces of Catalonia (the four provinces are Barcelona, ​​Girona, Lleida and Tarragona). Located 75 m above sea level, its origins date back to 77 a. C., when Pompey built a oppidum in Via Heraclea and the Romans founded the original occupants Gerona, called in Latin Gerunda.

Girona Cathedral

Girona Cathedral is dedicated to Santa Maria, is at the highest point of the city, has the widest Gothic nave in the world with a total size of 22.98 meters. It is also the second widest in any style, behind St. Peter's in the Vatican that has a width of 25 meters. Its construction began in the eleventh century in Romanesque style, following in the thirteenth to the Gothic building is the Romanesque cloister of the twelfth and the tower of the same period dating from 1040.

In 1606 became the first stone of the facade but the works were delayed and did not continue until 1680, standing back and moving slowly over the following years. Until 1960 not closed the book and the next two years, local sculptors Josep M. Bohigas, Casamor Antoni Jaume Busquets and Domènec Fita made monumental sculptures were installed in the niches empty. The facade is baroque-classicist, divided into three sections as an altarpiece. Over the last body opens a large crowned with a pediment and oculus above are open seven openings or segmental arch. The niches or niches of the three bodies are separated by paired columns and occupied by sculptures.

For schedules and other information visit the website of the Cathedral.

La Rambla: Gerona backbone

Backbone of the old medieval and Baroque octocentista Gerona, the Rambla has become the busiest public space and emblematic of Gerona. However, the existence of the ravine is very recent, and its configuration data from 1885, a period in which the municipal architect Martí Sureda i Deulovol unified Square Street sprouts with the trough and the arcades of the esparto grass did down. The entire space became, since then, in a tree-lined, lime trees, and benches were. It was called La Rambla de la Libertad honoring the tree of liberty planted in 1869, during the six years of democracy. Despite the reforms, currently still retains some medieval arcades and some of the palaces of the same era. You can rent an apartment in Girona or near the city, such as renting an apartment on the Costa Brava, a half hour or an hour (depends on the people) in the city.

Bridges: representative of the city buildings

The bridges can be seen around the city linking the two parts of the Girona Oñar separated by the river, ie, the Old Town and the neighborhood of Mercadal. Unfortunately, today there are none of the medieval bridges crossing the river and most of the buildings are contemporary. Among them are four: the Stone Bridge, Iron Bridge, the Bridge of Gomez and the railway viaduct.

Gomez Bridge (which carries the name of the person to whom the house was expropriated to build the bridge) dates from 1916 and nineteenth-century style breaks the previous bridges, with a modern concrete structure and austere.

The Stone Bridge (Pont de Pedra or Isabel II), built in 1849 and substitute the medieval bridge connecting the two neighborhoods of the city.

The Railway Viaduct, built in 1876, represented the coming of modernity and progress to a walled remained Gerona.

The Iron Bridge (Pont de Ferro or Pont de Eiffel in honor of Gustave Eiffel and his company built the bridge), dates from 1876, and represented a breakthrough in terms of unity and cohesion of the city.

Do not forget that in Catalonia there are also many cultural villages you can visit and rent, for example, an apartment in Sitges.

The most historic areas of the city

In Roman times, the old town of Girona was the center of the city and now is important because it is much more important artistic heritage of the city. One of its features that make it more attractive is that it is surrounded by huge walls of wall that can be covered by the Archaeological and Passeig Passeig the Wall.

Over a thousand years of history come together in the former Gerona, which revolves around the Cathedral, with a single nave, built between the XIV and XVII. At the foot of the temple lies the call, or Jewish quarter, a labyrinth of streets in which stands Bonastruc ça Porta Centre.

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