Towering 650m over the central
highlands of Spain, Madrid is the country's capital city. With a population of 3 million
inhabitants, Madrid is the political, economic and cultural hub of the country. Though it
only has a few major monuments, it features more than 50 museums. The most renowned is the
Museo del Prado, which dates from 1819 and is one of the most beautiful museums in all of
Europe.
Barcelona was built around its port on the
Mediterranean Sea. The long-standing capital of the autonomous community of Catalonia,
this city of 1.5 million inhabitants has always had its sights turned north towards
Europe, making for a very unique identity, compared to the nation's other cities. The
emblem of Barcelona lies in the northern part of the city, in the Eixample district: the
Sagrada Familia basilica. Its construction was undertaken in 1884 and it remains
unfinished. This stunning testament to the genius of its architect, Gaudí, is topped with
spindle-shaped towers and bears witness to its creator's outlandish taste for symbolism
and the exuberant shapes of nature.
Hanging from the
southern tip of Europe and facing Africa, Andalusia cultivates a strong personality
inherited through centuries of travels, conquests and brilliant civilisations. Located at
the feet of the Sierra Morena and Sierra Nevada mountain chains, whose highest summits
shine under their perpetual snow, the region's palaces, mosques and gardens evoke the
golden age of the Moor Kingdoms. The riches may have passed, but the cultural and natural
landscape remains the same: flamenco, bull-fighting, unbridled
ferias, arid mountains dotted with small villages and
the beaches of the Costa del Sol. The sunny Andalusian coastline follows the Mediterranean
Sea over some 300km, from Gibraltar to Almería, at the foothills of the Sierras. A
veritable tourist Mecca since the 1970s, the Costa del Sol's mild winters and festive
summer nights more than make up for its rather stony beaches.
The political and cultural capital of Andalusia, Seville is an energetic
little town that loves to celebrate its corridas and
annual feria. During Holy Week, masked penitents lead a
procession through the city's streets. Central to the city is its Gothic cathedral, third
largest in Europe and built during the 15th century on the former site of an Almohad
mosque. The cathedral features a funerary monument which is rumoured to contain the ashes
of Christopher Columbus, though the fact is disputed by the cathedral of Santo Domingo, in
the Dominican Republic, which also claims to hold the explorer's final
remains.
A historical and cultural anachronism,
Gibraltar is an overseas territory of the United Kingdom whose population is largely
catholic and Spanish-speaking. Covering a mere
6km2, its territory, which is only attached to
Spain by a long spit of sand, lies behind the famous rock which guards the strait that
separates Africa from Europe. Slightly sloping towards the Atlantic Ocean, the Rock of
Gibraltar constitutes a 425m vertical wall on its Mediterranean side. Visitors can learn
more about the area at the Gibraltar Museum. Home to a number of more or less wild
monkeys, the rock, which can only be reached by cable-car, offers an exceptional view of
the strait and Morocco.
Four of the 16 Balearic
Islands are inhabited. The largest and most visited, Majorca
(3,604km2), is also the one whose landscape is the
most varied. Its capital, Palma, is located on the southern coast of the island and is
surrounded by most of the major beach resorts. Minorca
(680km2) is five times smaller than Majorca and
much less frequented by travellers. The most easterly of the Balearics, it is a sparsely
wooded low-lying island surrounded by craggy cliffs and magnificent coves. The island's
capital, Mahón, is located on the eastern coast, above a large gulf. Legend has it that
the city's name was the inspiration for the French word mayonnaise, which started
appearing on French tables after France's 1756 conquest Minorca. The third largest
Balearic Island is the "White Island" of Ibiza
(572km2). Its uneven terrain and jagged coasts hide
a myriad of isolated creeks. Discovered by hippies and artists during the 1960s, it is a
major tourist destination which has nonetheless managed to retain its unique character.
The contrasts are striking between the urbanizaciones
that surround its beautiful teeming beaches, and the central inland area, where stepped
fields abound in poppies in springtime and the farms and fortified villages of Arab
inspiration recall Andalusia.
Seven islands of
volcanic origin make up the Canaries, which seem to surge from the depths of the ocean, a
short distance from Africa. Forming one of Spain's 17 autonomous communities, the islands
definitely have a unique character. The largest and most popular island is Tenerife, which
lies at the foot of a lighthouse and is commonly referred to as the "island of eternal
spring." The island's extremely varied landscape ranges from rocky coasts and volcanic
terrain to long sandy beaches and quasi-tropical valleys. On the northeastern part of the
island is Santa Cruz, a city with a population of 219,000 inhabitants which became the
capital of Tenerife in 1821. Its port, the second largest in Spain, welcomes cargo ships,
oil tankers and cruise ships year round.