Andalusia 2019 - Part 9 - Antequera
Jan. 19th, 2024 08:41 pmThe day after Cadiz, we spent the morning in Antequera, which is a delightfully named town which became even more evocative when the tour guide explained it was called that because it was old when the Romans came.
Local tourism board - https://antequera.co.uk/
Andalusian tourism board - https://www.andalucia.org/en/antequera
We arrived near the Tourist Office and walked along to one of the squares which had some pretty fountains:


From there, we walked up the hill to the arch of the giants, created for Philip II of Spain.

Past the arch lies the Real Colegiata de Santa MarĂa la Mayor (https://www.andalucia.org/en/antequera-cultural-tourism-real-colegiata-de-santa-maria-la-mayor)

I also managed to get probably my best photo technically of the trip, capturing the flag fluttering in the breeze.

From the top of the hill you could get a very nice view over the whole town.


There is a distinctly large number of churches per square foot. According to the tourism board it has the highest churches per person in Spain, and I could believe it. In a panorama shot that didn't quite come out, unfortunately, I managed to get 15 church spires in one shot.

I must admit my favourite bit of decoration was this graffiti.

The photo I'm sharing outside a cut is from the top of the hill too. In the distance, you can see a hill that looks like a man's face coming out of the ground. The hill is called the Lover's Rock (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pe%C3%B1a_de_los_Enamorados) and has the exact starcrossed lover's throwing themselves off of it stories you'd imagine.

We had a very nice lunch in the town square, and then on to our next destination.
Local tourism board - https://antequera.co.uk/
Andalusian tourism board - https://www.andalucia.org/en/antequera
We arrived near the Tourist Office and walked along to one of the squares which had some pretty fountains:


From there, we walked up the hill to the arch of the giants, created for Philip II of Spain.

Past the arch lies the Real Colegiata de Santa MarĂa la Mayor (https://www.andalucia.org/en/antequera-cultural-tourism-real-colegiata-de-santa-maria-la-mayor)

I also managed to get probably my best photo technically of the trip, capturing the flag fluttering in the breeze.

From the top of the hill you could get a very nice view over the whole town.


There is a distinctly large number of churches per square foot. According to the tourism board it has the highest churches per person in Spain, and I could believe it. In a panorama shot that didn't quite come out, unfortunately, I managed to get 15 church spires in one shot.

I must admit my favourite bit of decoration was this graffiti.

The photo I'm sharing outside a cut is from the top of the hill too. In the distance, you can see a hill that looks like a man's face coming out of the ground. The hill is called the Lover's Rock (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pe%C3%B1a_de_los_Enamorados) and has the exact starcrossed lover's throwing themselves off of it stories you'd imagine.

We had a very nice lunch in the town square, and then on to our next destination.