How to fill a day in central Spain
Saturday, January 17th, 2009 08:40 pmI am getting the sleeper train from Paris to Madrid when I go to Gibraltar for Pesach; it'll be my first time on a sleeper train. The concept strikes me as very Victorian...
Once I get there, I'll have a day and a half to fill and to get to Gibraltar before Pesach comes in. My mother suggested seeing Toledo, a city with a significant Jewish history. Does anyone here have recommendations as to what to see in Toledo and/or Madrid?
The RENFE (Spanish train company) web site gives me only two trains a day from Madrid to Algeciras; though Rail Europe says the timetable isn't released until sixty days beforehand, so maybe if I wait more trains will turn up (or the times will change). One of the two is too late for me; it arrives across the bay and the border from Gibraltar three minutes after candle-lighting; the other is early in the morning.
If that remains the case, I think I'll probably go back to Madrid and stay overnight there, since trains to Algeciras go from Madrid, not Toledo; but it's annoying that I can't pin down my arrangements until early in February...
Once I get there, I'll have a day and a half to fill and to get to Gibraltar before Pesach comes in. My mother suggested seeing Toledo, a city with a significant Jewish history. Does anyone here have recommendations as to what to see in Toledo and/or Madrid?
The RENFE (Spanish train company) web site gives me only two trains a day from Madrid to Algeciras; though Rail Europe says the timetable isn't released until sixty days beforehand, so maybe if I wait more trains will turn up (or the times will change). One of the two is too late for me; it arrives across the bay and the border from Gibraltar three minutes after candle-lighting; the other is early in the morning.
If that remains the case, I think I'll probably go back to Madrid and stay overnight there, since trains to Algeciras go from Madrid, not Toledo; but it's annoying that I can't pin down my arrangements until early in February...
no subject
Date: 2009-01-17 11:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-01-17 11:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-01-18 07:58 am (UTC)There's not a lot in Madrid itself. Some really fantastic art galleries, but you don't care for art galleries. Other than that you just want to do the obvious tourist circuit (there's a palace, I forget the details, but you can't really miss it), especially if you have little time there. The city itself is not especially attractive or architecturally interesting, mostly concrete and square, really. There are some cool bronzes dotted around, and nice city parks.
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Date: 2009-01-18 08:51 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-01-18 09:08 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-01-18 09:45 am (UTC)Thanks; this was precisely the sort of information I was after.
Basically the Jewish bits are the Abulafia synagogue and the Santa Maria la Blanca (sp?) church which used to be a synagogue and then a mosque, neither of which you can miss.
Does the Santa Maria la Blanca church have dead people in it?
There's not a lot in Madrid itself.
I thought: it's not historic, but then I thought: it was selected as capital four hundred years ago—that still gives it more history than, say, almost anywhere in the New World.
Some really fantastic art galleries, but you don't care for art galleries.
Well, don't care much, or on my own, it would be better to say.
Other than that you just want to do the obvious tourist circuit (there's a palace, I forget the details, but you can't really miss it), especially if you have little time there.
Okay. Unless there's anywhere more interesting between there and the south you think should take preference.
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Date: 2009-01-18 10:05 am (UTC)Toledo is definitely the most interesting city within easy range of Madrid. One option rather than hanging out in the city might be to go to San Lorenzo de El Escorial, the palace of the Bourbon kings. It has a cathedral, and the crypt where all the past Spanish monarchs are buried, obviously full of dead people, but in spite of being named after a saint it is not itself a church, it's mostly a palace with gardens. Both more historically interesting and more beautiful to look at than Madrid itself.
no subject
Date: 2009-01-18 12:24 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-01-18 06:12 pm (UTC)