Ronda Sights

  1. Alameda del Tajo Park

    Behind the Plaza de Toros, spectacular cliff-top views open out from Paseo de Blas Infante and the leafy Alameda del Tajo Park nearby. The park has a good play area for younger children.

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  2. Casa del Rey Moro

    For a more dramatic view of the river and gorge go to the Casa del Rey Moro. Here, terraced gardens give access to La Mina, an Islamic stairway of over 300 steps that are cut into the rock all the way down to the river at the bottom of the gorge. These steps enabled Ronda to maintain water supplies when it was under attack. It was also the point where Christian troops forced entry in 1485. The steps are not well lit and are steep and wet in places. Care should be taken, even by the fit and able.

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  3. Iglesia de Santa María La Mayor

    A minute's walk southeast from the Palacio de Mondragón is the city's original mosque, now the ornate Iglesia de Santa María La Mayor . Just inside the church entrance is an arch covered with Arabic inscriptions, which was part of the mosque's mihrab (prayer niche indicating the direction of Mecca). The church has been declared a national monument, and its interior is an orgy of decorative styles and ornamentation.

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  4. Museo del Bandolero

    The amusing Museo del Bandolero is dedicated to the banditry for which central Andalucía was once renowned. Old prints reflect that when the youthful bandoleros (bandits) were not being shot, hanged or garrotted by the authorities they were stabbing each other in the back, literally as much as figuratively.

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  5. Museo Taurino

    The Museo Taurino is crammed with bullfighting memorabilia such as blood-spattered costumes worn by Pedro Romero and 1990's star Jesulín de Ubrique. It also includes photos of famous fans such as Orson Welles and Ernest Hemingway, whose novel Death in the Afternoon provides in-depth insight into the fear and tension of the bullring.

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  6. Palacio de Mondragón

    Nearly all of the mansions still bear the crest of each family, including the Palacio de Mondragón. Built for Abomelic, ruler of Ronda in 1314, the palace retains its internal courtyards and fountains, the most impressive of these being the Patio Mudejar, from which a horseshoe arch leads into a cliff-top garden with splendid views. It houses the city museum with artefacts and information especially related to both Roman and Islamic funerary systems.

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  7. Palacio del Marqués de Salvatierra

    Just before you reach the Old Bridge you will pass the Palacio del Marqués de Salvatierra, a huge mansion that required the demolition of 42 houses for it to be built. Owned by the descendants of the Marqués de Moctezuma, the Governor of South America, the palace is decorated on its portal with carvings of native American Indians. The palace and all its antiques are sometimes open to the public.

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  8. Paseo de Blas Infante

    Behind the Plaza de Toros, spectacular cliff-top views open out from Paseo de Blas Infante.

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  9. Plaza de España

    Directly across the Puente Nuevo is the main square, Plaza de España , made famous by Hemingway in his novel For Whom the Bell Tolls . Chapter 10 tells how early in the Civil War the 'fascists' of a small town were rounded up in the ayuntamiento (town hall), clubbed and made to walk the gauntlet between two lines of townspeople before being thrown off the cliff. The episode is based on events that took place here in Plaza de España. What was the ayuntamiento is now Ronda's parador.

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  10. Plaza de Toros

    Ronda's elegant Plaza de Toros is a mecca for bullfighting aficionados. In existence for more than 200 years, it is one of the oldest and most revered bullrings in Spain. It has also been the site of some of the most important events in bullfighting history. Built by Martín Aldehuela, the bullring is universally admired for its soft sandstone hues and galleried arches.

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  12. Puente Nuevo

    Straddling the dramatic gorge and the Río Guadalevín (Deep River) is Ronda's most recognisable sight, the towering Puente Nuevo, best viewed from the Camino de los Molinos, which runs along the bottom of the gorge. The bridge separates the old and new towns.

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  13. Puente Viejo

    Taking the narrow Calle Marqués de Salvatierra will bring you to the small Puente Viejo, with views down onto the river as it rushes into the gorge.

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  14. Puerta de Almocábar

    The Old Town is surrounded by massive fortress walls pierced by two ancient gates: the Islamic Puerta de Almocábar, which in the 13th century was the main gateway to the castle; and the 16th-century Puerta de Carlos V. Inside, the Islamic layout remains intact, and its maze of narrow streets now takes its character from the Renaissance mansions of powerful families whose predecessors accompanied Fernando el Católico in the taking of the city in 1485.

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  15. Puerta de Carlos V

    The Old Town is surrounded by massive fortress walls pierced by two ancient gates: the Islamic Puerta de Almocábar, which in the 13th century was the main gateway to the castle; and the 16th-century Puerta de Carlos V . Inside, the Islamic layout remains intact, and its maze of narrow streets now takes its character from the Renaissance mansions of powerful families whose predecessors accompanied Fernando el Católico in the taking of the city in 1485.

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