Alicante is a Spanish city at the Costa Blanca coastline, where visitors enjoy one of Europe’s mildest climates. It is wonderful to come here all year round with the many hours of sunshine, the tasty Spanish Mediterranean cuisine and the lovely sandy beaches along the entire coast north and south of Alicante.
Alicante, with its more than 300,000 inhabitants, is a metropolis with a long and interesting history. And there are a lot of sights in the cozy streets and squares of the old city. Sights are from present day Alicante and from bygone eras, and the two fortified castles on top of the city hills come on top of it all. The castles of Castillo de Santa Bárbara and Castillo San Fernando are testimonies to the importance of the city throughout history.
Fine parks, elegant promenades and the modern marina are places defining Alicante today. City life thrives here where the cultural offer is full of activities. And a walk along the grand harbor promenade, Explanada de España, is a must do when in the coastal city.
There are many things to do in the vicinity of Alicante as well; such as a visit to the inland nature and Costa Blanca’s fine sandy beaches. Furthermore, it is very easy to get to the beaches with the modern light rail connecting Alicante with Benidorm.
Alicante Cathedral was built on the remains of a Moorish mosque. The style is Herrero Renaissance, and the building was designed by Agustín Bernardino. The construction lasted in the period 1613-1662. The cathedral’s cloister buildings with the archways are older and were built in the 15th century.
After the original constructions, expansions were later carried out in the Baroque style; among others the Communion Chapel/Capilla de la Comunión from the 18th century. The chapel is considered a fine example of Spanish Baroque.
Of the cathedral’s other interior, it is the altar that is particularly interesting. At the altar you can see Alicante’s patron saint, Saint Nicholas, who according to history was bishop of Myra in the 4th century. Above the church’s ground plan, which is like a Latin cross, rests the beautiful and 45 meter high dome.
On the remains of a former mosque, the Gothic Basilica de Santa María was built in the 14th century, making it Alicante’s oldest church building. Since its construction, however, the church has been rebuilt and changed several times, which happened, among other things, after a fire in the 15th century. The baroque entrance was also added later.
The interior is very exciting, and here you can experience the gilded rococo high altar from the 18th century and some beautiful chapels. The church’s baptismal font was made in Carrera marble at the end of the 16th century and is by the Michelangelo school. The Basilica of the Virgin Mary also contains a large collection of documents dating back to the 13th century.
Alicante’s famous and beautiful esplanade was built on a dammed area by the water and along the city’s large marina. With its shady palm trees, flower decorations and elegant undulating marble pavement, it is a very nice place for a walk and it is an opportunity to observe the outdoor life in southern Spain.
Before the esplanade there was a quay here, and the esplanade was realized in its first version in 1867 according to the design of the city architect José Guardiola Picó. Today there is a newer design where you walk around 500 meters on approximately 6.6 million tiles.
Mercado Central is Alicante’s central market for the sale of, among other things, fish, fruit, vegetables and flowers. The market was built in the years 1911-1912 in a style inspired by modernism and church buildings. For example, you can see a small rotunda in the south-west corner of the market.
It was the local architect Juan Vidal Ramos who designed the market building, just as he was behind other contemporary buildings in Alicante. Mercado Central was built on the remains of the walls that surrounded Alicante from the 18th century.
Alicante’s city hall is a very fine example of the city’s civil baroque buildings. It was designed by Lorenzo Chápuli, and construction started in 1701 on the site where the city’s former town hall also stood. Construction lasted most of the century.
The impressive facade is 50 meters wide and is flanked by the two characteristic town hall towers. At the foot of the town hall’s main staircase is the so-called Cota Cero, which is the reference point for all height measurements throughout Spain.
Of particular interest inside is the Blue Room/Salón Azul with its side chapel and the Plenary Hall/Salón de Plenos. On a tour you can also enjoy art by, among others, Amorós, Cabrera and Gastón Castelló, who came from Alicante.
At the top of the ridge Monte Benacantil is the castle Castillo de Santa Bárbara, which was originally founded in the 8th century. The location is fantastically beautiful towards the sea, and from the place 166 meters up there is a wonderful view of Alicante. The castle was a Moorish fortress from the 8th century. Troops from Castile captured the facility on December 4, 1248, and as this day was the name day of the saint Barbara, the place got its current name.
Santa Bárbara Castle’s three primary buildings date from the 14th, 16th and 18th centuries. The 14th-century complex La Torreta is at the top and bottom, while the most important buildings date from the 16th-century expansion. From this time you can see, among other things, the Salón Felipe II hall, the Cuerpo de Guardia guardhouse and the Patio de Armas parade area. In the 18th century, for example, the raveline Revellín de la Reina was built.
On a tour of the castle, you can look at the various fortifications, various exhibitions and, of course, enjoy the view. Monte Benacantil is also worth seeing from below when you are in the beach area along the water at Playa Postiguet. From here you can see a rocky outcrop on the mountain itself, which has great similarities to the profile of a human face. The projection is then also called the Mason’s Face/la Cara del Moro.
At Santa Bárbara Borg, the so-called CAPA collection/Colección CAPA is on display. Both indoors and outdoors, the works and collection of the sculptor, collector and city boy Eduardo Capa are displayed. With the exhibition, Capa wanted to make it possible to get to know Spanish contemporary art.
The CAPA collection is one of the largest collections of recent Spanish sculptural art in the world. The artworks are from the 1800s and 1900s, and they were executed by, among others, Salvador Dalí, Martín Chirino and Eduardo Capa’s son Fernando.
In the castle grounds, you can also visit the Alicante City Museum/Museo de la Ciudad de Alicante. At the museum, there are various themed exhibitions about, for example, people and events that have developed the city, and there are also a number of effects to experience here.
At Alicante’s archaeological museum, visitors can take a trip to the city’s and area’s past. The particularly distinguished collection contains more than 80,000 objects, which in permanent exhibitions go through several themes; prehistory, Iberian culture, Roman culture, medieval and modern times. There are also changing exhibitions.
Among the most valuable effects in the museum is the Woman from Guardamar/Dama de Guardamar, which is a 50 centimeter high bust from approximately 400 BC. The bust was found in the excavation of the Phoenician settlement Cabezo Lucero.
The museum building is the former hospital San Juan de Dios, which was built in the years 1926-1929 and designed by the architect Juan Vidal Ramos. The museum opened its doors here in 2000.
San Fernando Fortress was built in the early 1800s to strengthen Alicante’s defenses against a possible invading French army led by Napoleon.
Castillo San Fernando was named after Fernando VII, who was the king of Spain at the time of construction. However, the fortress never had a military role, and is now designated as a recreational area. You are also rewarded with a fine view from the fortress, which is located on the ridge of Monte Tossal.
The Plaza de los Luceros is a beautifully landscaped square that is often the focal point of large-scale celebrations in Alicante. The square took on its current appearance in 1930, when Alicante artist Daniel Bañuls Martínez’s central, monumental fountain was erected.
The square was still undeveloped when it was laid out as Independence Square/Plaza de la Independencia in 1908, commemorating the uprising against French troops on May 2, 1808. In 1934, the square changed its name to Plaza de Cataluña, and in 1940 it got its current name.
Gravina Art Museum is a museum housed in a mansion that was built in the years 1748-1808 as the residence of the Count of Lumiares; the house is then also called the Palacio del Conde de Lumiares. The count had come to the city with his family in the mid-1700s, and he had the new mansion built on the ruins of an earlier house that had perished during the War of the Spanish Succession.
The house’s beautiful facade is built in stone from the nearby San Julian Mountains, and the very nice vaulted lower floors were formerly used as warehouses.
Today, the mansion houses a provincial archive as well as the Gravina Art Museum, which is one of Alicante province’s art museums. The works in the collection mainly span the period from the 16th century to the beginning of the 20th century, and here are more than 500 works of art by artists such as Rodrigo de Osona, Francisco Salzillo, Vicente López and Antonio Gisbert.
Alicante is blessed with a mild climate and a warm Mediterranean Sea, which in season brings many tourists and locals who want a ride in the waves. Along the coasts north and south of the city, there are many bathing opportunities, and there are also in the city center itself.
Playa del Postiguet is a 900 meter long sandy beach, which is located immediately north-east of the city’s large marina and old town. The high season for swimming is mid-June to mid-October, but it’s always delicious to take a walk along the beach.
Palacio Carbonell is one of the beautiful and impressive mansions that line the Explanada de España. It was built in the years 1920-1925 with French inspiration according to drawings by the local architect Juan Vidal Ramos.
The mansion was built as shops and tenements by businessman Enrique Carbonell, after whom it is named. There used to be a market by the harbor at this location, and the new building was a good example of the skills of the bourgeoisie at the beginning of the 20th century.
Plaza de Gabriel Miró is a square located one block from the promenade Explanada de España, and it is an elegant respite in the center of the city close to the sea. Beneath the trees stands Alicante artist Vicente Bañuls’ 19th-century fountain La Aguadora.
The square is also called Postpladsen/Plaza de Correos, and this is because the city’s main post office was located here. You can still see the beautiful post and telegraph building, which is located on the south-west corner of the square.
In the past, the sea reached the current site, and fishermen often put their boats to dry after a trip to the sea. In the 16th century, King Felipe II had a building built to store salt, and it was reconstructed and rebuilt as a post office in 1920.
Marina Alicante is the city’s marina and at the same time a lovely place for a stroll. Here are elegant surroundings, large and modern yachts and a fine view of the city profile. Around the marina there are also various shopping facilities and entertainment.
For example, you can visit Casino Mediterrani Alacant and Museo The Ocean Race, which is a maritime museum which focuses on the racing The Ocean Race. Along the harbor you can also try rides in the Mundo de los Niños park.
Alicante’s bullring was built in 1848. It was later expanded several times; most significantly in 1888. The arena is used for many different purposes such as concerts and sports matches.
In connection with the arena is the Bullfighting Museum/Museo Taurino, which primarily depicts the heroes among local bullfighters and their exploits, equipment and the like. Celebrities within the genre include Vicente Blau and Francisco Antón.
The Roman city of Lucentum is the forerunner of present-day Alicante. Lucentum was founded in the 3rd century BC and the city was inhabited until the end of the 2nd century. At that time, the neighboring city, present-day Elche, had overtaken Lucentum.
The archaeological excavations of the 30,000 m² area started in the 18th century; initially without reference to Lucentum. In 1780, Antonio Valcárcel Pío de Saboya postulated that the large area was Lucentum, which was correct.
There are mainly Roman ruins to see, but also traces of earlier settlements. A tour of the ruins gives you a good impression of Lucentum’s various buildings and functions; of significant buildings you can see the remains of the Roman forum, bathing facilities and the city wall.
Castillo de Petrer is a former Moorish castle that rises above the rest of the town of Petrer. The castle was built at the end of the 12th century. It was involved in the Muslim revolt of 1256 until King Jaume II conquered it and integrated it and the area into the Kingdom of Aragon.
The Castillo de Petrer is very exciting to visit with the preserved double walls that give the feeling of stepping back into the defenses of the Middle Ages. In the inner castle, you also get a good impression of the Moorish buildings of the time.
Sax Castle was built by the Moors as a mighty fortress on a mountain top. The original construction started in the 9th century, but today’s castle mainly dates back to the following centuries.
Despite the location on the top above the city and the surrounding countryside, King Jaume Sax conquered Borg in 1239. Today, well-preserved parts of the wall and some of the defense towers can be seen.
Elche, also known as Elx in the local Valencian language, was originally settled by Greeks around 600 BC. After a period of Moorish rule, Aragon conquered the city and the area in the 13th century.
Today, Elche is famous as the city of palm trees and gardens. Around the city is the large palm forest Palmeral de Elche, which offers more than 200,000 palms, which is the highest number in Europe. The palm forest was established in its time by the Moors, who brought the palms to the area. Since then, the mild climate has given the plants the perfect conditions, and there are up to 150-year-old palm trees in the area.
In Elche’s old town there are many things to see. Among the highlights is the impressive Baroque church, Basílica de Santa María (Plaça del Congrés Eucharistic), which was built in the 17th century. Elche’s archaeological museum, Museo Arqueológico y de Historia de Elche, exhibits finds from the ancient times of the city and the region, such as the Roman city of La Alcudia (Carratera Dolores), whose excavations are located south of the current center. The museum is housed in the 13th-century castle Palacio de Altamira (Diagonal del Palau 7).
The city’s Arab baths, Baños Árabes (Passeig de les Eres de Santa Llúcia 13), are the successor to the former Roman baths, and here you can see the decoration with tiles, columns and vaults, which were part of the framework around the place, which both worked as a bath and as a meeting place.
The beautiful and historic town of Santa Pola was a Roman settlement with the name Portus Ilicitanus, which alludes to the fact that the place was a port for what is now Elche. There are a number of sights in the city, and the location by the Mediterranean means that a visit can be combined with a trip to the beach or on the water.
The castle of Santa Pola, Castillo-Fortaleza de Santa Pola (Plaza de la Glorieta), was built in 1557 in Renaissance architecture. However, renovations have been made since then. The architects were Italian, and the purpose was to establish a defense of the city against pirates. Today, the castle is set up as a cultural activity centre, and there are, among other things, two museums set up here; The Marine Museum/Museo del Mar and the Fisheries Museum/Museo de la Pesca.
You can experience glimpses of Santa Pola’s Roman past up close at the Roman Villa Palmeral/Villa Palmeral (Avenida de Portus Ilicitanus). The villa was built in the 4th century as a residence for a wealthy merchant family. Visitors have access to the entire restored excavation area, and among the highlights are exquisite floor mosaics.
Off the coast of the Costa Blanca lies the island of Tabarca, which, with just 1,750 meters in length and up to 300 meters in width, is a clear, beautiful and peaceful place. The island is as if divided in two, with its small settlement to the west and the open expanses to the east.
The small town is characterized by low-rise buildings with the Gran Plaza as its centre. Saint Peter & Paul Church/Iglesia de San Pedro y San Pablo is the island’s church and is also located in the town, while the Torre de San José observation tower and Tabarca Island Lighthouse/Faro de Isla de Tabarca dominate the open country. The island has fine beaches, and the island’s restaurants are known for serving some of the region’s best seafood dishes.
Avenida de la Estación
Calle de José García Sellés 2, Avenida Alcalde Lorenzo Carbonell
carrefour.es
Avenida Maisonnave 53, Avenida Federico Soto 1
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Muelle Poniente 6
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Antonio Ramos Carratalá
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Rambla de Méndez Núñez, Avenida Maisonnave, El Barrio
Aqualandia
Sierra Helada s/n – Rincon de Loix, Benidorm, 40 km NE
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Aquapark
Calle del Norte, Rojales, 40 km SW
aquaparkrojales.es
Mundomar Sierra Helada
Rincón de Loix, Benidorm, 40 km NE
mundomar.es
Rio Safari
Carratera Elche-Santa Pola, Elche, 20 km SW
riosafari.com
Terra Mitica
Camino del Moralet, Benidorm, 40 km NE
terramiticapark.com
The Alicante region has been inhabited for about 7,000 years, with tribes from Central Europe moving south to new hunting areas. The first real settlements in today’s Alicante area occurred on and at the strategically well-located mountain of Benacantil. At that time, the mountain was surrounded by several sides, so from there there was a fine and strategically important overview of the land and the sea.
Around the year 1000 BC both Greeks and Phoenicians began to trade the present coast of Spain. They established trading stations that also helped to civilize and develop the area. The new foreign settlers, for example, brought the alphabet, iron and ceramic works to the local tribes.
After a few centuries, the Greeks and Phoenicians gained competition in the area as Rome began to interfere. The Roman Empire used its military to gain control of the Iberian Peninsula, where several important battles would take place over time. The rival army from Carthage, however, fortified themselves, and under General Hamilcar they established Akra Leuka, one of the forerunners of Alicante.
Akra Leuka was well located and became an Iberian trading center with contacts in Carthage, Greece, Phoenician and Iberian Tartessos.
Carthage expanded its territory from Akra Leuka, but Rome’s strength proved superior, and the Romans took control of the area after the victories of the Second Punic War. The Romans called their city Lucentum, which means the luminous city. The name came from the bright sky and the many hours of sunshine that were here.
As a Roman city, Lucentum gained a distinct Roman feel with bathing facilities, temples, forums, sewerage and so on. The highlight of the Roman period was the centuries around the birth of Christ; Subsequently, part of the lucrative trade gradually shifted to the present Elche, which was better located than Lucentum.
In the 400s, the dissolution of the Roman Empire began, and it was felt in the Iberian Peninsula, where the West Gothic warlord Teodmiro gained increasing power; among others in Alicante.
The next people to rule the region were the Arabs who overcame all existing leaders in both Alicante and much of present-day Spain. It was in the year 711 that Alicante came under the rule of the Arab Moors, and it was a period that lasted more than 500 years.
The Moors brought new things to Lucentum, which they renamed Alicante. Both names refer to being the city of light in Latin and Arabic respectively. Those things were, among other things, oranges, rice and the palms, which today are almost a symbol of the warm coastal areas of Spain.
Throughout Alicante’s Moorish period, building was once again different from past cultures. Thus, many buildings were erected with inspiration in the new Moorish style, as was the case across large parts of the Iberian Peninsula.
The Spanish conquest of the Iberian Peninsula began in the 11th century, but it was not until the middle and late 1200s that Alicante transitioned from Arab rule to first became part of the Spanish kingdom under Alfonso X in 1246 and then The Kingdom of Valencia under Jaume II of Aragon from 1298. With the implementation of the Spanish reconquista, the Moors’ power in Europe was over.
With the new era, a big boom started in Alicante. The city’s trade in large parts of the Mediterranean increased dramatically, and products such as rice, wine, olive oil and wool were major commodities. The 15th century was a golden age for Alicante, who lived economically well by trade and agricultural production.
Then the recession began. At the beginning of the 17th century, King Felipe III expelled thousands of remaining Moors, and since they were especially employed and skilled in agriculture and handgun, Alicante’s production and economy went into gear.
The Spanish War of War erupted in 1701 between mainly France on the one hand and England, the Netherlands and Austria on the other. The cause of the war was the struggle for the Spanish succession following the death of Karl II without heirs. Both France and Austria had a candidate for the Spanish throne, and the outcome of the war had consequences for Alicante.
After the Spanish Succession War, in which Alicante had supported the losing party, the region’s political status as partially autonomous changed and Alicante became subject to Spain. In the following centuries, Alicante was financially and politically affected in a negative direction, and there was stagnation in the city.
Throughout the 1700s-1800s, Alicante experienced a recession, and development passed the city, whose economy was primarily based on fisheries, agriculture and some production.
Alicante’s long period of stagnation ended with the end of the 19th century. Here, the city saw an improvement in the economy, not least due to the expansion of the port area. Alicante became an export port in those years, and shipping flourished in the early 1900s. Spanish neutrality during the First World War led to further growth in exports.
Throughout time, there had been little attempt at rebellion, but it had never been greater until during this period there was so much tension in the city and in Spain in general that King Alfonso XIII had to abdicate. On April 14, 1931, the Second Spanish Republic was proclaimed a replacement for the kingdom.
The Republican government did not rule Spain for many years until civil war broke out in the country. It started July 17, 1936, and faced the Republic, the victorious victor Francisco Franco. Alicante became the city that fought for the Republic for the longest time, and Franco’s forces could only occupy on April 1, 1939.
After some harsh winters in the 1940s that had put Alicante’s agricultural production back on, the city’s economy radically changed over the following decades.
After the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s, Francisco Franco came to power, and under his leadership, the country focused on a large-scale expansion of tourism as a new source of income. Areas like the Costa Blanca at Alicante were natural to expand due to the region’s beaches, climate and the many buses and planes that brought increasing numbers of tourists from Northern Europe.
Alicante and the coastal area developed rapidly, and new resorts such as Benidorm shot up with huge construction activity. Alicante’s new affluence allowed for the restoration of historic buildings and a generally increased cultural offering that has benefited both locals and the many tourists.
The city’s port has also undergone a major transformation in recent decades. The formerly busy industrial port saw a decline in the 1980s, and trade was largely transferred to nearby Valencia. Since then, Alicante has focused on an exclusive marina and the prolific cruise ships, which every year bring many tourists to the city from the water’s edge.
Today, more than 300,000 people live in Alicante, an increase from about 50,000 in 1900 and 20,000 at the turn of the year to 1800.
Overview of Alicante
Alicante is a Spanish city at the Costa Blanca coastline, where visitors enjoy one of Europe’s mildest climates. It is wonderful to come here all year round with the many hours of sunshine, the tasty Spanish Mediterranean cuisine and the lovely sandy beaches along the entire coast north and south of Alicante.
Alicante, with its more than 300,000 inhabitants, is a metropolis with a long and interesting history. And there are a lot of sights in the cozy streets and squares of the old city. Sights are from present day Alicante and from bygone eras, and the two fortified castles on top of the city hills come on top of it all. The castles of Castillo de Santa Bárbara and Castillo San Fernando are testimonies to the importance of the city throughout history.
Fine parks, elegant promenades and the modern marina are places defining Alicante today. City life thrives here where the cultural offer is full of activities. And a walk along the grand harbor promenade, Explanada de España, is a must do when in the coastal city.
About the Whitehorse travel guide
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At Alicante’s archaeological museum, visitors can take a trip to the city’s and area’s past. The particularly distinguished collection contains more than 80,000 objects, which in permanent exhibitions go through several themes; prehistory, Iberian culture, Roman culture, medieval and modern times. There are also changing exhibitions.
Among the most valuable effects in the museum is the Woman from Guardamar/Dama de Guardamar, which is a 50 centimeter high bust from approximately 400 BC. The bust was found in the excavation of the Phoenician settlement Cabezo Lucero.
The museum building is the former hospital San Juan de Dios, which was built in the years 1926-1929 and designed by the architect Juan Vidal Ramos. The museum opened its doors here in 2000.
San Fernando Fortress was built in the early 1800s to strengthen Alicante’s defenses against a possible invading French army led by Napoleon.
Castillo San Fernando was named after Fernando VII, who was the king of Spain at the time of construction. However, the fortress never had a military role, and is now designated as a recreational area. You are also rewarded with a fine view from the fortress, which is located on the ridge of Monte Tossal.
The Plaza de los Luceros is a beautifully landscaped square that is often the focal point of large-scale celebrations in Alicante. The square took on its current appearance in 1930, when Alicante artist Daniel Bañuls Martínez’s central, monumental fountain was erected.
The square was still undeveloped when it was laid out as Independence Square/Plaza de la Independencia in 1908, commemorating the uprising against French troops on May 2, 1808. In 1934, the square changed its name to Plaza de Cataluña, and in 1940 it got its current name.
Gravina Art Museum is a museum housed in a mansion that was built in the years 1748-1808 as the residence of the Count of Lumiares; the house is then also called the Palacio del Conde de Lumiares. The count had come to the city with his family in the mid-1700s, and he had the new mansion built on the ruins of an earlier house that had perished during the War of the Spanish Succession.
The house’s beautiful facade is built in stone from the nearby San Julian Mountains, and the very nice vaulted lower floors were formerly used as warehouses.
Today, the mansion houses a provincial archive as well as the Gravina Art Museum, which is one of Alicante province’s art museums. The works in the collection mainly span the period from the 16th century to the beginning of the 20th century, and here are more than 500 works of art by artists such as Rodrigo de Osona, Francisco Salzillo, Vicente López and Antonio Gisbert.
Alicante is blessed with a mild climate and a warm Mediterranean Sea, which in season brings many tourists and locals who want a ride in the waves. Along the coasts north and south of the city, there are many bathing opportunities, and there are also in the city center itself.
Playa del Postiguet is a 900 meter long sandy beach, which is located immediately north-east of the city’s large marina and old town. The high season for swimming is mid-June to mid-October, but it’s always delicious to take a walk along the beach.
Palacio Carbonell is one of the beautiful and impressive mansions that line the Explanada de España. It was built in the years 1920-1925 with French inspiration according to drawings by the local architect Juan Vidal Ramos.
The mansion was built as shops and tenements by businessman Enrique Carbonell, after whom it is named. There used to be a market by the harbor at this location, and the new building was a good example of the skills of the bourgeoisie at the beginning of the 20th century.
Plaza de Gabriel Miró is a square located one block from the promenade Explanada de España, and it is an elegant respite in the center of the city close to the sea. Beneath the trees stands Alicante artist Vicente Bañuls’ 19th-century fountain La Aguadora.
The square is also called Postpladsen/Plaza de Correos, and this is because the city’s main post office was located here. You can still see the beautiful post and telegraph building, which is located on the south-west corner of the square.
In the past, the sea reached the current site, and fishermen often put their boats to dry after a trip to the sea. In the 16th century, King Felipe II had a building built to store salt, and it was reconstructed and rebuilt as a post office in 1920.
Marina Alicante is the city’s marina and at the same time a lovely place for a stroll. Here are elegant surroundings, large and modern yachts and a fine view of the city profile. Around the marina there are also various shopping facilities and entertainment.
For example, you can visit Casino Mediterrani Alacant and Museo The Ocean Race, which is a maritime museum which focuses on the racing The Ocean Race. Along the harbor you can also try rides in the Mundo de los Niños park.
Alicante’s bullring was built in 1848. It was later expanded several times; most significantly in 1888. The arena is used for many different purposes such as concerts and sports matches.
In connection with the arena is the Bullfighting Museum/Museo Taurino, which primarily depicts the heroes among local bullfighters and their exploits, equipment and the like. Celebrities within the genre include Vicente Blau and Francisco Antón.
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