Calahorra Cathedral

Calahorra Cathedral is a Gothic-style building whose construction began in 1484 and lasted almost two hundred years in all. The main façade, also known as the "Puerta del Moral", is in Baroque style, built between 1680 and 1704 by the brothers Raón, Juan and Santiago, to replace the previous Gothic-style façade built at the end of the 15th or beginning of the 16th century.

About this building

Key Features

  • Architecture
  • Monuments

Other nearby buildings

Wikimedia Commons/PMRMaeyaert

Tudela Cathedral

Tudela Cathedral is a late Romanesque style cathedral built from the end of the 11th century during the reign of Sancho VI of Navarre, using the stones of the 19th-century mosque after it was razed to the ground. Originally used as a collegiate church, it became a cathedral in the 18th century under Pius VI, following the creation of the Diocese of Tudela, formerly attached to the Diocese of Tarazona de Aragón.

Wikimedia Commons/Juanje 2712

Iglesia de San Bartolomé

The church of Saint Bartholomew, which dates back to the 12th century, is the oldest church in the town of Logroño. It preserves part of the Romanesque style, in the choir and in the initial part of the tower, and was built during the 13th century, with the development of the Gothic style, with the construction of the magnificent Gothic portal from the 14th century, which contains some Romanesque sculptures that tell the story of the life of the saint and other passages from the Bible.