Castillo de Peñíscola  

Spain

Photo credit: kitmasterbloke on VisualHunt.com

Peniscola Castle is a castle in Peniscola, Castellón, Valencian Community, Spain. The castle is restored and is open to the public.

The castle is situated on a crag overlooking the Mediterranean Sea, at an altitude of 64 metres (210 ft) above mean sea level.

The earliest evidence of habitation in the area were Ibero-Roman remains excavated in the port of Peniscola; they date to the 1st–2nd centuries BC. Arab writer Al-Idrisi described Baniskula in the 11th century AD, and briefly described a Moorish castle overlooking the sea.

There are no detailed descriptions until the 13th century when James I of Aragon briefly summarised the Muslim defences.

 The castle was transferred to James’s control in April 1229, after the last Almohad governor of Valencia, Zayd Abu Zayd, signed an accord surrendering various castles in eastern Spain.

The current form of the castle is essentially that developed by the Knights Templar, who planned to develop a kingdom centred on Peniscola.

 James II of Aragon gave the castle to the Templars in 1294, together with the nearby castles of Pulpís and Xivert. The Templars began work that year, demolished the Muslim fortifications, and completely rebuilt the castle; the work was completed in 1307.

In common with other Templar fortifications, the castle was laid out around an inner ward and possessed a chapel. Architectural features included barrel vaulting and round arches. The basic Templar core of the castle remains intact; some changes were made by Antipope Benedict XIII in order to modify it for use as a papal residence in the early 15th century.

The castle defences and the associated town fortifications were significantly upgraded from the early 16th century onwards, in line with advances in military technology.

The castle was massively redeveloped by military engineer Giovanni Battista Antonelli in the 16th century. An illustration of the castle published in 1786

The castle was involved in various military conflicts of the Kingdom of Aragon, and later in the War of the Spanish Succession in the early 18th century, the Peninsula War and civil conflicts in the early 19th century, each of which impacted upon the state of the castle defences in some form. The castle garrison was finally disbanded in 1890.

The castle where Benedict lived from 1417 until his death in 1423 was restored, improved and new walls were added in 1960 when Anthony Mann’s film El Cid was partially filmed there. The town and castle of Peníscola played the role of Valencia.

The castle is now a popular tourist attraction and the beaches and surrounding area are a popular family holiday resort.

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Castille de la Mota 

Spain

Castille de la Mota's history and travel information by castletourist.com
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The Castle of La Mota or Castillo de La Mota is a medieval fortress, located in the town of Medina del Campo, province of Valladolid, Spain. It is so named because of its location on an elevated hill, a mota (in Spanish), from where it dominates the town and surrounding land.

The adjacent town came to be surrounded by an expanding series of walls in subsequent years, of which little remains.

It has been protected by the state since 1904, first as a national monument and more recently as a site of cultural interest or Bien de Interés Cultural.

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Penafiel Castle 

Spain

Penafiel Castle's history and travel information by castletourist.com
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Peñafiel Castle is located in Peñafiel, Valladolid Province, Spain. The castle is more than 200 metres (660 ft) long and encloses an area about 35 m (115 ft) wide. Standing in the middle is a 34 m (112 ft) high three-storey keep.

Fernan Gonzalez began construction on the Peñafiel site in 947, as a frontier outpost in defence against the Arabs. A castle was built in 1013 by Sancho Garcia to protect the land. Several other members of the Spanish nobility added to the castle including Juan Manuel and Pedro Girón. Blanche I, Queen of Navarre gave birth to the Charles, Prince of Viana in the keep of Peñafiel in 1421.

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Castel de Bellver 

Spain

Castel de Bellver's history and travel information by castletourist.com
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Bellver Castle is a Gothic-style castle on a hill 3 km to the west of the centre of Palma on the Island of Majorca, Balearic Islands, Spain. It was built in the 14th century for King James II of Majorca and is one of the few circular castles in Europe.

First serving as the residence of the Kings of Majorca, and afterwards long used as a military prison throughout the 18th to mid-20th century, it is now under civilian control, being one of the main tourist attractions of the island, as well as the seat for the city’s History Museum.

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Olite Castle 

Spain

Olite Castle's history and travel information by castletourist.com
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 Royal Palace of Olite is a castle-palace in the town of Olite, in Navarre, Spain. It was one of the seats of the Court of the Kingdom of Navarre, since the reign of Charles III “the Noble” until its conquest by Castile.

This monument was quite damaged (except the church) in 1813 by a fire caused by general Espoz y Mina during the Napoleonic French Invasion with the aim of that was not occupied by French troops.

It was largely restored from 1937 in works that lasted for 30 years giving it back its original appearance. Nevertheless, miscellaneous architectural decoration of its interior, and the outside gardens, were lost.

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Castillo de Loarre 

Spain

Castillo de Loarre's history and travel information by castletourist.com
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The Castle of Loarre is a Romanesque Castle and Abbey located near the town of the same name, Huesca Province in the Aragon autonomous region of Spain. It is one of the oldest castles in Spain.

The castle was built largely during the 11th and 12th centuries when its position on the frontier between Christian and Muslim lands gave it strategic importance. The first of the two major building programs began circa 1020 when Sancho el Mayor (r. 1063–94) reconquered the surrounding lands from the Muslims.A distant view of the complex in 2005

After 1070, Loarre became increasingly important. In 1073, King Sancho Ramírez installed a community of Augustinian canons, and it was from Loarre that he prepared for the conquest of Huesca in 1094. In 1097, however, his successor, Peter I of Aragon and Navarre, donated all the goods of Loarre to a new royal monastery at Montearagon.

This evidence suggests that the second major construction program was undertaken between 1073 and 1097, and much building evidently does date from this period. By comparison with other monuments, however, it is also clear that the building and decorative program continued into the 12th century.

The location appears in the 2005 epic film Kingdom of Heaven.

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