manuel cohen

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  • Cafes and restaurants in the Placa del Mercat or market square in the evening, in Xativa, Valencia, Spain. Xativa was a Roman town located on the Via Augusta, the Roman road leading from Rome to Cadiz, and was also an important town under the Visigoths, the Moors and after the Reconquest. In the distance is the bell tower of the 16th century La Basilica Collegiata di Santa Maria or La Seu. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0270.JPG
  • Cafes and restaurants in the Placa del Mercat or market square in the evening, in Xativa, Valencia, Spain. Xativa was a Roman town located on the Via Augusta, the Roman road leading from Rome to Cadiz, and was also an important town under the Visigoths, the Moors and after the Reconquest. In the distance is the bell tower of the 16th century La Basilica Collegiata di Santa Maria or La Seu. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0271.JPG
  • Castillo de Xativa, or Xativa castle, aerial view, a double fortress consisting of the Castell Menor and Castell Major, which has been built on and added to throughout Roman, Carthaginian, Andalusian, Iberian, Gothic and Islamic periods, at Xativa, Valencia, Spain. The Castell Menor is the oldest part of the castle, dating from Iberian and Roman times, and the Castell Major is medieval and Islamic. The castle is situated on the Via Augusta, the Roman road leading from Rome to Cadiz. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    DRN_LC21_SPAIN_MC_0274.jpg
  • Main entrance to the Castillo de Xativa, or Xativa castle, a double fortress which has been built on and added to throughout Roman, Carthaginian, Andalusian, Iberian, Gothic and Islamic periods, at Xativa, Valencia, Spain. The arched entrance door is the Porta Ferissa or iron gate, in the keep, which leads to the Plaza de Armas, the main central courtyard, with a neo-Gothic 20th century building. The Castell Menor is the oldest part of the castle, dating from Iberian and Roman times, and the Castell Major is medieval and Islamic. The castle is situated on the Via Augusta, the Roman road leading from Rome to Cadiz. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0261.jpg
  • Sarcophagus of Jaume II d'Urgell, 1380-1433, in the Capilla de Santa Maria, built by Maria, wife of Alfonso the Magnanimous, c. 1435, in the Castell Major at Xativa castle, a double fortress which has been built on and added to throughout Roman, Carthaginian, Andalusian, Iberian, Gothic and Islamic periods, at Xativa, Valencia, Spain. The Castell Menor is the oldest part of the castle, dating from Iberian and Roman times, and the Castell Major is medieval and Islamic. The castle is situated on the Via Augusta, the Roman road leading from Rome to Cadiz. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0265.jpg
  • Torre dels Escipions, or Scipio's Tower, a Roman funerary tower built 1st century AD, on the Via Augusta outside Tarragona, in Catalonia, Spain. The tower is 3 storeys high and has 2 reliefs of the Phrygian god Attis. The city was an important fortified Roman colony named Tarraco and its remains are listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0377.jpg
  • Bera?s Arch, Triumphal arch monument, Tarragona (Tarraco, Hispania Citerior), Catalonia, Spain; An inscription explains that it was built in memory of the funeral Luci Lucini Sura in the I Century AD but recent researches say that it is from the I Century BC, when the Via Augusta was reformed; Corinth fluted pilasters hold the entablature on each side of the arcade.
    atarraco06217.jpg
  • Bera?s Arch, Triumphal arch monument, Tarragona (Tarraco, Hispania Citerior), Catalonia, Spain; An inscription explains that it was built in memory of the funeral Luci Lucini Sura in the I Century AD but recent researches say that it is from the I Century BC, when the Via Augusta was reformed; Corinth fluted pilasters hold the entablature on each side of the arcade.
    atarraco06216.jpg
  • Bera?s Arch, Triumphal arch monument, Tarragona (Tarraco, Hispania Citerior), Catalonia, Spain; An inscription explains that it was built in memory of the funeral Luci Lucini Sura in the I Century AD but recent researches say that it is from the I Century BC, when the Via Augusta was reformed; Corinth fluted pilasters hold the entablature on each side of the arcade.
    atarraco06215.jpg
  • Bera?s Arch, Triumphal arch monument, Tarragona (Tarraco, Hispania Citerior), Catalonia, Spain; An inscription explains that it was built in memory of the funeral Luci Lucini Sura in the I Century AD but recent researches say that it is from the I Century BC, when the Via Augusta was reformed; Corinth fluted pilasters hold the entablature on each side of the arcade.
    atarraco06214.jpg
  • Hotel and restaurant Montsant, housed in a former Cistercian monastery, aerial view, in Xativa, Valencia, Spain. Xativa was a Roman town located on the Via Augusta, the Roman road leading from Rome to Cadiz, and was also an important town under the Visigoths, the Moors and after the Reconquest. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    DRN_LC21_SPAIN_MC_0275.jpg
  • Garden of the hotel and restaurant Montsant, in the former Cistercian monastery, in Xativa, Valencia, Spain. Xativa was a Roman town located on the Via Augusta, the Roman road leading from Rome to Cadiz, and was also an important town under the Visigoths, the Moors and after the Reconquest. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0269.jpg
  • Castillo de Xativa, or Xativa castle, aerial view, a double fortress consisting of the Castell Menor and Castell Major, which has been built on and added to throughout Roman, Carthaginian, Andalusian, Iberian, Gothic and Islamic periods, at Xativa, Valencia, Spain. The Castell Menor is the oldest part of the castle, dating from Iberian and Roman times, and the Castell Major is medieval and Islamic. The castle is situated on the Via Augusta, the Roman road leading from Rome to Cadiz. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    DRN_LC21_SPAIN_MC_0273.jpg
  • Castillo de Xativa, or Xativa castle, a double fortress consisting of the Castell Menor and Castell Major, which has been built on and added to throughout Roman, Carthaginian, Andalusian, Iberian, Gothic and Islamic periods, at Xativa, Valencia, Spain. The Castell Menor is the oldest part of the castle, dating from Iberian and Roman times, and the Castell Major is medieval and Islamic. The castle is situated on the Via Augusta, the Roman road leading from Rome to Cadiz. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0262.JPG
  • Castillo de Xativa, or Xativa castle, a double fortress which has been built on and added to throughout Roman, Carthaginian, Andalusian, Iberian, Gothic and Islamic periods, at Xativa, Valencia, Spain. In the foreground is the Plaza de Armas, the main central courtyard, with a neo-Gothic 20th century building, looking up to the Castell Menor in the distance. The Castell Menor is the oldest part of the castle, dating from Iberian and Roman times, and the Castell Major is medieval and Islamic. The castle is situated on the Via Augusta, the Roman road leading from Rome to Cadiz. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0263.jpg
  • Castell Menor seen from the Castell Major, at the Castillo de Xativa, or Xativa castle, a double fortress which has been built on and added to throughout Roman, Carthaginian, Andalusian, Iberian, Gothic and Islamic periods, at Xativa, Valencia, Spain. The Castell Menor is the oldest part of the castle, dating from Iberian and Roman times, and the Castell Major is medieval and Islamic. The castle is situated on the Via Augusta, the Roman road leading from Rome to Cadiz. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0264.jpg
  • Prison cell of Jaume II d'Urgell, 1380-1433, pretender to the crown of Aragon, imprisoned here 1426-33, in the Castell Major at Xativa castle, a double fortress which has been built on and added to throughout Roman, Carthaginian, Andalusian, Iberian, Gothic and Islamic periods, at Xativa, Valencia, Spain. The castle was used as a royal prison 13th - 16th centuries. The Castell Menor is the oldest part of the castle, dating from Iberian and Roman times, and the Castell Major is medieval and Islamic. The castle is situated on the Via Augusta, the Roman road leading from Rome to Cadiz. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0266.jpg
  • Road up to the entrance of the Castell Menor at the Castillo de Xativa, or Xativa castle, a double fortress consisting of the Castell Menor and Castell Major, which has been built on and added to throughout Roman, Carthaginian, Andalusian, Iberian, Gothic and Islamic periods, at Xativa, Valencia, Spain. The Castell Menor is the oldest part of the castle, dating from Iberian and Roman times, and the Castell Major is medieval and Islamic. The castle is situated on the Via Augusta, the Roman road leading from Rome to Cadiz. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0272.jpg
  • Castell Menor seen from the Castell Major, at the Castillo de Xativa, or Xativa castle, a double fortress which has been built on and added to throughout Roman, Carthaginian, Andalusian, Iberian, Gothic and Islamic periods, at Xativa, Valencia, Spain. The Castell Menor is the oldest part of the castle, dating from Iberian and Roman times, and the Castell Major is medieval and Islamic. The castle is situated on the Via Augusta, the Roman road leading from Rome to Cadiz. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0267.jpg
  • Castell Menor seen from the Castell Major, at the Castillo de Xativa, or Xativa castle, a double fortress which has been built on and added to throughout Roman, Carthaginian, Andalusian, Iberian, Gothic and Islamic periods, at Xativa, Valencia, Spain. The Castell Menor is the oldest part of the castle, dating from Iberian and Roman times, and the Castell Major is medieval and Islamic. The castle is situated on the Via Augusta, the Roman road leading from Rome to Cadiz. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0268.jpg
  • Torre dels Escipions, or Scipio's Tower, a Roman funerary tower built 1st century AD, on the Via Augusta outside Tarragona, in Catalonia, Spain. The tower is 3 storeys high and has 2 reliefs of the Phrygian god Attis. The city was an important fortified Roman colony named Tarraco and its remains are listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0396.jpg
  • Arc de Bera, a Roman triumphal arch built 13 BC, on the Via Augusta at Roda de Bera near Tarragona, Catalonia, Spain. The arch was erected in memory of its donor, Lucius Licinius Sura, in homage to Augustus, and is decorated with fluted pilasters with corinthian capitals. Tarragona was an important fortified Roman colony named Tarraco and its remains are listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0378.jpg
  • Bera?s Arch, Triumphal arch monument, Tarragona (Tarraco, Hispania Citerior), Catalonia, Spain; An inscription explains that it was built in memory of the funeral Luci Lucini Sura in the I Century AD but recent researches say that it is from the I Century BC, when the Via Augusta was reformed; Corinth fluted pilasters hold the entablature on each side of the arcade.
    atarraco06221.jpg
  • Bera?s Arch, Triumphal arch monument, Tarragona (Tarraco, Hispania Citerior), Catalonia, Spain; An inscription explains that it was built in memory of the funeral Luci Lucini Sura in the I Century AD but recent researches say that it is from the I Century BC, when the Via Augusta was reformed; Corinth fluted pilasters hold the entablature on each side of the arcade.
    atarraco06220.jpg
  • Bera?s Arch, Triumphal arch monument, Tarragona (Tarraco, Hispania Citerior), Catalonia, Spain; An inscription explains that it was built in memory of the funeral Luci Lucini Sura in the I Century AD but recent researches say that it is from the I Century BC, when the Via Augusta was reformed; Corinth fluted pilasters hold the entablature on each side of the arcade.
    atarraco06219.jpg
  • The Quarry of El Mèdol; Roman, Tarragona (Tarraco, Hispania Citerior), Catalonia, Spain; The most spectacular one, near the ancient Via Augusta, nine km north of Tarragona; The impressive stone needle in the centre is a memorial to the labours undertaken on this site.
    atarraco06242.jpg
  • The Quarry of El Mèdol; Roman, Tarragona (Tarraco, Hispania Citerior), Catalonia, Spain; The most spectacular one, near the ancient Via Augusta, nine km north of Tarragona; The impressive stone needle in the centre is a memorial to the labours undertaken on this site.
    atarraco06241.jpg
  • The Quarry of El Mèdol; Roman, Tarragona (Tarraco, Hispania Citerior), Catalonia, Spain; The most spectacular one, near the ancient Via Augusta, nine km north of Tarragona; The impressive stone needle in the centre is a memorial to the labours undertaken on this site.
    atarraco06240.jpg
  • Carles Duarte, b. 1959, poet, linguist and political Catalan, on the roof of the Escola d'Idiomes, the School of Languages at the University of Barcelona, on the Via Augusta, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. Carles Duarte is Director General of the Cultural Institution of the Catholic Influence Center or CIC. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_0926.jpg
  • Carles Duarte, b. 1959, poet, linguist and political Catalan, on the roof of the Escola d'Idiomes, the School of Languages at the University of Barcelona, on the Via Augusta, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. Carles Duarte is Director General of the Cultural Institution of the Catholic Influence Center or CIC. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_0925.jpg
  • Carles Duarte, b. 1959, poet, linguist and political Catalan, on the roof of the Escola d'Idiomes, the School of Languages at the University of Barcelona, on the Via Augusta, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. Carles Duarte is Director General of the Cultural Institution of the Catholic Influence Center or CIC. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_0927.jpg
  • The Quarry of El Mèdol; Roman, Tarragona (Tarraco, Hispania Citerior), Catalonia, Spain; The most spectacular one, near the ancient Via Augusta, nine km north of Tarragona; The impressive stone needle in the centre is a memorial to the labours undertaken on this site.
    atarraco06243.jpg
  • The Quarry of El Mèdol; Roman, Tarragona (Tarraco, Hispania Citerior), Catalonia, Spain; The most spectacular one, near the ancient Via Augusta, nine km north of Tarragona; The impressive stone needle in the centre is a memorial to the labours undertaken on this site.
    atarraco06239.jpg
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