Almeria is a city of light open to the Mediterranean, whose recent
growth has not
taken anything away from the local colour of its older quarters
nor from that flavour of
nearby Africa which sets it apart from other Andalusian towns. In
these lands, which were the home to powerful civilisations during
prehistory, such as those of El Algar or Los Millares, the Arabs
left their mark and even today, the reddish Alcazaba Fortress, one
of the largest of its kind on the peninsula, dominates the urban
landscape. In the centuries following its construction, begun at
the end of the first millennium, it is said that it could house
an army of 20,000 men and their munitions. Today we can still see
the three walled enclosures with towers, such as La Vela or El Homenaje.
but wars and earthquakes have deprived us of their interior palaces
and mosques. The other great monument of Almeria is its Cathedral.
Its fortress-like structure make's it impressive from the outside,
but its interior is Renaissancce, with a beautiful Plateresque chancel
and large Baroque altar pieces. It is one of
the great cathedrals of the eastern provinces of Andalusia: Granada,
Jaen and Malaga.