The Fascinating Spain team's favourite villages
In Spain there are fascinating villages, full of unique spots and landscapes. However, there is always one that you keep a special memory of that makes it your favourite town. The team of Fascinating Spain wanted to share these memories with their readers and make their favourite villages known. Does one of them match yours?
Ana Pérez (Community Manager)
Favourite village: Cudillero
“My favorite village is, since I was a little girl, Cudillero. Every summer, my family and I organize a trip to Asturias, and we always stop there after an intense day at the beach. I loved its atmosphere, its colorful houses and its narrow streets, and it became an unforgettable place for me, where I will always want to return every summer.”

Javier Retuerta Merino (Editor)
Favourite village: Sobrado dos Monxes
“I discovered it while doing the Northern Way and it is the entrance to a town that has impressed me the most. Its Cistercian monastery overlooks the landscape, immense and next to an artificial lake made by the monks themselves in the 16th century. Inside it is totally naked, due to the amortizations, and it generates a phantasmagoric sensation that goes very much with the land of A Coruña where it is located.”

With a high historical value and a relevant natural richness, in Sobrado dos Monxes you can also visit the Roman camp of Ciudadela and the Sobrado lagoon (artificially built by the monks).
Rubén Larios (Human Resources)
Favourite village: Peratallada
“I visited Peratallada after it was recommended and, of course, I was glad I did. It is a small medieval village of the 'Baix Empordà' with much charm, its low, cobbled houses, narrow streets and plants climbing the facades make it a special place. To finish the visit and as a curiosity, it has one of the best artisan gourmet ice-cream parlours, where you can try different flavours such as Idiazábal cheese, anchovies with mussel vinegar, beer or vermouth…”

María Lara Lozano (Graphic Designer)
Favourite village: Mundaka
“My favourite village in Spain is Mundaca. I discovered it last summer and found it to be a magical place and one of the most beautiful villages I have ever seen. Its chapel, the viewpoints, the port, its green landscapes, the colorful houses... make this town unique.”

Nowadays, it is a small fishing village with a port that has become the real gem of the town. On the outskirts of Mundaka, you should not miss the opportunity to discover the hermitage of Santa Catalina, located on a small peninsula. Here you can enjoy views of Mount Ogoño, the island of Izaro and the estuary, which is representative of the Urdaibai Biosphere Reserve.
Isabel Fernández (Translator)
Favourite village: Guadalest / El Castell de Guadalest
“A couple of years ago I discovered what has since become my favourite village in Spain. Its location in the Guadalest valley allows you to enjoy unparalleled views, both of the reservoir and the surrounding mountains. The village itself is also very special, as some of the buildings are located at the top of the rock, such as its popular castle. A unique village with a lot of history to discover.”

The village, catalogued as a Historic-Artistic Site, is divided into two areas. That of the castle and what remains behind the old medieval wall, and the Arrabal, where the population located their houses at the foot of the mountain. To access the first, you must enter through a tunnel dug into the rock of the same mountain.
Luis Marcuccini (Translator)
Favourite village: Quel
“Quel was my childhood hometown. A small corner of La Rioja Baja in the Cidacos valley and protected by the high figure of the rock on which stands out its impassive castle. A place where children would walk the slopes of the old town with their houses overflowing with peppers drying in the sun. I remember those summer afternoons when we used to pick tomatoes from its bushes and peaches from its branches overflowing with juice and sugar. Summer afternoons when we hunted snails that the grandmothers prepared for everyone. And those summer nights when we climbed the rock to contemplate the stars. An idyllic place.”

Quel's existence is documented as early as 1065. This village in La Rioja amazes visitors with the fantastic view of its 15th century castle crowning the town. As for its origin, it is uncertain whether it is Roman or Arabic. Legend has it that there is a tunnel that starts at the castle, crosses the whole town and the river and ends up at a hermitage. In Quel you can also visit the church of San Salvador, of late Gothic style with some Renaissance elements, and the hermitage of Cristo de la Transfiguración. Every year in August the Bread and Cheese Festival is celebrated, of Regional Tourist Interest.
Alex Martín (Graphic Designer)
Favourite village: Covadonga
“I do not know if it is really a village, but this small amount of houses piled up among imposing monuments and hidden among mountains won my heart. I discovered it when I was a child, on vacation far away from my homeland, and I remember the impression that it was the most beautiful thing I had ever seen. Nothing has ever again surpassed the cliffs at every turn of the road, the intense green of the almost vertical mountains, the wet stones of the Basilica, the cave of the Virgin carved into the rock, the fog that came and went enveloping everything...And if you are not surprised, the cows will do that, wandering all over the place
!”

Ignacio Suárez-Zuloaga (Director)
Favourite village: Zumaia
“Zumaia is a town with an impressive cuisine, good museums, beautiful beaches and very special places. Many people know it as the beach of Game of Thrones or the church of Spanish Affair, but it is a perfect village to walk and enjoy with a very varied tourist offer.”

However, a must see are the majestic cliffs that are located here. From Itzurun beach to Deba, it is possible to take a tour in which you can observe these incredible rock formations raised above the sea. Without a doubt, the phenomenon called Flysch is one of the most curious that occurs at low tide.
Elsa Canal (Sales)
Favourite village: Jadraque
“It is the village of reference in the area where my grandparents were born, neither very big nor very small, it makes you feel that you have always been part of it even if it is the first time you visit it. Famous for the Castle of El Cid, as well as for the kid, which is undoubtedly the most delicious of all, I would dare to say that it has the best "torreznos" in Spain in Bar el Alto Rey”.

The religious architecture is also quite abundant. On the one hand, the church of San Juan Bautista, with elements from the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries. On the other hand, the hermitage of Santísimo Cristo, in a classicist style. As an added value, the convent of the Capuchins.
Jizel Petrona (Finance)
Favourite village: Cadaqués
“It is a village in Girona with a special charm. It is a very touristic destination, but no wonder why. Its stone streets are beautiful, its white houses, its coasts and its bars and terraces give a different touch to the town. It is also famous because Salvador Dalí lived there, today you can visit a house-museum where he lived.”

Cadaqués is located in the Alt Empordà region, in the province of Girona. It is a coastal town located in a natural and picturesque port. Nowadays it is one of the most touristic enclaves of the Costa Brava, but it maintains the charm of a fishing village. In order to get to the old town of Cadaqués, you have to go through one of the gates of the old wall, which has been preserved to this day. Walking among its white houses is one of the main attractions, as well as the streets of the old Jewish quarter. The promenade is another option for walking and enjoying the sea breeze.
A visit not to be missed is the Salvador Dalí House Museum, located in the Portlligat bay, to the north of the town. A beautiful landscape that captivated the artist and where you can see the fishermen's huts that the painter acquired, memories of Dalí, his workshop, the library...
Javier Barroso (CMO)
Favourite village: Ribadesellla
“Ribadesella has everything to make visiting it a pleasure. A beautiful and enormous beach and many restaurants, some of them of the highest category. In the same village, which is beautiful, you have modern artistic heritage, prehistoric art and even dinosaur footprints. You are very close to the Picos de Europa and to the Asturian capitals, and if you are up for adventure you can go canoeing down the Sella River, probably the best known in Spain, or go surfing with one of the surfing courses established there.”

Pablo Guialén (Programmer)
Favourite village: Rapariegos
“My grandparents' village, where I have spent endless summers and weekends. A magical place for me, because you can visit hundreds of places and dozens of countries, but in the end there is no better place than the one that takes you back to your childhood, where every day was a Sunday. Besides, they roast some suckling pigs!”

María Jesús Colombo (Editor)
Favourite village: Guadalupe
“Until a few years ago I still had no idea about the province of Cáceres. After visiting several of its locations, it seems to me to be one of the most unknown gems in Spain. However, the town that stole my heart is Guadalupe, perhaps one of the most popular. Its cobbled streets seem to be taken from a fairy tale. It is very pleasant to visit a town where the views are accompanied by the very friendly people who live and work there. The monastery also attracted my attention”.

The streets of Guadalupe are also worth mentioning, with their mountain architecture, which lead to corners such as the Plaza de Santa María de Guadalupe, the baroque church of La Santa Trinidad or the Colegio de Infantes. Also noteworthy are the five medieval arches that are divided by its two walls.