Puente Trujillo
- Río Jerte Avenue
Entrance to the city via the N-630 from the south, it is very degraded and a 2,000 square metre area with a viewpoint and green areas will be improved from 2022.
Anything to improve?
Entrance to the city via the N-630 from the south, it is very degraded and a 2,000 square metre area with a viewpoint and green areas will be improved from 2022.
Anything to improve?
Outside the walls of the historic centre of Plasencia and over the waters of the river Jerte, we find the bridge of San Lázaro, next to the chapel of the same name. It was built in the 16th century in the Gothic style and is considered to be the oldest bridge in Plasencia.
This platform has a double slope and is made up of seven spans that were originally pointed, especially the central ones, which were lowered in successive repairs. Likewise, the ashlars of the arches were replaced by slate.
The landscape that can be seen when crossing the bridge of San Lázaro has spectacular views, full of nature, reflecting a certain part of the town’s history. It was the only stone bridge in the city and after a flood, it has been rebuilt until the present day, which remains as one of the many icons of the municipality of Plasencia.
Anything to improve?
This bridge, more than 500 years old, is called Puente Nuevo (New Bridge) because it was the only platform in the city for almost 480 years, although it could also be called Puente de la Reina (Queen’s Bridge) due to the interest that Isabel the Catholic put in this work of extreme necessity for Plasencia and its land. It was in 1512 when the union of 16 municipalities, together with Plasencia and the Cathedral Chapter resulted in the construction of a stone bridge over the river Jerte, which is still enjoyed by the people of Plasencia and other inhabitants of the north of Extremadura. It replaced a wooden bridge, which had previously replaced a masonry bridge. The New Bridge has no replacement.
“The construction of the New Bridge is a symbol of the unity of Upper Extremadura”, according to the mayor of Plácido, Fernando Pizarro.
It was Rodrigo Alemán, an artist who worked on the cathedral and who is said to be the first man to fly in Spain, who was commissioned to carry out this “great work of engineering”, which took 12 years to build, and which was open to traffic until about a decade ago.
The bridge is of ashlar masonry, in a double-slope layout, and in the centre is a small temple dedicated to the Virgin Nuestra Señora de la Cabeza, depicted offering the Child a dove in granite and polychrome carving.
Anything to improve?
The complex houses a centre for the promotion of Extremaduran crafts, which brings together, for sale and exhibition, objects made of ceramics, leather, cork and metal, among others. The hall belongs to a network of craft centres run by Artesanex located in Cáceres, Badajoz, Llerena and Villafranca de los Barros. Here we find a bakery dating from the 19th century, called “de los Bocanegra”, which consists of an oven of magnificent dimensions that was active until 1975. You can visit a Mozarabic silo, 1.40 metres deep, with ceramic remains from the 9th century.
The church of La Magdalena is the oldest in Plasencia. It has Mozarabic burials from the 9th century. The new Romanesque church was built over the remains of this hermitage in the 12th century, when Plasencia was already founded as such.
In its beginnings, the church of La Magdalena had three naves and therefore three apses. Its dimensions were rather small. Today only two apses remain, as in 1811 it was sacked and burnt down by Napoleon’s troops. Some paintings dating from the 16th century are still preserved along the interior wall of the chapel. Therefore, in a small space and despite the inclemency of the weather, we have a historical journey that goes from Mozarabic to Renaissance and Romanesque. A compendium of the art, history and culture of Pláceres.
When it was refurbished in 2008, glass was used to create a play of reflections without detracting from the medieval walls that can also be glimpsed here.
Undoubtedly one of the most magical and historic corners of the city of Plasencia, where you can see first-hand the best craftsmanship of Extremadura and at the same time one of the most interesting and hidden monuments in the city of Plasencia.
Anything to improve?
The complex houses a centre for the promotion of Extremaduran crafts, which brings together, for sale and exhibition, objects made of ceramics, leather, cork and metal, among others. The hall belongs to a network of craft centres run by Artesanex located in Cáceres, Badajoz, Llerena and Villafranca de los Barros. Here we find a bakery dating from the 19th century, called “de los Bocanegra”, which consists of an oven of magnificent dimensions that was active until 1975. You can visit a Mozarabic silo, 1.40 metres deep, with ceramic remains from the 9th century.
The church of La Magdalena is the oldest in Plasencia. It has Mozarabic burials from the 9th century. The new Romanesque church was built over the remains of this hermitage in the 12th century, when Plasencia was already founded as such.
In its beginnings, the church of La Magdalena had three naves and therefore three apses. Its dimensions were rather small. Today only two apses remain, as in 1811 it was sacked and burnt down by Napoleon’s troops. Some paintings dating from the 16th century are still preserved along the interior wall of the chapel. Therefore, in a small space and despite the inclemency of the weather, we have a historical journey that goes from Mozarabic to Renaissance and Romanesque. A compendium of the art, history and culture of Pláceres.
When it was refurbished in 2008, glass was used to create a play of reflections without detracting from the medieval walls that can also be glimpsed here.
Undoubtedly one of the most magical and historic corners of the city of Plasencia, where you can see first-hand the best craftsmanship of Extremadura and at the same time one of the most interesting and hidden monuments in the city of Plasencia.
Anything to improve?