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![]() | Home > Barcelona Travel Guide > Towns and cities |
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![]() Where To Go? ![]() -Towns & Cities ![]() -Itineraries ![]() -Parks ![]() -Beaches ![]() -Museums ![]() -Excursions ![]() What To Do? ![]() -Port Aventura ![]() -Sports ![]() -Shopping ![]() -NightLife ![]() -Food & Drink
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Montserrat Montserrat, only 40 kilometres (30 miles) inland from Barcelona, is a very powerful symbol for the Catalan people, and you would be hard pressed to find a Catalan who hadn’t, at some point in time, visited Montserrat. Tarragona Tarragona, located on the Mediterranean coast in the northeast of Spain, is the most southern of the Catalan provinces. Girona Montserrat, only 40 kilometres (30 miles) inland from Barcelona, is a very powerful symbol for the Catalan people, and you would be hard pressed to find a Catalan who hadn’t, at some point in time, visited Montserrat.
Ribera Quarter Outside the first wall but still medieval in origin is the Ribera Quarter, separated from the Gothic Quarter by the Via Laietana. El Eixample El Eixample or "Enlargement" is the central area of the city of Barcelona formed by a grid layout of streets with diamond-shaped intersections. |
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