ϲʼʱ

Casa del Rey Moro

Ronda


Several landscaped terraces give access to La Mina, an Islamic stairway of nearly two hundred steps cut into the rock all the way down to the river at the bottom of the gorge. These steps enabled Ronda to maintain water supplies when it was under attack. It was also the point where Christian troops forced entry in 1485. The steps are dark, steep and wet in places. Take care.

The landscaped terraces were the work of French landscape architect Jean-Claude Forestier in 1912. Forestier was also responsible for Seville's Parque de María Luisa.


ϲʼʱ's must-see attractions

Nearby Ronda attractions

1. Puente Viejo

0.06 MILES

Taking the narrow Calle Marqués de Salvatierra will bring you to the small Puente Viejo, with views down to the river as it rushes into the gorge.

2. Museo Lara

0.06 MILES

This crazy, cluttered museum is the private collection of Juan Antonio Lara Jurado, who has been a collector since the age of 10. Now in his 80s, he still…

3. Puente Árabe

0.08 MILES

One of three historic bridges spanning the gorge. This one is the oldest, dating from Moorish times.

4. Puente Nuevo

0.11 MILES

Straddling the dramatic gorge of the Río Guadalevín (Deep River) is Ronda's most recognisable sight, the towering Puente Nuevo, so named not because it's…

5. Baños Árabes

0.11 MILES

Backing onto Ronda’s river, these 13th-century Arab baths are among the best-preserved in all of Ի岹ܳí, with horseshoe arches, columns and clearly…

6. Museo Joaquín Peinado

0.13 MILES

Native Ronda artist Joaquín Peinado was an amigo and contemporary of Picasso's, a fact reflected in his work, with its strong abstract lines, flirtations…

7. Plaza de España

0.14 MILES

The town's main square was made famous by Ernest Hemingway in For Whom the Bell Tolls. Chapter 10 tells how, early in the civil war, the 'fascists' of a…

8. Museo del Bandolero

0.17 MILES

This small museum is dedicated to the banditry for which central Ի岹ܳí was once renowned. Old prints reflect that when the youthful bandoleros …