GALICIAN GEOGRAPHICAL DATA

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  1. SITUATION & DISTANCES

    AMSTERDAM
    ATHENS
    BARCELONA
    BERN
    BERLIN
    BRUSSELS
    BUDAPEST
    COPENHAGEN
    DUBLIN
    EDINBURGH
    STOCKHOLM
    2.091
    4.475
    1.174
    2.132
    2.715
    1.905
    3.070
    2.890
    2.615
    2.730
    3.512
    HELSINKI
    LISBOA
    LONDON
    MOSCOW
    MADRID
    OSLO
    PARIS
    PRAGUE
    ROME
    VIENNA
    WARSAW
    3.880
    556
    2.081
    4.570
    670
    3.490
    1.610
    2.640
    2.530
    2.805
    3.293
    Santiago de Compostela - Distances from other European cities (kms)


  2. THE SEVEN MAJOR CITIES

    Here you are the present seven major cities of Galicia: Vigo, A Coruña, Santiago, Ourense, Pontevedra, Lugo and Ferrol. They are the only settlements that exceed the 50,000 inhabitants.


  3. VIGO AND ITS BAY

    The biggest human concentration of Galicia is placed in this industrious city, founded some 4,000 years ago in a privileged maritime settlement. Its present population exceeds the 300,000 inhabitants, and the Vigo Bay area exceeds the 500,000.

    The coat of arms of VigoVigo is known as "The City of the Olive Tree", as this is its emblem, the symbol of peace. In the 14th century the religious warrior order of the Knight-Templars seized the joint cathedral of Santa María (no longer standing today) and in its atrium planted an olive tree, the symbol of peace, and a reminder of Jesus Christ entering Jerusalem. The Knight-Templars eventually disappeared from Vigo, as happened in the rest of Europe, but they left their legacy in the symbol of the olive tree. In the 19th century the old church of Santa María was torn down and the olive tree disappeared. Manuel Ángel Pereyra, however, had taken a cutting of the tree and his descendants planted it in the Paseo de Alfonso XII, where it stands today. On its bronze plaque there is an inscription expressing the promise made by the people to Vigo to give "love, loyalty and self-sacrifice to the city". The olive tree is included on the heraldic emblem of the city, along with a castle and the Atlantic Ocean.

    The sporting port of VigoThe Atlantic Ocean and Vigo are quite inseparable. From 16th century the port of O'Berbés has had a very important and universal traffic, being affected by Francis Drake's piracies. In 1702 it took place the battle of Rande in the Vigo Bay's waters, in which Spanish fleet was sunk by English and Dutch navies. The big treasure that shipped the Spanish boats was lost and never found in the Bay.

    The beginning of the 19th century was marked by the Napoleonic Wars. Vigo was the last city in Galicia to surrender to the French invader and the first to be liberated. The so-called "Reconquest of Vigo" started out with a guerrilla war until it snowballed into a true popular liberation army, that would defeat and capture the entire French garrison. There is a monument commemorating the victory of the city over the French in March 27th, 1809.

    In the 19th century Vigo became capital of its province, starting the industrial and commercial renewal, becaming the most important city of Galicia and the best pillar of Galician economy.

    The pazo of CastrelosIt's worth to be visited the neoclassic Colexiata de Santa María in the old downtown, its urban center, with its broad streets and avenues, or the Quiñóns de León Museum at the pazo of Castrelos, containing an important collection of modern painting and Celtic archaeology items. Not to be forgotten the viewpoints of O Castro (with its Celtic archeological remains), A Guía and O'Pozo mounts, with splendid vistas over the Bay, the near Cíes islands and the A Madroa zoo.


  4. THE BIG MAP


    Click on the picture to get a full color big map of Galicia, with the major cities and towns, roads and so on.


  5. THE WEATHER

    Galicia is in a tempered zone. Its climate, marine par excellence, counts on slight variations of temperature, smooth to winter and fresh summers, rains to us combined with seasons of sun, that make reality their green landscapes.

    By its situation and geographic extension, from the sea to the plateau, in Galicia certain climatic diversity exists. In the coastal strip their temperatures oscillate between 8º-10º of winter and 20º-25º of the summer. As we moved away of the coast (Lugo and the province of Ourense) the climate becomes drier, with obvious differences of temperatures respect to the average, superior in the summer and lower in the winter.

    The Rías Baixas (Low Bays), between Padrón and Tui, counts on a differentiated microclimate. The number of precipitations more is reduced during summer and their temperatures usually are, in these dates, 5º over those of the rest of the coast of Galicia.

    More about Galician weather:


The temperature in Vigo right now.


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