Built in the 18th century, this architectural marvel soars nearly 100 meters above the gorge and took over 40 years to complete — a masterpiece that still offers one of Spain’s most spectacular views.Picture it: a massive wooden gate bursting open, a raging bull charging out in a blur of muscle and dust. The crowd roars from the stone tiers, a wall of sound rising under the Andalusian sun. Trumpets, tension, excitement—every heartbeat synced to the intensity unfolding in the sand.
This plaza has witnessed centuries of spectacle. Built in the late 18th century, the Plaza de Toros de Ronda is one of Spain’s oldest and most revered bullrings, often called the birthplace of modern bullfighting. Legends were made here, traditions refined, and reputations sealed with a single pass of the cape.
Today, though, the arena feels different.
The stands are quiet. The gravel crunches softly underfoot. Instead of adrenaline, there’s reflection. While bullfights are still occasionally held here, most notably during Ronda’s famous Corrida Goyesca, they are far fewer than in the past—and increasingly controversial. The space now functions largely as a museum and historical monument, inviting visitors to learn rather than cheer.
Here, in the calm after centuries of noise, I felt relief.
Relief that this place can be appreciated for its architecture, its history, and its cultural significance—without the blood and suffering that once defined its purpose. The echoes of the crowd may linger in the stone, but the silence feels like progress.
Some traditions are worth remembering.
Others are better left in the past.
Lunch at Restaurante Abades Ronda — a hearty Andalusian spread! 🍽️ We started with embutidos ibéricos (local cold cuts), soup, and croquetas de pollo, or chicken croquettes — a classic Spanish tapa commonly served in Ronda. The main dish was carne en salsa, tender beef stew with fries, and we ended on a sweet note with natillas con galleta, a creamy custard topped with a simple biscuit. Comfort food with a Spanish soul.After lunch, we crossed to the opposite side of the gorge for a completely different view of the town. From this angle, the Puente Nuevo looked even more magnificent — a towering sweep of stone bridging the cliffs, with whitewashed houses perched daringly along the edge. Below, the gorge plunged deep and narrow, the river glimmering in the sun like a silver thread. It was one of those scenes that make you pause, breathe, and quietly say to yourself, wow… this is Ronda.
We started with Calamares Rellenos con Arroz y Salsa Verde, tender squid stuffed and served with rice and a bright green sauce, followed by Solomillo de Cerdo en Salsa, succulent pork tenderloin bathed in a rich, savory sauce with potatoes and vegetables. To finish, we shared a slice of pastel cordobés, Córdoba’s signature puff pastry tart dusted with sugar and filled with sweet pumpkin jam. A hearty end to a day of cliff-top views.


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...Veronica, once again you saw some amazing sights. Thanks for sharing them with me.
ReplyDeletemagnificent photos of your travels. The aqueduct and the arena look amazing. I've done some traveling throughout Spain and find the history and architecture fascinating.
ReplyDeleteBreathtaking views, a wonderful bridge, a great museum and a church. Wonderful to be able to see these structures and scenes, Veronica. The food looks ok too :)
ReplyDeleteWhat nice views! I visited there back in the 1990's, thanks for bringing back good memories.
ReplyDeleteWhat a fantastic series of photos from your trip, Veronica.
ReplyDeleteThere are beautiful views.
I'm not a fan of bullfighting, I consider it animal cruelty.
The food looks delicious again.
I wish you a wonderful week.
Best regards Irma
Dear Veronica,
ReplyDeletea wonderful lucky new year with Happiness and Health.
The photos sounds from summer, here in Germany is winter - with snow and ice and storm! Today the sun is shining - now it's a Photo-Winter-Day ;-)
Greetings
Kirsi
Happy New Year, Veronica :-)
ReplyDeleteThe architecture of that 18th-century stone bridge is absolutely stunning.
Great post. Thanks for sharing.
Amazing photos. Amazing food. Have a beautiful day.
ReplyDeletersrue.blogspot.com
Thank you, Veronica, for sharing these marvelous sites with us and for your historical notes of the places you encountered. This was a once-in-a-lifetime holiday, for sure. Blessings in the New Year!
ReplyDeletevery beautiful post, thank you
ReplyDeleteThe stone bridge looks really impressive! Absolutely distastes the bullfighting...
ReplyDeleteWonderful trip
ReplyDeleteRonda looks wonderful. That bridge over the gorge is spectacular. Incredible to think it was built in the 18th century! You certainly ate well on your trip!
ReplyDeleteWhat a nice places, thanks for your sharing
ReplyDeleteEverything is so pretty and so impressively clean too!
ReplyDeleteYour photos are extraordinary this time around. Such a wonderful trip you had. The old buildings look so historic with so many stories behind them. I've always wondered what the bullfights were all about, as I don't really understand the history or traditions of it all. It's never been wise to me to mess with nature and the wild. The fashion is something else! Your sky photos are striking, and the food looks delicious.
ReplyDeleteI hope the new year is being kind to you so far. : )
The way they've built that bridge is pretty scary, the cliff looks so high up.
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year, Veronica! :* Very beautiful post, thank you!
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year!
ReplyDeleteThe park is beautiful.
The arena is gigantic. I felt very sorry for the bulls, though. It's good that their era is over. :)
The different cuisine you shared has me literally salivating. The food is enough reason to visit alone. And I loved seeing that wonderful old stone bridge. It's fun to think of all the different people who have travelled across that bridge over the centuries!
ReplyDeleteThank you very much, Veronica! I like the places in your post. I enjoy looking at the ancient bridge.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful photos, Veronica. The photos of your meals made my mouth water.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to hear bullfighting has fallen in frequency. It sounds like it was a lovely day.
ReplyDeleteGenial viaje. Lindas fotos. Te mando un beso.
ReplyDeleteVeronica, what a great way to start the new year by sharing these photos of such wonderful architecture. That bridge over the gorge and the bullfighting area were amazing and it looks like you also enjoyed beautiful weather on your travels. The foods did make me hungry and made me recall the delicious meals we enjoyed in Portugal this past October. Spain is on our "to see" list as well.
ReplyDeleteWhat wonderful photos and stories you've told about Ronda. The architecture is beautiful. I attended a bull fight once, many years ago, in South America, and felt so sorry for the animals. I wouldn't go again. The pageantry and traditions were interesting, but not the suffering.
ReplyDeleteI like your skirt and top outfit. Very chic.
Dear Veronica, your travel report from Andalusia is wonderful. The photos from Córdoba are fantastic. Thank you for taking us along on the journey.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed your photo diary. Beautiful scenes and good food!
ReplyDeleteA most wonderful adventure and the food. I love the food.
ReplyDeleteThank you for joining the Wordless Wednesday Blog Hop.
Have a fabulous Wordless Wednesday. ♥
Another fantastic travelogue, Veronica! ♥ Thanks for sharing your tour, and I'm with you about the bull fighting. Glad it's in the past, as it was a cruel "sport".
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing these wonderful photos with us.
ReplyDeleteThe park and views look so peaceful and lush. Quite a contrast from some of the other places on your tour.
The bridge is impressive, and it wowed me to think it took 40 years to build.
Hope your new year is off to a good start.
Another fabulous day of amazing sights! It is really neat to see those houses perched so close to the edge of the cliffs.
ReplyDeletegreat post with lot of interesting details.
ReplyDeleteWe were in Cordoba in November. What a beautiful place.
ReplyDeleteLovely scenery and some amazing structures. Thank you for the photos so I could journey through them to see what you were seeing through the lens. Looks amazing, and amazing history of the bullfights.
ReplyDeleteHello Veronica,
ReplyDeleteBeautiful trip photos and report. I love the lovely park and the stone bridge over the gorge is amazing. You were able to visit many wonderful places. Take care, have a great day!
Thank you for the wonderful post from Spain. The bridge is amazing. Happy Thursday, Veronica!
ReplyDeletethanks! https://sintrabloguecintia.blogspot.com/
ReplyDeleteVery interesting post and pictures.
ReplyDeletewww.paginasempreto.blogspot.com
Another post with amazing photos and details. Thanks for sharing with me.
ReplyDeleteGreat photos of your travels ~ enjoy '~ hugs,
ReplyDeleteWow! That is so amaizing!
ReplyDeleteBjxxx,
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Oh wow, that bridge! So incredible!! Thanks for sharing your experience.
ReplyDeleteI agree that there are some traditions that need to be relegated to the past. We've been to Madrid, Segovia and Toledo but all were very quick visits so we did not get to see as much as you did. Wonderful photos and descriptions.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful views. I'm so jealous of trips like that ;) Have a nice day!
ReplyDeleteAngelika
This is such a poignant and lovely post with beautiful views, delicious looking food and wonderful sights. I love the very old architecture, it's quite beautiful. But this also made me think, especially as you mentioned about the traditions that should stay in the past. And even MORE especially, as you wrote about the horse and the carriage. It was a good reminder that as we tour the world and experience so many of the "tourist" things, there is a powerful, often sad, back story -- one that affects both humans and the animals, too.
ReplyDeleteDelightful pictures of amazing sites. A joy to view, Veronica.
ReplyDeleteDear Veronica thank you for your good heath wishes :) I am starting visiting today and you are the first blogger I came to. You share such spectacular views of all the places you visited. The bridge over the gorge is magnificent, and the cliff top views amazing. I couldn't help noticing your empathy towards the horses that pull the carriages, I feel the same as you, and also bullfights are cruel specticles that I wish could be banned.. In Greece you showed the same empathy for the donkeys that carried tourists all day long up and down steep inclines. and although of a cultural nature, I can't bare cruelty to animals and wish it would stop. I enjoyed all your photos, you see so much of other countries, and I missed some of your visit to Portugal so I will visit again, when I have visited everyone who left me a lovely get well message.
ReplyDeleteAll the best
Warm hugs
Sonjia.
Thank you so much for your beautiful photos and details of your trip,
ReplyDeleteshared with us. There is so much beauties in this world!
A Happy New Year, dear Veronica! ❤️😘
Beautiful photos, and the stone bridge is magnificent. Wherever we travel we all have wonderful experiences that are unfortunately tinged with some sadness. I hope bullfighting will soon end completely. And I agree about the horses, I saw similar ones in Cuba.
ReplyDeleteSpektakuläre und einzigartige Eindrücke! LG aus Wien
ReplyDeleteLiebe Veronica,
ReplyDeleteich liebe Deine Reiseberichte. Es ist so schön zu lesen, als wäre man dabei gewesen! Sehr interessant und sicher sehr beeindruckend sieht diese Steinbrücke aus, ein Meisterwerk!! Ja, so einen Stierkampf braucht man in der heutigen Zeit wirklich nicht mehr aber die Arena ist sicher sehenswert.
Herzliche Grüße und ein gesundes neues Jahr wünschen
Kerstin und Helga
No me canso de darte las gracias por compartir vuestro precioso viaje por Portugal y España . Muchos y buenos recuerdos me trae.
ReplyDeleteHasta ahora conocemos lo que habéis visitado y seguro que tenéis también estupendos recuerdos. Bellísimos lugares todos que no olvidaréis. Pensé lo mismo que tu, cuando vimos los carruajes de caballos, se ven un varias ciudades andaluzas. Y en pleno verano con tanto calor, es tremendo verlos para diversión de los turistas. Tendría que desaparecer.
Os deseo un feliz 2026 Verónica. Que sea un buen año para vosotros.
Abrazos 🤗 🤗 〰〰💞
I wish you a happy 2026, Verónica. May it be a good year for both of us. Hugs 🤗 🤗 〰〰💞
Veronica, I love your description of the farmland - 'a quilt stitched in gold and olive green'
ReplyDeleteBeautifully awesome. A happy belated new year to you!
What a great blog to read and see about your experiences. And of course, don't forget the stomach. That wall must have been really high when you looked down at it with your photo. It's another beautiful memory for you, and the beautiful photography for me. Thanks for sharing. I just wanted to let you know that there's a link on your homepage to follow you on blogloving, but it's no longer working.
ReplyDeleteDear Veronica,
ReplyDeleteyour travelogue took me to places I haven't yet seen with my own eyes. I was, of course, familiar with the Puente Nuevo over the El Tajo Gorge from photos; the sight is absolutely fascinating, and I hope to travel there someday. Regarding the bullring, you found very beautiful and fitting words to describe the atmosphere and your thoughts about it. I think I would have felt very similarly to you! You also reflect on the carriage horses... It seems we humans don't easily stop viewing animals as something we can use at our whim. On the other hand, I wonder how many of these animals wouldn't even be alive if they didn't serve a "tourist purpose"... Sigh!
I also traveled virtually to Seville with you—but only today, as I have a lot to do right now. The city is as beautiful as its reputation. You've made me really want to visit Spain again (just as you've made me want to visit a few more places in Portugal).
Warm winter greetings ❄️☃️, Traude
https://rostrose.blogspot.com/2026/01/reisebericht-2025-vogelbegegnungen.html
Looks like an amazing trip -- great pictures, and you learned so much history; I appreciate you sharing the good and the bad parts.
ReplyDeleteYour photography of your travels is amazing. You take such great photos and share such beautiful places and history with us. I just love it.
ReplyDelete