In this street is the building that was the Hospital of Poor Priests, whose purpose was to give assistance to the needy priests of the city. The building is configured around an arcaded cloister with ceramic ...
This street gets its name from when ball was played here in medieval times, since it was one of the ratchets preferred by the nobles. Previously it was called San Juan del Hospital.
The prosperous Valencian bourgeoisie lived in this street in the mid-19th century. Since then its architecture has been modified little, keeping a lot of it until today.
Antonio Aparisi y Guijarro was ...
The musician José Iturbi was born on this street.
The Xerea cinema was also located there, which in the 70s of the 20th century became a reference for all movie lovers.
This street is dedicated to the Valencian pianist, composer and conductor José Iturbi, who died in 1980. He was the director of several orchestras in US cities (Philadelphia, New York, Chicago) and also ...
This street runs parallel to that of La Paz, although it has a more sinuous layout as it is older. It is so called because it led to the Sea Gate of the fourteenth century wall.
Apparently the name of this street comes from a miracle of S. Vicente Ferrer, who in the face of a pronounced drought predicted that raindrops as large as hazelnuts would fall.
The doctor and Nobel laureate, ...
During the 13th century the medieval cemetery of the Church of Santa Catalina was located here, but in the 14th century it was converted into a market place.
In this square is one of the entrances to ...
This church has its origin in the 13th century and received the name of Santa Catalina in honor of the Infanta Catalina, daughter of Jaime I. In the 16th century it was covered with Renaissance decorative ...