Cádiz Capital City
Cádiz, the capital of the Province of the same name, boasts a long seafaring tradition that has influenced the composition of modern day Spain. It was here that the ancient Carthaginians and their Roman enemies established powerful fortresses to control rich trading routes many centuries before the birth of Christ.
Trying to define Cádiz is like trying to define a dream. Legend holds that Cádiz was founded by Hercules and claims to it being the oldest city in Europe are supported by archaeological evidence dating from a time when Cádiz was an integral part of the Phoenician commercial sphere of influence some 1100 years B.C.
The prime position of Cádiz in relation to the major shipping routes of the Mediterranean and its extensive sheltered natural harbour have ensured its maritime dominance for untold generations.
For many centuries Cádiz was the centre of operations for Phoenician and, later, Greek commercial interests and it was during the influence of the latter that the first geographical descriptions of its favoured coastal location appear.
Its strategic importance wasn’t lost on the Romans who used Cádiz as one of the principal points of entry into the Iberian Peninsula and it was here that many of the bloody confrontations between the Romans and their arch-enemies the Carthaginians occurred.
At the end of Muslim rule and after conquest of the city by Christian forces in the 13th century, the strategic value of the city was recognised by the construction of extensive walls and the powerful castles of Santa Catalina, San Sebastián and Puntales among others.
Its commercial importance spectacularly increased, along with its rivalry with its principal competitor Seville, with the discovery of the New World and the opening up of major trans-Atlantic shipping routes that saw a huge increase in traffic related to the import of American wealth to Europe.
Cádiz has always been considered to be an fiercely independent city. It holds the distinction of being one of the places that Napoleon was unable to subdue during the Peninsula War of the early 19th century and it was here in 1812 that the first, albeit unsuccessful, Spanish constitution was proclaimed by the government in exile.
Today, Cádiz has regained some of its lost commercial splendour. Shipbuilding is still one of the main industries although tourism is increasingly important. There are many attractions.
Apart from the hugely ornate Baroque and Neo-Classical Cathedral that dominates the skyline of the coast and the Oratori de San Felipe Neri, where Spain’s first constitutional monarchy was declared, one of the principal attractions is the Carnival of Cádiz that, every year in February or March, fills the streets with participants disguised in elaborate fancy dress, parties, music, parades, shows and general good-humoured mayhem.
More information: Cádiz travel guide









