Locatello is an app where you can generate personal audio guided tours. Set your preferred distance, guide, language and theme, and a guided tour is created on the spot.
A city gate, also known as Bab-al-Yayl or "Puerta de los Caballos", of Arab origin, featuring a horseshoe arch with escalones and integrated into the city's medieval fortifications.
A palace-fortress in the highest part of Toledo, measuring 60 meters on a side, with four large towers 60 meters high.
A Catholic cathedral, the Chapel of Saint Blaise is a burial chamber with an octopartite vault, built on the lower level of the Toledo Cathedral grounds, and decorated with frescoes and ironwork screens in a Renaissance style.
Church of Santo Tomé is a historic church in the heart of Toledo, built on the site of an old mosque in the 12th century and later rebuilt in the 14th century in Mudéjar style.
A museum building, the Synagogue of El Transito is a significant example of medieval Spain's mudéjar style, with a façade that symbolizes the social status, power, and influence of Samuel ha-Levi, a Jewish treasurer of King Peter of Castile.
A synagogue, entirely unusual in plan and elevation, converted into a church in the 15th century and later used as a museum and tourist attraction.
The Convento de San Pedro Mártir is a Dominican convent in Toledo, Spain, with three courtyards: Real, Silencio, and Naranjos/Procesiones.
A Mudéjar-style church built in the 13th century, featuring three naves, horseshoe arches, and reused Visigoth and Roman columns. The church was consecrated in 1221 and houses the "Museum of the Councils and Visigothic Culture".
A Baroque style church consecrated to Saint Ildefonso of Toledo, patron of the city and Father of the Church. Its construction took more than 100 years, starting in 1629, with various architects contributing to its completion in 1718 and final completion in 1765.
A former Dominican convent and cloistered monastery, founded at the end of the 15th century as a nunnery, and later converted into a university campus by the University of Castilla-La Mancha.
A Catholic chapel and former mosque, the Mosque of Cristo de la Luz is one of the ten Moorish-era mosques in Toledo, Spain, built in 999 and showcasing a unique blend of Islamic and Christian architectural styles.
A 10th-century city gate in Toledo, Spain, named Puerta Bab al-Mardum, also known as Puerta de Valmardón, is one of the oldest gates in the city.
A city gate in Toledo, built in the late 14th century by the Knights Hospitaller, featuring a medallion depicting the ordination of Toledo's patron saint Ildephonsus.
A 10th-century city gate constructed during the Moorish Taifa of Toledo in Islamic Al-Andalus, also known as Puerta de Alfonso VI.
A 13th-century church in Toledo, Spain, commissioned by Sancho II, built on a Visigothic and mosque site, featuring Mudéjar style with Romanesque influences and a freestanding bell-tower incorporating a former mosque's minaret.
A Moorish-inspired city gate, Puerta de Bisagra Nueva is the best-known entrance to Toledo, built in 1559 by Alonso de Covarrubias. It features the coat of arms of Charles V and replaced the Puerta Bisagra Antigua as the main city gate.
Convento de San Pedro Mártir