-
- Click Here for more information
article_detailFree guided tours in the city of Cartagena 2024!
Contact your guide and arrange a visit to Cartagena whenever you like!
During the remainder of 2024 the tourist board of the Region of Murcia has organized a series of guided tours which can be contracted on any date and at any time by groups of between 2 and 29 people.
These tours are all free of charge except where admission fees to museums and other establishments are payable, and most of them can be held in English: see below for the list of registered guides and the languages they offer.
The locations are in many different towns and cities of the Region, and while it is to be expected that Murcia and Cartagena feature prominently there are also other fascinating visits in Lorca, Cieza, Caravaca and more.
The tours listed in Cartagena are the following:
- The Mediterranean port of Cartagena (“Cartagena, puerto del Mediterráneo”)
A 2-hour tour which includes the Plaza del Ayuntamiento, Plaza Héroes de Cavite, the seafront Paseo Alfonso XII, the Museo Naval and the ARQUA national underwater archaeological museum.
In the 16th century Cartagena was named the home of the Royal Galleys of Spain, and two hundred years later towards the end of the 18th century it became the navy’s Maritime Capital of the Mediterranean. These two honours led to the city being endowed with a fantastic range of castles, fortresses, an arsenal and even defensive walls to protect the most important military port of the Spanish Mediterranean.
In the decades that followed, the industrialized mining boom brought economic prosperity to go along with the military prestige, and this opulent status is reflected in the palatial residences which still line the streets of the Calle Mayor and others in the old centre.
This guided visit includes a stop in the Naval Museum, where the first electrically powered submarine (designed in Cartagena by Isaac Peral) is housed, and the Museo Nacional de Arqueología Subacuática (ARQUA), where among the exhibits is the treasure found with the wreck of the galleon Nuestra Señora de las Mercedes. Along the way your guide will also be pointing out and explaining some of the military and Modernist architecture which adorn the streets, all of it made possible by the development of Cartagena as a port city with the rich heritage of the many different cultures which have settled and governed here over the last 3,000 years.
Admission to the Museo Naval but for the ARQUA museum it is necessary to pay 3 euros per head on working weekdays (free of charge on Saturdays from 14.00 to 20.00 and on Sundays from 10.00 to 15.00).
2. Roman Cartagena (“Uno de Romanos”)
After a brief period of Carthaginian rule in the 3rd century BC it was the Romans who consolidated “Carthago Nova” as an important trading and military port, and this tour takes visitors to some of the many vestiges of the centuries of Roman rule over the following centuries.
The Romans captured the city during the Second Punic War, when the Carthaginian Hannibal, son of Hasdrubal, set off from Cartagena on his famed journey with the intention of overthrowing the authorities in Rome itself.
This great power struggle is a part of Cartagena’s history of which the modern-day population are proud, and the annual “Cartagineses y Romanos” fiestas are now among the most important dates in the calendar. The route of the “Uno de Romanos” tour takes in many of the Roman remains which have been unearthed – and are still being unearthed – in recent decades, such as the Punic Wall, the remains in Calle San Diego, the Casa de la Fortuna, Plaza San Francisco, the area around the forum district on the Molinete hill, the “Decumano Máximo” street, Plaza San Sebastián, Calle Mayor, the Plaza del Ayuntamiento and of course the Roman Theatre Museum.
The quantity and quality of these remains has led to Cartagena becoming one of the most important cities in Europe for archaeologists, and this is your chance to see why!
Although the services of the tour are free of charge, the combined admission fees to the Casa de la Fortuna, the Punic Wall centre and the Roman Theatre cost 13 euros per person (10 euros for large groups, the unemployed, OAPs, students and large families).
3. Modernist Cartagena
Another 2-hour route which takes visitors to many of the splendid buildings which appeared in Cartagena in the late 19th century, when the city at last returned to being a wealthy and important port after decades, even centuries, of relative obscurity. This was due in part to Cartagena being chosen as the main Spanish navy base in the Mediterranean – the Navy’s “Mediterranean capital” – and in part to the resurgence of mining brought about by the Industrial Revolution, which made it possible to extract minerals which had previously lain untouched.
High-ranking navy officers and those who profited from the mines built a series of palatial Modernist residences in the city, and this tour in the old centre includes the room in which Isaac Peral’s pioneering submarine is displayed, the Palacio Consistorial in the Plaza del Ayuntamiento, the Calle Mayor, the Plaza del Rey, Plaza San Sebastián, Plaza San Francisco and the Palacio Aguirre in Plaza de la Merced.
The route begins at the tourist office in the Plaza del Ayuntamiento before heading to the seafront to visit the Peral Submarine. Returning to the Plaza del Ayuntamiento, there is a stop in the grand entry hall of the Palacio Consistorial and then in the Calle Mayor, still a pedestrian street, the sights include the magnificent façades of the Casa Cervantes and the Casino.
From here it’s a short walk to the Plaza del Rey, which plays a central role in the city’s renowned Semana Santa processions, and next on the itinerary are the emblematic Gran Hotel and the Casa Maestre. Finally, it’s on to the Palacio de Don Camilo Aguirre, a luxurious mansion which gives us an insight into the well-heeled lifestyle of the bourgeois of Cartagena well over a century ago (it is now home to the regional museum of modern art).
CONTACT YOUR TOUR GUIDE
The guides listed by the ITREM tourist board are the following:
NATALIA BUSTAMANTE - nabuste@hotmail.com, telephone 679 630549
Languages: Spanish / French / English
MARÍA INMACULADA ARRES SERRANO - mariainmaculada.arres@gmail.com, telephone 628 438273
Languages: English / Italian
TUDMIR SERVICIOS TURÍSTICOS - info@tudmirst.com, telephone 691 022019
Languages: English
MARIÁN HERRERO MARTÍNEZ - marianherrero@gmail.com, telephone 661 471640
Languages: English
MAYCA DENGRA ROMERO - info@visitasguiadasmurcia.com, telephone 610 689900 / 968 219099
MIGUEL ÁNGEL POMARES AROCA - info@guiasmur.com, telephone 616 717888
Languages: Spanish
CAROLINA GUTIÉRREZ MARTÍNEZ - caro.gutierrez.martinez@gmail.com, 620 442311
Languages: Spanish
JOSÉ ANTONIO GÁZQUEZ MILANÉS - info@stipaturismo.com, telephone 658 641101
YOLANDA RIQUELME MARCOS - yorimarcos@hotmail.com, telephone 686 199961
Source: ITREM
article_detail
LoadingSign up for the Spanish News Today Editors Roundup Weekly Bulletin and get an email with all the week’s news straight to your inbox
Special offer: Subscribe now for 25% off (36.95 euros for 48 Bulletins)
OR
you can sign up to our FREE weekly roundup!
Read some of our recent bulletins:
25% Discount Special Offer subscription:
36.95€ for 48 Editor’s Weekly News Roundup bulletins!
Please CLICK THE BUTTON to subscribe.(List price 3 months 12 Bulletins)
Read more stories from around Spain:
Contact Spanish News Today: Editorial 966 260 896 / Office 968 018 268
To be listed on the CAMPOSOL TODAY MAP please call +34 968 018 268.
To be listed on the CONDADO TODAY MAP please call +34 968 018 268.
Guidelines for submitting articles to Camposol Today
Hello, and thank you for choosing CamposolToday.com to publicise your organisation’s info or event.
Camposol Today is a website set up by Murcia Today specifically for residents of the urbanisation in Southwest Murcia, providing news and information on what’s happening in the local area, which is the largest English-speaking expat area in the Region of Murcia.
When submitting text to be included on Camposol Today, please abide by the following guidelines so we can upload your article as swiftly as possible:
Send an email to editor@camposoltoday.com or contact@murciatoday.com
Attach the information in a Word Document or Google Doc
Include all relevant points, including:
Who is the organisation running the event?
Where is it happening?
When?
How much does it cost?
Is it necessary to book beforehand, or can people just show up on the day?
…but try not to exceed 300 words
Also attach a photo to illustrate your article, no more than 100kb