Destinations
Trujillanos
- Explore
- Trujillanos
Destinations
Trujillanos
Location and Contact:
- Contact person: Town Hall Trujillanos
- Tel.:924327048
- Fax: 924327004
- Email: ayuntamiento@trujillanos.es
- Email: secretario@trujillanos.es
- Website address: www.trujillanos.es
-
A stroll through the streets of this town will enable you to make contact with its people, its culture, its traditions and popular festivals so that you can experience Extremadura in full.
-
Type:
- Locality
Theme:
- Destinations
Target audience:
- Families
- Young people
- Single people
- Senior citizens
- Children
- Couples
- Single people
More suggestions
-
National Roman Art Museum in Mérida
The National Roman Art Museum (MNAR) shows the visitor different sides of daily life in the province of Hispania.
-
Extremadura Geology Museum
Its collection has made this museum one of the most important of its kind.
-
Museum of Visigoth Art and Culture
The collection of Visigoth pieces in this museum brings together relics from Mérida from the 4th-8th centuries, as the capital of the Diocesis Hispaniarum and as the metropolitan capital of the province of Lusitania
-
Museum of Mérida
The Museum of the Town of Mérida houses a collection on the Mérida-born sculptor and other pieces that take one on a route through the town's history.
-
Charca La Vega Del Machal Special Protection Area (SPA) for Birds
Reservoirs are the main feature of this natural space.
-
Cornalvo Reservoir and Sierra Bermeja SPA and SCI
Come and discover this area of dehesas, or pasture lands, with a Roman reservoir.
-
Morerías Archaeological Zone
Find out how the town of Mérida developed from Roman times to the Visigoth era.
-
Archaeological Ensemble of Mérida
Mérida's Roman past is still very obvious from the many monuments remaining, reflecting life in one of the Empire's provincial capitals.
-
Roman theatre of Mérida
The town of Mérida contains one of the most important archaeological sites in the world, of which the Roman theatre forms part.
-
Rabo de Buey Aqueduct
Mérida was supplied with water by three main aqueducts in Roman times. One of them was the one called Rabo de Buey, or also San Lázaro.