Features

The lords of yore return to Anoia

More than a score of Medieval fortresses and castles have become the star attraction of a campaign to attract visitors to county that centuries ago was a frontier between kingdoms

Prats de Rei is the lat­est town to join the tourism pro­ject, “Anoia, terra de castells” (Anoia, land of cas­tles), an ini­tia­tive from the Con­sell Co­mar­cal de l'Anoia to use the county's me­dieval stonework as a way of at­tract­ing vis­i­tors and pro­mot­ing the local leisure sec­tor. In all, there are 16 mu­nic­i­pal­i­ties signed up to the cas­tle pro­ject, which be­tween them boast a total of 25 cas­tles and fortresses, while local busi­nesses have also been brought on board to pro­vide such tourist ser­vices as foot­paths, off-road cy­cling routes, restau­rants, and so on.

A large num­ber of these for­ti­fi­ca­tions and cas­tles date back to the 10th and 11th cen­turies. At that time, the counts of Barcelona, Osona-Man­resa and Berga-Cer­danya oc­cu­pied and re­pop­u­lated the area after oust­ing the for­mer Mus­lim con­querors. It was an era marked by power strug­gles, palace in­trigue, fam­ily feuds and war. Thanks to the pro­ject, since the mid­dle of May, the stonework of Anoia's cas­tles have begun to tell their sto­ries, which in some cases even outdo pop­u­lar fic­tion, such as the Game of Thrones TV se­ries.

Mo­bile app

Among the his­tor­i­cal fig­ures who lived, plot­ted and died in these places are noble fam­i­lies such as the Clara­munts or the Castel­lolís. By using a mo­bile app, vis­i­tors can now make con­tact with these fig­ures of dif­fer­ent his­tor­i­cal mo­ments, learn­ing more about their lives and the im­pact they had on the local area. Tech­nol­ogy and me­dieval aes­thet­ics thus come to­gether to make any visit to see the cas­tles mem­o­rable. Among the sto­ries to be found on the app are those re­lat­ing to fig­ures who lived in the shadow of King Jaume I, such as Guillem II de Clara­munt, As­bert de Mediona and Guillem Sescorts, who tell their tales and pro­vide an ideal way to get the best out of a visit to the cas­tles they once oc­cu­pied.

Mean­while, of the 25 build­ings in the Anoia cas­tle pro­ject (al­though in all there are around 50 sites re­main­ing), seven of them also of­fered guided vis­its.

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