Ernest Hemingway’s idyll with the capital of Navarre is still so alive that it is possible to imagine the author of ‘For Whom the Bell Tolls’ or ‘Fiesta’ strolling quietly through the streets of the old town, stroking his beard, until he reaches the Café Iruña for a coffee.
While it is true that Pamplona is much more than Hemingway, touring its history is a good excuse to visit unique places and learn about the love they professed for each other.
Pamplona Cathedral is dedicated to Santa María la Real and contains the mausoleum of Charles III ‘the Noble’ and his wife, Doña Leonor.
Calle Estafeta, the most famous street in Pamplona thanks to the San Fermín festival, its shops and its pintxos
Pamplona is a foodie capital, a city where you can sit back and be guided by magnificent Navarran produce, and the creativity and culinary skills of chefs who make visiting the capital’s many restaurants an utter delight.
Designed in 1830, these are the city’s oldest and most emblematic gardens, which have retained their original Romantic ambience.
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