Heritage towns in Toledo
9 towns in this province.
A UNESCO World Heritage city on the Tajo river in Castilla-La Mancha, where a Gothic cathedral, Moorish mosques, medieval synagogues, and a hilltop alcázar stand within the same ancient walled centre.
A city on the Tagus in Toledo province, where prehistoric dolmens, Roman walls, Moorish towers, Gothic-mudéjar churches and a famous ceramic tradition layer more than three thousand years of continuous human settlement.
A castle town in western Toledo province where a medieval fortress built in two stages — first by Moorish hands, then by the counts of Oropesa — still anchors the skyline above a landscape scattered with the ruins of villages long since abandoned.
Above the plains of Toledo, Consuegra's ridge carries a Moorish-origin castle and a line of twelve windmills that together mark one of the most recognisable skylines in Castilla-La Mancha.
A Toledo hill town with a monumental Plaza Mayor, Renaissance convents, and a past that drew Castilian royalty — including Isabel la Católica — to its streets.
A La Mancha town whose grand arcaded plaza once doubled as a bullring, shaped by Roman roads, medieval crusading orders, and centuries of wool trade across the Castilian plain.
A Toledan hill town of medieval walls, surviving town gates, and a castle on its western edge, where centuries of Castilian history left their mark on every street corner.
Famous across the world as the home of Dulcinea from Cervantes' *Don Quixote*, this small La Mancha town in Toledo province carries one of the most recognised addresses in Spanish literature.
A Toledo province market town shaped by Romans, Visigoths, Moors, and medieval royalty, its streets still carrying the irregular grain of an Arab city and its skyline anchored by a Gothic-Renaissance collegiate church built in nine years at the turn of the sixteenth century.