SLOPES OF CERRO DE SAN VICENTE
45 minutesThe municipal park known as Laderas del Cerro de San Vicente is located in the southwest of Salamanca's historic quarter, on the westernmost of the three hills where the primitive city was founded. This enclave houses the origin of Salamanca, a prehistoric settlement from the First Iron Age linked to the Meseta culture of Soto de Medinilla.
The area has been subject to various archaeological interventions, as well as landscaping and accessibility improvement works, which have allowed its transformation into an urban park with abundant native vegetation. The original slope of the terraces has been softened to facilitate the route, also incorporating rest areas with benches along the itinerary.
During a stroll through this environment, various elements of ethnographic interest can be observed, such as a waterwheel, irrigation systems, stone terraces, and ancient cobblestone paths, which help to highlight the historical and rural past of the place.
Free visit price
- Individual - 0.00 €
The Teso de San Vicente is the westernmost of the three hills that shaped the historic city of Salamanca. Its prominent position overlooking the Tormes River gave it a decisive strategic value, explaining its early settlement. Here, the first stable settlement of the city was established during the First Iron Age. It was occupied from the 8th to the 4th century BC, when demographic growth led the population to move to the nearby Teso de las Catedrales, which would become the fort of Salmántica.
After the foundation of this second settlement, the hill remained uninhabited for centuries, until the Benedictine Monastery of San Vicente was founded on it during the Middle Ages. Due to its strategic nature, the monastery and the hill were occupied by Napoleonic troops and transformed into a military fort during the War of Independence, which led to its destruction during the Battle of Salamanca in June 1812.
After the end of the War of Independence, the Benedictine monks tried to reconstruct what remained of the conventual building, until in 1835 they completely abandoned their fruitless attempts, to which the disentailment policies of the governments of that period contributed. The ruins of the distinguished building were thus left abandoned and exposed to the looting of its fabric, so by the last third of the 19th century, no remains of artistic interest were preserved. From this date, the area began to be colonized by the population who created, largely on the rubble of the monastery and reusing it, a popular neighborhood of small constructions that lasted until a few years ago and erased any trace of historical urban planning.
In 1949, when the Colegio Mayor de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe began to be built on the upper platform of the hill, the remains of the protohistoric settlement were discovered. Since the nineties, archaeological excavations have been carried out, allowing the site to be framed within the Soto Medinilla Culture. The importance of the remains found here led to the drafting in 1997 of the Master Plan for the Cerro de San Vicente, which differentiated three main areas of action: the archaeological remains of the First Iron Age, the remains of the Benedictine Monastery of San Vicente, and the slopes facing the Vaguada de la Palma.
The slopes of Cerro de San Vicente were part of the Monastery of San Vicente and were cultivated by the monks since ancient times. After the disentailment of the 19th century and the abandonment of the space by the monastic community, the slopes were occupied by humble families, who maintained the horticultural tradition of the area until well into the eighties of the last century.
The conditioning works on the slopes have documented archaeological remains covering all historical stages represented at the site, from the Iron Age to the present day. The intervention carried out in the park has allowed for the recovery of the historical profile of the hill, giving prominence back to the terraces and the archaeological and ethnographic landmarks present along the route.
In 2022, the Botanical Park of the Slopes of San Vicente Hill opened its doors to the public. During the conditioning works, various ethnographic elements related to traditional agricultural use were found, which today form part of the route along its pedestrian paths.
The park covers 8,741 square meters, where archaeological remains and ethnographic evidence linked to agricultural cultivation coexist. Its perimeter is delimited by an old stone wall. The area featured an irrigation system composed of channels, a water wheel, and a pond, which are preserved and have been integrated into the park's route. More than 14,000 specimens of shrub species and 70 new fruit trees have been planted, adding to the existing ones, mainly almond and quince trees.
The main access is from Vaguada de la Palma, where informative panels introduce visitors to the history of the place and guide them along the route. The slopes of the paths have been smoothed to make them accessible, and benches have been placed at strategic points along the route. Among the most prominent landmarks are:
THE NEIGHBORHOOD OF LOS MILAGROS
In the second half of the 19th century, a popular neighborhood known as Los Milagros emerged on the ruins of the ancient monumental buildings that existed in this area of the historic center. Humble families, mainly from rural areas, built their own homes here, taking advantage of the ruins caused by the Napoleonic War and the disentailment process of the 19th century. Thus, a neighborhood of low, humble houses was born, with a distinct rural appearance that contrasted with the monumental surroundings. It was an unsanitary neighborhood, without any services, through which the Los Milagros stream flowed, eventually giving its name to the neighborhood.
WATER WHEEL and POND
Among the traditional constructions preserved in the lower part of the hillside, a water wheel (noria) and a pond (alberca) can be seen. Both structures already appear in Napoleonic military plans, made at the beginning of the 19th century, so they are interpreted as original elements of the monastery's irrigation system that continued to be used by the neighborhood's inhabitants until a few decades ago.
Recently, the wheel and machinery donated by the Barbero family, manufactured by the Salamanca-based company Metalúrgica del Tormes S.A., have been installed inside the water wheel. The original machinery, which disappeared years ago, was made of wood; at the end of the 19th century, its components were replaced by cast steel parts.
IRRIGATION SYSTEM AND PAVEMENTS
Since monastic times, the terraces on this hillside had an irrigation system of channels reinforced with stone and gravel walls that distributed water from above by gravity. In archaeological excavations carried out next to the southern wall of the enclosure, what appears to be a small irrigation channel excavated in the natural terrain was detected.
TERRACE WALLS
The hillside was modified throughout history for agricultural use. Sections of stone walls from the old terraces are preserved, which contained the slopes and allowed for the creation of stepped platforms for cultivation. Some could date back to monastic times.
NEW FENCE WALL and VIEWPOINT OF SAN VICENTE MONASTERY
In 1577, the monastery acquired the land on the hilltop, known as El Castro, from the council. It commissioned architect Ribero de Rada to build a recreational house and a viewpoint over the Tormes River. The viewpoint used part of the New Fence's route, which ran from Puerta Nueva, bordering the hill to Vaguada de la Palma, as a parapet. Ribero Rada used Herrerian spheres as ornamentation. Today, one of these spheres remains on the remnants of the viewpoint.
MONASTIC COBBLESTONE PAVEMENT
At the top of the hillside, a cobblestone pavement of quartzite pebbles has been located, remnants of a path that connected the monastery's cellars with the terraced gardens on this hillside. The old paths had a much steeper slope than the current walkways.