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It cannot be a water mill, as there is no stream nearby. Windmills are not common round there – at least, I've never seen one.
It is significant, perhaps, that the road leading out of Hontanas towards the Camino Santiago Francés is named as Camino del Cubo. 'Cubo' means 'mill-pond' (among other things) which ties in with 'Molino del Cubo' on the Hontanas website. So, although the 'tower' is some distance from a stream, the molino must have been on one of the streams.Horse mill - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
I am not a historian. I have taken thousands of photos on my caminos. I like to caption them with information about the subject of the photo. I sometimes get the information I need from something displayed next to the subject, sometimes I get information from the internet. Unfortunately, it seems that, if I look at two results from a Google search, the information is different, like with the Casa de Tejada. Then I turn to the forum. I also turn to the forum if I cannot find any information on the internet. This was a case where I couldn't find any information about the 'tower' on the internet. But I wasn't looking in the right place. The information is there, on the Hontanas website, but I might not have found it, even then. Because of the photos, I suppose you could say I'm really interested in the history of places on the internet.Question: @Bert45 you are often asking questions about specific places and sites. Are you a historian or just really interested in history of the places on the Camino.
Mills are not all powered by wind or water. Humans and animals can be used.Hmm. A village called San Miguel? I'd expect more ruins. A mill? I'm ruling nothing out. I wish (just a bit) that I'd walked the 'real' camino from Hontanas to Castrojeriz, rather than taking the easy route along the smooth, level, tarmac road. [Don't condemn me! I walked the real, i.e. signposted, camino in 2003, but I was using film in those days, and probably felt I could not spare a frame for that structure.] I could have had a closer look at the tower. Is it a tower, even? It seems too small in width (both ways) to have a staircase within it. It cannot be a water mill, as there is no stream nearby. Windmills are not common round there – at least, I've never seen one.
You can see the ruins of the mill from the Camino (I don't recall that we noticed it. We certainly did not see the millstones). It is next to the stream called Garbanzuelo. You can see the location in Google Earth. It is to the left of (south of) the Camino de Santiago, about 500 metres before you reach the church ruins. Apparently, the millpond has disappeared but its dam can still be seen.It is significant, perhaps, that the road leading out of Hontanas towards the Camino Santiago Francés is named as Camino del Cubo. 'Cubo' means 'mill-pond' (among other things) which ties in with 'Molino del Cubo' on the Hontanas website. So, although the 'tower' is some distance from a stream, the molino must have been on one of the streams.
I can't see that the church ruins are part of what is left of a buttress when you look at it from all angles, for example @jungleboy's great photo or the photo below. It looks like the facade, i.e. the front end, of these (to me) typical Spanish churches where the bells are not enclosed in a tower but are on top of a wall that is higher than the other three walls. There is probably a Spanish word for it. This would also fit with the traditional east-west orientation of medieval churches. @Bert45, you took your photo in the morning?a buttress
I took the photo at 11:20. One of the reasons that I undertook another camino earlier this year was to see the things I had read about or seen on the internet for myself. There were a few things I was still unable to see, of course, churches were locked, etc. But this discussion has highlighted a couple of things (the 'tower' and the mill) that I might need to make another camino to see for myself, even though I had resolved not to do another camino.I can't see that the church ruins are part of what is left of a buttress when you look at it from all angles, for example @jungleboy's great photo or the photo below. It looks like the facade, i.e. the front end, of these (to me) typical Spanish churches where the bells are not enclosed in a tower but are on top of a wall that is higher than the other three walls. There is probably a Spanish word for it. This would also fit with the traditional east-west orientation of medieval churches. @Bert45, you took your photo in the morning?
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PS: Found it. The bell-gables or espadañas are a feature of Romanesque architecture in Spain. They replaced the bell tower beginning the 12th century due to the Cistercian reformation that called for more simplified and less ostentatious churches, but also for economical and practical reasons as the Reconquista accelerated and wider territory needed to be re-christianized building more churches and espadañas were cheaper and simpler to build. Today, they are a common sighting in small village churches throughout Spain and Portugal. (Wikipedia).
The reason for my question / assumption that you took the photo in the morning: the direction of the shadow of the “tower” in your photo and the common east-west orientation of Christian churches in the Middle Ages.I took the photo at 11:20