- Time of past OR future Camino
- Most recent: Fall 2023 Aragonés, Frances
I like to find vintage images of places I've lived or travelled to. A few of Santiago.
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What wonderful historic photos; would you please share the source/date of these images.
MM
Love the pictures , thank you for sharing.I like to find vintage images of places I've lived or travelled to. A few of Santiago.
Thanks for your update; no need to go to any further trouble. As an art/architectural historian I love old views and prints. Your sepia photos of empty public spaces and women in long skirts recall discriptions by Georgina Goddard King in her fascinating early 1917 study The Way of Saint James first published 1920.
Looks like all the windows of the now parador are thrown wide open. Does anyone kow what its use was after it was a pilgrim hospital and before it was a parador?I like to find vintage images of places I've lived or travelled to. A few of Santiago.
Looks like all the windows of the now parador are thrown wide open. Does anyone kow what its use was after it was a pilgrim hospital and before it was a parador?
Looks like all the windows of the now parador are thrown wide open. Does anyone kow what its use was after it was a pilgrim hospital and before it was a parador?
The Spanish Wikipedia article states "Se utilizó como hospital hasta el siglo XIX. En el siglo XX se convirtió en Parador de Turismo con la denominación «Parador Museo Santiago»." "It was used as a hospital until the 19th century. In the 20th century it was converted in a Parador de Tourismo under the classification >Parador Museum Santiago.<" See https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hospital_de_los_Reyes_Católicos#Historia
There is also a lengthily English PDF on the Parador website itself with some historic information here: http://www.parador.es/sites/default/files/parador/adjuntos/2013/09/santiago_eng.pdf
Hope that helps, SY
The Hostal de los Reyes Católicos was the Santiago hospital until 1953. On 24th July 1954 was open as a Parador with the presence of the future pope John XXIII.
My mother was operated of goiter in that hospital.
In 1912, the hospital was declared national monument, and the photo with all those well dressed people, including soldiers, suggests me the presence inside of the King of Spain because that event.
The photo in Praza Cervantes for me is clear, it shows three old women who probably went that day to Santiago from one village near (Labacolla?) to sell products (cheese, eggs, vegetables) and buy things (sugar, chocolate....).
What is not clear for me is what could have been doing those women at Porta Santa wearing rural clothes, one of them wears wooden shoes. I mean for most women it was not usual visiting the cathedral dressed in that way.
A while back I uploaded 10 or so images of Viana in an album which you can search for ' San Fermin Vintage Postcards' ( someone please help with a proper link , my computer skills are limited)I like to find vintage images of places I've lived or travelled to. A few of Santiago.
Hey Viana fans! I've just uploaded 10 old views of Viana in the 'Photos' section. Here is just one of them. View attachment 14956
Thanx Margret ....I must learn how to do this - I will google and learn - ta.Here is Renshaw's postcard/post showing a Viana fountain.
If one selects 'Camino photos' and then scroll down to 'Browse Albums' - select .... then at the bottom select page 6 - I have written a note on collecting Vintage postcards under the 'San Fermin' viewI like to find vintage images of places I've lived or travelled to. A few of Santiago.
A while back I uploaded 10 or so images of Viana in an album which you can search for ' San Fermin Vintage Postcards' ( someone please help with a proper link , my computer skills are limited)
Below that first image is a short intro to Vintage postcards - use the top right direction button to view each image in the Album.
Ebay is a good source to find vintage postcards but perhaps an even better avenue is Delcampe postcards.