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Tarragona Cathedral

12th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in Spain13th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in Spain14th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in SpainBuildings and structures in TarragonaChurches completed in 1331
Gothic architecture in CataloniaRoman Catholic cathedrals in Catalonia
Cathedral of Tarragona 01
Cathedral of Tarragona 01

The Cathedral of Tarragona is a Roman Catholic church in Tarragona, Catalonia, Spain. The edifice is located in a site previously occupied by a Roman temple dating to the time of Tiberius, a Visigothic cathedral, and a Moorish mosque. It was declared a national monument in 1905.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Tarragona Cathedral (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Tarragona Cathedral
Carrer de Santa Tecla, Tarragona

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Wikipedia: Tarragona CathedralContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.119166666667 ° E 1.2580555555556 °
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Catedral de Tarragona

Carrer de Santa Tecla
43001 Tarragona
Catalonia, Spain
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Cathedral of Tarragona 01
Cathedral of Tarragona 01
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Naval battle of Tarragona

The battle of Tarragona fought between 4 and 6 July 1641, was a naval engagement of the Reapers' War in which a Spanish galley fleet led by the Duke of Fernandina attempted to break the French naval blockade of Tarragona, at that time besieged by land by the French and Catalan armies under the French Viceroy of Catalonia. The French blockading fleet was under command of Henri d'Escoubleau de Sourdis, Archbishop of Bordeaux, and consisted both of sailing and rowing vessels. On 4 July it was engaged by the Spanish galleys, of which some managed to enter the port of the town during a fierce action. In the end, a large number of Spanish galleys were abandoned when their crews panicked and fled to the beaches. On the night of 6 July Abraham Duquesne escorted 5 fireships to the mole of the harbor, where the Spanish galleys were abandoned, and set fire to them. The worsening of the situation inside Tarragona after the battle, caused largely because the vessels that had entered the port remained blocked, adding hundreds of mouths to feed, compelled Philip IV of Spain to order the assembling of a second relief fleet. This time, the number of vessels gathered was much larger, after the joining of Fernandina's squadron with another one commanded by the Duke of Maqueda. Sourdis offered battle to them on 20 August, but was defeated and the blockade was lifted. Viceroy Philippe de La Mothe-Houdancourt had to face simultaneously a land relief, and was forced to abandon the siege, retreating to Valls. Even if the siege and the 2nd Battle were two clear setbacks for the French, some Spanish authors also claim that Fernandina won the first battle.