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Museo Goya - Colección Ibercaja - Museo Camón Aznar

1979 establishments in SpainArt museums and galleries in SpainArt museums established in 1979European art museum and gallery stubsMuseums in Zaragoza
Spanish museum stubsTourist attractions in Zaragoza
Casa de los Pardo Museo Camon Aznar
Casa de los Pardo Museo Camon Aznar

The Museo Goya - Colección Ibercaja - Museo Camón Aznar is a fine arts museum in Zaragoza, Spain. It opened in 1979 under the name Museo Camón Aznar, after the art collector from the city who had contributed the nucleus of its collection. The museum collection includes over 1,000 works, with around 500 on display. It was given its current name on the 26th of February 2015 after the addition of the Ibercaja collection and the works held by the Real Sociedad Económica Aragonesa de Amigos del País.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Museo Goya - Colección Ibercaja - Museo Camón Aznar (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Museo Goya - Colección Ibercaja - Museo Camón Aznar
Calle de Francisco Bayeu, Zaragoza Casco Antiguo

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N 41.6547 ° E -0.87828 °
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Museo Goya (Colección Ibercaja - Museo Camón Aznar)

Calle de Francisco Bayeu 23
50003 Zaragoza, Casco Antiguo
Aragon, Spain
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call+34976397387

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museogoya.ibercaja.es

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Casa de los Pardo Museo Camon Aznar
Casa de los Pardo Museo Camon Aznar
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Caesaraugusta
Caesaraugusta

Caesaraugusta or Caesar Augusta was the name of the Roman city of Zaragoza, founded as a Colonia Inmune from Rome in 14 BC, possibly on December 23, on the intensely Romanized Iberian city of Salduie. Its foundation occurred in the context of the reorganization of the provinces of Hispania by Caesar Augustus after his victory in the Astur-Cantabrian wars. The new city received the name of "Colonia Caesar Augusta". It enjoyed the privilege of bearing the full name of its founder, who entrusted its deductio, like many other tasks of the Empire, to his general and close friend Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa. Veteran soldiers of the legions IV Macedonica, VI Victrix and X Gemina, discharged after the hard campaign against the Asturians and Cantabrians, participated in the foundation of the city, with the double intention of guaranteeing the defense of the territory at the same time as establishing the presence of Rome in it. Zaragoza had the status of a Colonia Inmune, granting it certain privileges such as the right to mint coins or the exemption from paying taxes. The new citizens were attached to the Aniense tribe. In the process of reorganization of Hispanic territories, three provinces were created, Tarraconense, Baetica and Lusitania, divided into juridical convents, minor districts with judicial and administrative functions; of these, the one governed by Caesaraugusta, the conventus juridicus Caesaraugustanus, was one of the largest of the seven into which the province of Tarraconense was divided. Caesaraugusta assumed from the beginning the role of regional head, replacing the colony Victrix Ivlia Celsa (in the current Velilla de Ebro). The period of the city's greatest apogee in the first and second centuries brought many of the great public works, some of which can still be seen today: the forum, the river port, which made Caesaraugusta the main redistributor of goods in the Ebro valley, the public baths, the theater or the city's first bridge, located on the site of the current Stone Bridge and which was probably a work of ashlar or a mixture of stone and wood. Water also played an important role in Roman Zaragoza, both for its location on the banks of the Ebro River and next to the mouth of the Huerva and Gállego rivers, as well as for its complex supply and irrigation systems. In addition to the aforementioned baths, a multitude of cisterns, fountains, sewers and various sections of lead and sanitation pipes have been documented.