Salamanca
Salamanca

ROMAN BRIDGE

30 minutes

The Roman Bridge is one of the most emblematic constructions of the city. Situated over the Tormes River, this bridge was, until the early 20th century, the only access route to Salamanca from the south. It is believed to have been built in the 1st century AD as part of the infrastructures of the Vía de la Plata (Silver Route), a route that connected Mérida with Astorga. Throughout the centuries, it has suffered the onslaught of Tormes floods, such as that of Saint Polycarp in 1626, after which part of its structure had to be reconstructed. It has 26 arches, of which only 15 are of Roman origin, made with semicircular arches and rusticated ashlar blocks. Its silhouette has been part of Salamanca's coat of arms, alongside the Vettonian boar, since the Middle Ages.

The Roman Bridge is one of the most interesting civil engineering works from the Roman era preserved in Spain. At its entrance, when arriving from the city, there is a granite sculpture representing a roughly carved bull. This boar, of pre-Roman origin, belongs to the group of zoomorphic sculptures distributed throughout the ancient territory of the Vettones, the pre-Roman people to whom the founding of Helmantiké, ancient Salamanca, is attributed.

A popular legend recounts that a shepherd saw a bull digging next to a tree on the bank of the Tormes River. Upon approaching, he discovered the remains of an ancient bridge next to the tree. With this story, popular tradition has sought to explain why a bull, a bridge, and a tree have appeared on the coat of arms of Salamanca since the Middle Ages.

The Roman Bridge, as a silent witness to centuries of history, has seen Roman legionaries, pilgrims, dashing Napoleonic generals, and even the famous Lord Wellington pass over it. But students, ruffians, and rogues have also traversed it. It inspired the literary work of Lazarillo de Tormes. The scene between Lazarillo and the blind man in the vicinity of the Salamanca bridge is one of the most emblematic in Spanish literature.

The bridge is part of the Camino de Santiago (Silver Route), which from Mérida allowed pilgrims to reach the tomb of the Apostle Saint James. Salamanca is halfway to Santiago. Before crossing the river via the Puente Mayor, pilgrims found accommodation and care in the hermitage and hospital of Rocamador, as well as in the Church of the Holy Trinity of Arrabal. Once across the bridge, the first temple they encountered was that of Santiago, a Romanesque Mudéjar style building that gave its name to the Santiago neighborhood, now disappeared.

Nowadays, the banks of the Tormes River next to the bridge have been transformed into a true green oasis, with meadows, riverside vegetation, parks, and extensive sports areas. Every second Monday after Easter, these banks fill with young people who come down to the river to celebrate Lunes de Aguas (Water Monday) by eating the typical Salamancan hornazo. This tradition recalls that during Lent, prostitutes were forced to leave Salamanca and cross the Tormes River to go to Tejares. On Lunes de Aguas, accompanied by university students and the Padre Putas (Father of Whores), they would return to Salamanca in boats. A large feast was organized in the meadows surrounding the bridge, where the gastronomic star was the hornazo, a pastry filled with pork loin, chorizo, ham, and hard-boiled egg.

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