Brief description:

Vigo is a port town and naval station, in the Pontevedra provincia, within the comunidad autonoma ("autonomous community") of Galicia, northwestern Spain.

Vigo, lies along the southeastern shore of the Vigo Inlet of the Atlantic Ocean, southwest of Pontevedra city. It was attacked by the English admiral Sir Francis Drake in 1585 and 1589. In 1702 a British-Dutch fleet under Sir George Rooke and James Butler, Duke of Ormonde, destroyed a Franco-Spanish fleet in the bay (Battle of Rande). The town's architecture gives a modern impression, though a few old buildings still remain. These include the medieval chapel of the Casa de Caridad; the neoclassical Collegiate Church of Santo Cristo de la Victoria, built to commemorate the defeat of the French in the Peninsular War (1808-14); and the 17th-century Castillo del Castro. Fishing is important, and the town's industry is well developed. Its manufactures include leather, lumber, flour, paper, sugar, brandy, and machinery. Click here for more information about the history of Vigo.

Here there are some nice pictures of Vigo (click on the images to obtain a bigger version).


 
Ria de Vigo   Aereal view of the city.

 Vigo is a marine city that dominates the estuary with the same name, Ria de Vigo.    It is a cosmopolitan metropolis and one of the most important centres in the Galician-Portuguese coast.




Puerto de Vigo   The Harbour.

 Its privileged marine situation, with its fishing, trading and communications importance, makes it a fundamental place in Vigo. Another important place in the city is the Real Club Naútico, which occupies an important place as regards water sports. At the bottom, we can see a ship travelling towards the Morrazo's peninsula (opposite to Vigo).



El Castro   El Castro.

 Settlement of the first pre historic town in Vigo. Its park offers extensive green areas with trees and with the fortress at the top; the views from this place are extraordinary. The anchors shown in this photo belonged to some of the galleons found in the botton of the Estuary of Vigo, in the Rande area, where a famous battle between Franco-Spanish and British-Dutch fleets was held.




Islas Cies   Partial view of one of the Cies Islands,

  The Cies Islands is a group of three islands located at the entrance of the Vigo Estuary. Hardly an hour's trip separates the Vigo from these three islands with a disturbing beauty where traces from ancient civilizations live together with colonies of protected birds as well as infinite beaches and intense vegetation.