About Me

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Troy Nahumko is an award-winning author based in Caceres, Spain. His recent work focuses on travels around the Mediterranean, from Tangier to Istanbul. As a writer and photographer he has contributed to newspapers and media such as Lonely Planet, The Boston Review, The Globe and Mail, The Sydney Morning Herald, The Toronto Star, Counterpunch,The Irish World, The Straits Times, The Calgary Herald, Khaleej Times, DW-World, Rabble and El Pais. He also writes a bi-weekly op-ed column 'Camino a Ítaca' for the Spanish newspaper HOY. His book, Stories Left in Stone, Trails and Traces in Cáceres, Spain is published by the University of Alberta Press.As an ESL materials writer he has worked with publishers such as Macmillan and CUP.

Thursday, May 26, 2016

Storage never looked so good. Caceres, Spain


Damascus, Istanbul and...Cáceres. Wind up the narrow lanes of Europe's third biggest intact medieval city and emerge from the labyrinth near the Plaza de las Veletas. Scan for the palace with the strange ceramic gargoyles and enter the museum. Breeze past Roman statues, Visigothic tablets, and prehistoric pig carvings that prove Spaniards have always had a thing for ham... just when you think you've seen everything, creep through a claustrophobically small door and scale down some narrow steps, the cool dampness will reach you first. In the penumbra, beautiful Moorish arches reach down into the water showing you the world's third largest intact Arabic cistern (aljibe). Who knew?

#museum #underground #getaway #medieval #water #ancient #arches #ancientrome #publicworks #oldstone #arabicarchitecture #cisterns #aljibe #waterconservation #archtecture

Originally published on Trazzler

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