El Casar de Talavera
About El Casar de Talavera
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Updated April 15, 2024
## El Casar de Talavera (Spain): what it is, what to see, and how to visit with context
El Casar de Talavera is a small settlement in Spain that belongs to the municipality of Talavera de la Reina, in the province of Toledo (Castilla–La Mancha). It is organized as an EATIM (an administrative entity below the municipality).
### Quick facts (verified)
– Coordinates: ~39.9628, -4.9179 (your dataset matches the coordinates cited on Wikipedia).
– Postal code: 45614.
– Altitude: 407 m.
– Administrative status: EATIM / “entidad de ámbito territorial inferior al municipio.”
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## Where exactly is El Casar de Talavera?
The Spanish Wikipedia entry places El Casar in the northwest of Toledo province, near the confluence of the N-502 (Ávila–Córdoba) and the Autovía de Extremadura.
It also notes local geography that helps you orient your visit:
– The locality borders nearby municipal terms including Talavera de la Reina, Mejorada, Gamonal, Velada, and is associated with the Tajo (Tagus) river area.
– A local stream, arroyo Merdancho, is described as crossing the area and flowing to the Tajo.
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## What makes it worth a stop (beyond “it’s a small place”)
El Casar de Talavera is one of those micro-destinations where the “visit” is really about a few specific heritage points rather than a long checklist of attractions. The most consistently cited local landmarks are:
### Atalaya de El Casar (10th century watchtower)
– Identified as an Islamic / Muslim-origin historic structure, dated to the 10th century.
– The Diputación de Toledo page specifies it as an “Atalaya… del siglo X” and even references a date “925 approx.” (that “approx.” matters—treat as an estimate, not a precise construction year).
How to use this on the ground: If you’re doing a short detour, this is the most “high-impact” sight because it’s a single, clear focal point tied to regional frontier/watchtower history (atalayas are a known defensive/visibility typology in Iberian landscapes).
### Iglesia parroquial (16th century)
– Cited as a 16th-century parish church, with Mudéjar elements (including references to a Mudéjar coffered ceiling / artesonado and distinctive ceramic work).
– Both the Spanish Wikipedia and the Diputación page emphasize unique features within the province (ceramics/artesonado, plus a carved baptismal font with imagery and a heraldic shield).
What to look for (fact-based): the sources specifically call out azulejería/cerámica, artesonado mudéjar, and the baptismal font.
### Ermita de San Roque (in ruins)
– Listed as in ruins, with the note that the image of San Roque is currently venerated in the parish church.
This is a good example of a “non-visit” you can still interpret: even if there’s little left physically, the dedication persists via the main church.
### Molino “El Cubo”
– Described as an old site associated with the celebration of “El Calbote” (1 November).
### Fuente “La Mora”
– Both sources list it and attribute historic significance (“from where Infantes and Archbishops of Spain drank” is a local-historical claim repeated in the sources).
### Small devotional/wayside elements
If you like reading landscapes through minor monuments:
– Crucero / Cruz del humilladero, near the municipal cemetery.
– El Calvario, described as being at the entrance of the village by the N-502 (Spanish Wikipedia) / by the N-V (Diputación text uses this older road designation in one line).
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## Local traditions you can time a visit around (verified listings)
If you want El Casar to feel “alive,” the best strategy is to align your stop with a local date that’s explicitly documented.
### Día de la Tortilla (Jueves de Comadre)
– Listed as happening on the Thursday before Carnival (Jueves de Comadre), with the tradition of going out to eat tortilla in the countryside/nearby areas.
### Patronal festivities (late August)
– The Diputación page lists Fiestas Patronales on the penultimate weekend of August, in honor of San Roque and Nuestra Señora del Rosario.
### Virgen del Rosario (7 October)
– Listed specifically as 7 October.
### “El Calbote” (1 November)
– Listed as 1 November (All Saints’ Day), described as spending the day in the countryside and roasting chestnuts, associated with places like Molino El Cubo and the Atalaya area.
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## Practical visit planning (only what the sources support)
### Getting oriented
– Use your coordinates (39.9627703, -4.917893) as your precision anchor; they align with published coordinates for the locality.
– Road context in the sources references N-502 and the Autovía de Extremadura nearby.
### What a realistic visit looks like
Given the listed points of interest, El Casar de Talavera is best approached as:
– a short heritage stop (atalaya + church focus), or
– a calendar-based visit (one of the specific local dates above).
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## Data quality + potential “outdated” flags (so you don’t publish shaky numbers)
Population is the one detail that varies by source and year:
– English Wikipedia shows 92 (as of 2019).
– Spanish Wikipedia shows 101 and also references INE 2022 in the body text (and a “101 hab. (2024)” line in the infobox).
– Diputación de Toledo directory shows 110 (no year displayed in the excerpted lines).
How to handle this in your post (fact-safe): state that the population is ~100 and that published figures vary by source and reference year, then cite the range above rather than choosing a single number.
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