Surrounded by the Atlantic, in Vigo, Spain

Vigo, SpainEarlier this month, I was in Galicia, Spain for the first time. Although I’ve traveled quite a bit around beautiful Spain, I’d never journeyed to westernmost points before.

I was in the port city of Vigo for work. Unfortunately, I didn’t have much time to explore this interesting city, but I did manage to do a bit of wandering and enjoyed my time in this last outpost of Europe – just on the edge of the Atlantic Ocean.

Vigo, SpainAs the Galicians liked to explain to me, theirs is not a dialect but a distinct language separate from Spanish. The Galician language developed in the 11th century, and is closely associated with Portuguese (the Portuguese border is only  a few kilometers from Vigo).

Vigo is Galicia’s oldest and  most industrialized city. Vigo has its roots in Roman times. It began to accumulate wealth after Charles V authorized it to serve as a port city with the burgeoning trade with America, in 1529. (Christopher Columbus’s Pinta ship docked nearby on its return voyage, south of Vigo in Baiona. If you’re a Columbus groupie, see my earlier posts on Columbus’ hometown of Genova and the statue in his honor in Barcelona)

Vigo, SpainDivers love exploring the waters around Vigo, where many galleons are said to have sunk. I’m told these underwater structures are fun to explore.

Today, Vigo is the largest port for consumed fish in all of Europe. The city has developed a thriving seafood industry, and that alongside its port and shipbuilding industry keep the city’s economy humming.

It’s fun to wander the city’s old town, with its narrow twisting streets. The castle sits high above the city, and boasts beautiful views out to the bay – and offers a spectacular perch for the dramatic sunsets.

Vigo is an enjoyable city to wander. Enjoy this corner of Galicia, surrounded by the blue waters of the Atlantic Ocean, on your next trip to Spain.

Vigo, SpainVigo, Spain

3 Comments

  1. ledrakenoir on October 20, 2015 at 7:57 am

    Languages always have fascinated me – as well as dialect of languages do – do enjoy that challenge once you have learned a foreign language, so to understand language dialects – all these european languages “enclaves” are fascinating – a part of pride – Galician is an official minority languages – some believe that the language is perhaps more in ‘family’ with the portuguese language in the same way as the brazilian language is… 🙂

    • kimberlysullivan on October 20, 2015 at 10:48 pm

      Agree with you, dialects and language enclaves are fascinating. In “my” country, Italy, when a film is in thick dialect from Naples or Sicily, there are often subtitles in Italian, since otherwise the rest of the viewing public wouldn’t understand. : )

      • ledrakenoir on October 20, 2015 at 10:56 pm

        The scouser dialect from Liverpool towards Manchester in northern England causing lots of problems for people from London too – and my own danish native area dialect also inflict Copenhageners serious problems, they don’t think it’s danish language – I think it is so funny things are like that and do enjoy it…. 😀

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