Museums in Cazorla
Museums include Centre for Threatened Species, ciCUM centre offers visitors a broad perspective of the forest culture, Visitor Centre for the Tower of Vinegar and the historic olive oil mill La Almedina.
Museums include Centre for Threatened Species, ciCUM centre offers visitors a broad perspective of the forest culture, Visitor Centre for the Tower of Vinegar and the historic olive oil mill La Almedina.
The Iglesia de San Francisco (Church of St Francis) is one of the best known in Cazorla, built in the 17th century on a site previously occupied by an old Franciscan Order convent. The church has a rectangular plan with three naves laterally divided into three planes.
If you are considering visiting Cazorla you will be interested to check the latest weather forecast for the next few days. This weather forecast provided by AEMET (Spanish State Meteorological Agency).
There are bus services from Cazorla to Jaén, Úbeda, Granada, Baeza, Begijar, Málaga, Peal de Becerro, and Linares using ALSA.
Around 2000 BC, in the oldest terraces of the Cerezuelo de Cazorla River, the first stable towns were established. Near there, on a hill known as Loma del Bellotón, was a small town from the Bronze Age (1500 BC). The Iberian culture developed significantly in these lands.