City

Leon

840m
42.5991°N, 5.5700°W

Coordinates

42.5991°N, 5.5700°W

Elevation

840m

Accommodation

Available

Services Available

Accommodation
Restaurant
Cafe
Grocery
Pharmacy
ATM
Train
Post Office
Airport
Bus
Pilgrim Office
Clinic
Water
Tobacconist

About Leon

Leon is the capital of the province of Leon, in the northwest of Spain. It was founded as a Roman military camp in the 1st century BCE for the Legio VI Victrix and later occupied by the Legio VII Gemina, the Twin Seventh Legion. The name Leon comes directly from the Latin legio: this was always a city of soldiers. Roman walls, in much-reworked form, still trace the boundary of the old city centre. The Camino Frances enters Leon through the eastern suburbs and runs through the heart of the medieval quarter.

After the Roman period, Leon rose to become the capital of the medieval Kingdom of Leon, a Christian kingdom that played a leading role in the Reconquista against Moorish rule. The kingdom was at its height in the 10th and 11th centuries, and the city's principal monuments date from this period and the centuries that followed. The Real Colegiata de San Isidoro, built in the 11th century by King Ferdinand I and Queen Sancha, houses the Pantheon of Kings, a Romanesque royal mausoleum whose ceiling frescoes have been called the Sistine Chapel of Romanesque art. The cathedral, begun in the 13th century, is a French Gothic building nicknamed the Pulchra Leonina, the Beautiful Leonese, famous for around 1,800 square metres of stained glass that floods the interior with coloured light at almost any hour. The monastery of San Marcos, originally a pilgrim hospital founded by Queen Sancha in the 12th century, was rebuilt in the 16th century in elaborate Plateresque style and now operates as a luxury parador hotel. Casa Botines, by Antoni Gaudi, sits in the Plaza de San Marcelo and was an early commission for the Catalan architect outside Catalonia; it now functions as a museum.

Leon has the full range of city services. Pilgrims will find the Albergue Municipal de Leon and the Albergue de las Carbajalas, run by Benedictine sisters, both close to the cathedral, alongside private albergues, pensions, hotels, and hostels at every price point. The city has restaurants, cafes, bars, supermarkets, pharmacies, ATMs, hospitals, medical care, and a railway and bus station with connections to Madrid, the Galicia coast, and northern Spain.

Leon is the only city between Burgos and Santiago that earns a full rest day. The Barrio Humedo, the tangle of streets south of the cathedral, is the city's tapas district and where the city comes alive in the evening.

Explore Leon

Things to Do in Leon

Sightseeing

Visit the Cathedral

The Cathedral of Leon is often called the most beautiful Gothic cathedral in Spain. Its defining feature is the stained glass: over 1,800 square metres of medieval and Renaissance windows that fill the interior with coloured light. On a sunny afternoon, the effect is overwhelming. The building itself is lighter and more delicate than the heavy cathedrals of Burgos or Santiago, deliberately designed to maximise the glass. Allow at least an hour, and try to visit when the sun is shining.

Food & Drink

Explore the Barrio Humedo

Leon's "Wet Quarter" is one of the best tapas neighbourhoods in Spain. The tradition here is that every drink comes with a free tapa, and the tapas are generous. The narrow streets around the Plaza de San Martin are packed with small bars, each with its own speciality. Order a glass of wine, eat the free tapa, move to the next bar. You can eat a full dinner this way without ever ordering food.

Sightseeing

Visit the Basilica de San Isidoro

Often overshadowed by the cathedral, San Isidoro is extraordinary in its own right. The Royal Pantheon, a crypt beneath the church containing the tombs of the medieval Kings of Leon, has Romanesque ceiling frescoes so vivid and well preserved that it is known as the "Sistine Chapel of Romanesque art." The museum upstairs contains the Chalice of Dona Urraca, which some scholars have controversially identified as the Holy Grail.

Sightseeing

See the Casa Botines by Gaudi

One of only three buildings that Antoni Gaudi designed outside Catalonia. This neo-Gothic building on the Plaza de San Marcelo was built in 1894 and now houses a museum with a collection of Spanish art from the 19th and 20th centuries. The building itself is the main attraction, with Gaudi's distinctive style visible in the turrets, the ironwork, and the dragon-slaying statue of Saint George above the entrance.

Relaxation

Walk Along the Rio Bernesga

The river runs through the western side of the city with tree-lined paths on both banks. After days of Meseta walking, the green shade and sound of water feel luxurious. The park areas near the Puente de San Marcos are popular with locals jogging, walking dogs, and sitting on benches in the evening.

Food & Drink

Eat Cecina and Morcilla

Leon is a food city. The two local specialities to try are cecina (smoked dried beef, sliced thin with olive oil) and morcilla leonesa (Leon-style blood sausage with onions). Both appear on almost every bar menu. Also try botillo del Bierzo if you see it, a cured meat dish from the mountains ahead. The Mercado del Conde Luna, a covered market in the old town, is great for fresh produce and local cheeses.

Camino Moment

Take a Rest Day

Leon is one of the best places on the entire Camino to take a rest day. The city has enough to fill two full days of sightseeing, eating, and relaxing. Your body has been walking for two weeks or more. The mountains of the Cruz de Ferro and O Cebreiro are ahead. A day off here, doing laundry, eating well, and sleeping in, is not a luxury. It is an investment in the weeks to come.

Practical Information

Everything you need to know for your time in Leon.

Pilgrim Office / Credential

Cathedral or the Albergue Municipal. The local Camino association is active and helpful.

ATM / Banks

Multiple ATMs throughout the city centre, especially around the Cathedral and Plaza Mayor.

Pharmacy (Farmacia)

Several pharmacies in the old town. Standard Spanish hours with siesta break.

Accommodation in Leon

Where You Are on the Camino

Previous town

Arcahueja

8 km back

Next town

Trobajo del Camino

4 km ahead

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Leon

306 km to Santiago de Compostela

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