Covadonga
Covadonga is one of 11 parishes in Cangas de Onís, a municipality within the province and autonomous community of Asturias, in Northwestern Spain. It is situated in the Picos de Europa mountains. With a permanent population of 55, the parish became a site of pilgrimage and a place of great cultural importance following the 722 Battle of Covadonga, which marked the beginning of the Spanish Reconquista of the Iberian Peninsula. The battle, which took place near the village in 722, was the first Christian victory in the Iberian Peninsula over the Arabs invading from north Africa under the Umayyad banner, and is often considered to be the beginning of the almost eight century-long effort to expel Muslim rulers governing Iberia during the Reconquista.
The two lakes of Covadonga, Enol and Ercina, are located in the mountains above the town, and the road leading to the lakes is often featured in the Vuelta a España bicycle race. The Holy Cave of Covadonga is a monument dedicated to Our Lady of Covadonga that commemorates the Battle of Covadonga. It comprises the following:
- Basílica de Santa María la Real de Covadonga, a church built in the 19th century based on a design by Roberto Frassinelli;
- Santa Cueva de Covadonga, in which the bodies of Kings Pelagius and Alfonso I lie;
- Collegiate church of Nuestra Señora de Covadonga, built in the 16th century and declared a Bien de Interés Cultural in 1884;
- Monasterio de San Pedro ; and
- Esplanade, with the Museum of the Real Sitio de Covadonga.