Plaça de Tetuan, Barcelona

(Redirected from Plaça de Tetuan)

Plaça de Tetuan (Catalan pronunciation: [ˈplasə ðə tətuˈan]), known in Spanish as Plaza de Tetuán, is a major square in Barcelona. It is in Fort Pienc, in the central district of Eixample, at the busy intersection of Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes and Passeig de Sant Joan. The square is named after the 1860 Battle of Tétouan, the siege and occupation of the Moroccan city of Tetuan by general Joan Prim and Catalan volunteers. It was formerly called Hermenegildo Giner de los Ríos.[1]

Plaça de Tetuan
Memorial for Bartomeu Robert

Doctor Robert monument edit

The square's central area contains the Doctor Robert monument by the sculptor Josep Llimona. Robert was a professor of internal pathology at the University of Barcelona. He was appointed mayor of Barcelona in 1899 and elected to the Spanish Parliament in 1901.

The monument was built in Plaça de la Universitat between 1904 and 1910, commissioned by mayor Lluís Domènech i Montaner. The monument was dismantled in 1940 by the Francoist State and moved to Plaça de Tetuan in 1985.[2]

Transport edit

Barcelona Metro edit

The station Tetuan is served by Barcelona Metro line L2 (purple).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "B Nomenclàtor". Retrieved 2013-03-29. (in Spanish)
  2. ^ "Monument al Doctor Robert". Pobles de Catalunya. Retrieved 2013-03-29. (In Spanish.)

External links edit

  Media related to Plaça de Tetuan, Barcelona at Wikimedia Commons

41°23′42″N 2°10′32″E / 41.394921°N 2.175507°E / 41.394921; 2.175507