• The Puerta de Toledo ([ˈpweɾta ðe toˈleðo], "Toledo Gate") is a gate located in Madrid, Spain. It was declared Bien de Interés Cultural in 1996.
  • Both Latin and Arabic chroniclers record that the Jews of the city “opened the gates of Toledo” to Tariq, who conquered the city.
  • Hey admit to sabbatism before sabbatism was even a thing. They also admit the moors were only able to invades Spain because the jews opened the gates.
  • The Gate of Toledo. On map. ... Puerta de Toledo triumphal arch may not be a landmark that you intend to visit, but if you are nearby, it is definitely worth visiting it.
  • A description of the walls and gates of Toledo in Spain in the accounts of Henry Swinburne, Richard Ford and other British travellers.
  • Hard to miss from nearly any vantage point in the city, a close up at look the bridges and gates of Toledo’s Old City is its own reward.
  • The Gates of Toledo. The city of “Toletum”, now Toledo, Spain, was known before Roman times for being a “small town fortified by its location”.
  • The construction of Toledo Gate was completed in 1328, as indicated in an engraving found on it.
  • The Gate of Toledo (Puerta de Toledo) was one of the gateways to the city of Madrid. ... The gate is located in the middle of the Glorieta de Toledo.
  • It was one of the last gates to be added to the city walls of Madrid, which at the time encircled the central part of the city.