Cancel

    Open app

    Search

    Catedral Primada

    5.0 (5 reviews)

    Catedral Primada Photos

    Recommended Reviews - Catedral Primada

    Your trust is our priority, so businesses can't pay to alter or remove their reviews. Learn more about reviews.
    Yelp app icon
    Browse more easily on the app
    Review Feed Illustration

    2 months ago

    Helpful 3
    Thanks 0
    Love this 4
    Oh no 0

    3 months ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Sara G.
    220
    1681
    3238

    11 months ago

    Helpful 4
    Thanks 0
    Love this 7
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Andrea U.
    5000
    3457
    27951

    4 years ago

    Helpful 14
    Thanks 0
    Love this 9
    Oh no 0

    7 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    Verify this business for free

    Get access to customer & competitor insights.

    Verify this business

    Alcázar de Toledo - Top floor exterior shot

    Alcázar de Toledo

    4.1(28 reviews)
    0.3 km

    Alcázar de Toledo is an excellent museum and absolutely worth visiting. Entry was only 5 euros and…read morethey have a basic security check where selfie sticks and drones are not allowed. They also provide lockers to store your items which makes walking around much more comfortable. No one really spoke English during our visit, but everyone was very helpful and made the experience easy. All of the exhibits were interesting and well maintained, and there is even a listening tour available in both English and Spanish which helps you understand the history behind what you are seeing. The third floor is the highest point in Toledo and offers incredible views of the city. It is definitely a highlight of the visit and a great spot for pictures. Overall, I would recommend this museum if you are visiting Toledo and have about two hours to look around. It is a well curated and memorable experience.

    Toledo's massive Alcázar, one of the city's most magnificent buildings, is an imposing citadel that…read moresits atop one of the city's most historic sites. The Romans built the first palace here in the 3rd Century, and its ancient foundations can been seen in the massive foyer of the military museum that now calls the Alcázar home. Those foundations, now displayed as part of one of the largest archeological excavations in Spain, are the most interesting part of the massive complex, much of which was reconstructed following the palace's destruction in the 1930s, after a two-month siege by Franco's Nationalist forces. The Alcázar's fascinating role in the Spanish Civil War (it's basically Spain's version of the Alamo) isn't given the attention it deserves in the present museum, which focuses on Spain's military history from the Visigoths to World War II. The exhibits are interesting (particularly the collection of medieval armor and swords), but they seem random and disconnected, and the lack of detail on the history of the palace itself feels like a missed opportunity. Worth maybe an hour of your time, unless you're a military history buff, in which case it's probably worth two.

    Photos
    Alcázar de Toledo
    Alcázar de Toledo
    Alcázar de Toledo

    See all

    Museo de Santa Cruz

    Museo de Santa Cruz

    4.3(7 reviews)
    0.4 km

    Gayle and I came here near the end of our day in Toledo. As with any place here, directions are not…read morelinear and finding a sought after location is sometimes confusing. For example, the Museo-Hospital de Santa Cruz is literally right across the street from the Alcazar, but at first you wouldn't know it. Admission is Free. This old hospital, now turned into a museum with temporary exhibitions, was built in XVI century. The museum displays a collection of paintings by El Greco, Goya, Ribera, Lucas Jordán, Carducho and other artists from Toledo along with valuable objects like ivory crucifix, Belgian wall-hangings, antique furniture, gold, and silver work. The archaeological exhibits include the skull of a mammoth and artifacts from the Roman, Visigoth, Arabic and Mmudejar periods. There's an Industrial Arts section where you can see examples of popular culture and local crafts. The most striking features of this plateresque building are its entrance, the elegant courtyard, the grand staircase and the Mudejar and Renaissance. Yet, like last year's visit to the Tile Museum in Lisbon, this place has an unfinished feel to it and with a lot of empty space and lack of cohesion in-between. Reasons could range from a confused state of renovation to budgetary and political issues. However, the individual parts are definitely worth a look (and study). There's also the cool Monastery next door (not open), of which we walked past on our way back down to the Train Station.

    Glad I had the chance to stop. I toured the first floor and then out to cloister after I thought…read morethat was it but you go up to level 2 and there are special exhibits, photography and abstract art when I visited. Such a contrast to the first level where there are paintings, wooden trunks and money boxes, pennants that were carried into battle or hung out to identify a leader, a beautiful gold and emerald crown and other neat treasures from the past 800 years. This is a good stop.

    Photos
    Museo de Santa Cruz
    Museo de Santa Cruz - Special exhibition

    Special exhibition

    Museo de Santa Cruz - The cloisters

    See all

    The cloisters

    Museo del Queso Manchego - The wine shop and tasting room

    Museo del Queso Manchego

    4.9(7 reviews)
    0.1 km

    Duplicate of this existing Yelp listing -- https://yelp.to/ddLZFGjjII…read more This is the review I posted at Yelp's SECOND listing FOR THE SAME PLACE: YouTube brought me here! The reviews are legit for the tasting room! Having gotten off the plane just a few hours before, I wasn't interested in processing didactics in the museo part, so we went straight to tasting, where we were welcomed warmly! €8 gets you a delicious tinto, 3 ages of Manchego (aged under 3mo, 6mo, and older than a year), plus pepper jam, olive butter, almonds, breadsticks, and pheasant pâté on Melba. It was all delicious, and very filling after hours walking through the city. There was an upcharge for more expensive wines but I wasn't interested so glad we stuck with the basic tinto, which was the best tinto I had the whole trip (and I had some very good ones). The bathrooms were clean and helped so much as travelers not staying the night in this city. We went to the counter to pay our cuenta and our server (who had been so friendly and kind throughout our experience), got out here balloon animal kit and my son insisted it would be a dog. I knew better what would come from Toledo; I was right, a sword! My son had a ball with his balloon sword, until the inevitable (but that's how you know you had fun). You definitely need to stop here and taste Toledo before you leave all its beautiful sights!

    We got the basic manchego tasting menu which included a glass of wine…read more Each of the wines are amazing - we got white, red, and rosé. The rosé was not sweet at all and they were all super smooth! The cheese with the olive oil and pepper jams were divine - we had to buy some to take home. The museum was lovely as well. The overall experience was great. Our server explained everything very well, was super friendly, and added to the overall comfortable ambience.

    Photos
    Museo del Queso Manchego
    Museo del Queso Manchego
    Museo del Queso Manchego - Las Tablas pink wine.

    See all

    Las Tablas pink wine.

    Catedral Primada - museums - Updated June 2026

    Loading...
    Loading...
    Loading...