Betanzos, Spain.
Try as I might, I couldn’t find any information about this bridge that leads into the Spanish municipality of Betanzos. Even Wikipedia, often my resource of last resort failed me. Oh, there is plenty of information on the Internet about Betanzos, the population is around 13,000 residents. It is part of the autonomous community of Galicia in the province of A Coruรฑa in northwestern Spain. The beautiful old church in the city is from the 15th century, and the town is on the English Way path of the Camino de Santiago. I suspect that the tour guide didn’t give us enough information when he referred to the bridge as “The Old Bridge” and commented that the other bridge on the river Mandeo is called the New Bridge (Ponte Nova).
There are many stock photos of the bridge on various websites, but no history or other information only offers to sell the images. Google Maps identifies the old bridge as Puente Viejo and Ponte Vella, and a portion of the walking tour brought us to the river’s edge outside the city. Regular readers know that I occasionally feature bridges in my posts, but I like to describe the origination and some engineering details, as well as a bit of history. Well, I struck out. Please comment if you have a source of information to tell more of the story of this beautiful old bridge. Sofia Alves of the blog Photographias noted that the bridge was rebuilt in 1577, and provides other details in the comments below.
About the photo: The image is a composite of two photographs captured by my Samsung S20U. Adobe Lightroom processed the image into a panorama of some 19,000 x 9,000 pixels. When I fed it to Luminar Neo, it was slow going as my processor was working overtime to tweak all of the pixels. To top it off, Lightroom failed to watermark the image even after it was reduced to 4K HD, so I used Luminar’s layering function to manually watermark the image for sharing. Click on the image above to view it in 4K on my Flickr site.
I encourage fellow bloggers to create their own Cellpic Sunday posts. I never have a specific topic for this feature, and the only rules are that the photo must be captured with a cell phone, iPad, or another mobile deviceโฆ If you have an image from a drone or even a dashcam, thatโs acceptable as well. The second rule is to link your challenge response to this post or leave a comment here with a link to your post in the comment. Oh, and, you don’t have to post it on a Sunday.
John Steiner
Lovely capture.
The wall projection between the arches appears interesting.
Thanks, Philo!
You are welcome John.
[…] Posted for John’s Cellpic Sunday […]
Great photo, John. I managed to find a bit more info about the bridge. There was a bridge there in 1219 and there are records of that one being destroyed by overflowing river. This one dates to 1577 and it had a tower, destroyed between 1820 and 1823. Sorry for the translation, it was all in Spanish ๐
Here is mine:
Thanks for finding that info for me. I will edit the post giving you credit for finding the additional information.
No need to credit me, John ๐ I thought you’d enjoy the extra info.
Stunning photo of this bridge John!
Thanks, Aletta! It is a beautiful bridge.
๐
I love the reflections and what a great bridge ๐
When I first saw the bridge from a distance, I knew it would make an interesting panoramic image. Thanks, Brian!
[…] John’s Cellpic Sunday […]
The photo has your trademark super-realist clarity. Lovely.
From me this week: https://anotherglobaleater.wordpress.com/2022/11/23/midweek-mobile-15/
Thanks!
[…] For Debbieโs One Word Sunday prompt and Johnโs Cellpic Sunday prompt. […]
I always aspire to get the reflections like you have done ๐! My entry here
https://flightsofthesoul.wordpress.com/2022/11/27/stop/
Truth is, reflections are so much a part of luck. We had only a few minutes to visit the bridge on our shore excursion, and I was lucky to have the winds light and an interesting sky above.
Thanks for the compliment!
[…] Johnbo’s Cell Pic Sunday […]
A truly beautiful photo of the bridge, John. The nice thing about blogs is that they contribute to google’s info that can now be found on your post! Here is mine–using my cell phone a lot out and about in the snow these days: https://secondwindleisure.com/2022/11/27/sunday-stills-vivid-memories-spark-gratitude/
[…] with Journeys With Johnbo Cellpic Sunday All of the photos in this post were taken with my […]
[…] Johnbo’s CellPic Sunday Photography Challenge […]
Beautifully captured, what a great bridge and I love the crystal-clear reflections. Here is my entry https://brashley.photography/2022/11/27/river-wye-herefordshire/
[…] Steiner, the blogger behind Journeys With Johnbo, has this prompt he calls Cellpic Sunday in which he asks us to post a photo that was taken with a cellphone, tablet, or another mobile […]
Beautiful picture John. Thank you for sharing. I love all your posts.
I always appreciate your comments, Eithnea.
Really love the reflections! Here’s my own reflection of sorts https://thrumyeyes291981044.wordpress.com/2022/11/27/cell-pic-sunday-2/
Thanks, Sherry!
[…] John’s Cell Pic Sunday […]
A beautiful shot, John. Don’t worry about a lack of information. Your photo speaks for itself (although not historically.) ๐
It’s always worth mentioning. Sofia found some tidbits of info to add to the story. Not everything on the web is in English. ๐
A structure this beautiful and functional deserves to have its history recorded. But that doesn’t detract at all from the quality of your photograph, John!
It is a beautiful bridge, and I am sure the stories it could tell are legion!
[…] Here is my entry for John’s from Journeys From Johnbo blog, Cellpic Sunday Challenge. […]
Gorgeous photo John. What a great bridge. ๐ ๐
Here is my entry for the week.
Thanks, Cee! It is a beautiful bridge.
[…] โJohn.S’s Cellpic Sunday […]
My contribution
Great Bridge there John ๐ฅ๐ฅ๐ฅ๐
It is, indeed!
[…] Cell Pic Sunday Most of the photos here are taken with either my iPhone 12s mini or my iPhone 6 […]
It is amazing that a bridge could last that long. We would have it torn down after a couple of hundred years if it still stood! Fabulous picture and a little of the story is better than no story. Who would know it was that old? Here’s my belated post for this month. ๐ http://alwayswrite.blog/2022/11/30/wqw-46-are-abandoned-buildings-compelling-art/
[…] Cellpic Sunday โ The Old Bridge at Betanzos โ Journeys with Johnbo […]