An interesting route to discover the history of the world's most famous Mallorquin
Ramón Llull was born in 1232 in Palma. He was a philosopher, writer, poet, theologian, and missionary. He wrote philosophical and scientific works, as well as on education, poetry, and novels, in Catalan, Latin, and Arabic. He was a pioneer in the use of Catalan as a literary language.
The Ramón Llull Route visits the most important places in his life. His birthplace on Plaça Mayor Square, the Santa Margalida church where he heard a sermon that changed his life, the parish churches of Santa Eulàlia and Sant Miquel, witnesses of other life stages, the cathedral and the Sant Francesc basilica, in which his bones rest. The Biblioteca Diocesana de Mallorca preserves several of his manuscripts.
Lullian tradition and island landscape
A chapel with incredible views over the south of the island
One of the most important monasteries in Majorca, linked to Ramón Llull
Vestiges of Cistercian architecture
Medieval Franciscan church with a Baroque facade and a Gothic cloister