Spain

Mesta Livestock trails

WHS Score 0.39
rate
Votes 6 Average 0.5
Show votes
Votes for Mesta Livestock trails

0

  • AT8
  • Christoph
  • David Berlanda

1

  • Argo
  • Inigo Cia
  • M. Huineman de la Cuadra
The Mesta Livestock trails or Cañadas Reales are a network of interconnected roads that have been used for transhumance since ancient times. The maintenance of the cañadas has been regulated by laws since the Middle Ages up to the present time. About 125,000 kilometres of this trail network still exist today.

Site Info

Official Information
Full Name
Mesta Livestock trails (ID: 5128)
Country
Spain
Status
On tentative list 2007 Site history
History of Mesta Livestock trails
2007: Added to Tentative List
Added to tentative list
2023: Preliminary Assessment
Criteria
Links
UNESCO
whc.unesco.org
All Links
UNESCO.org

Community Information

Community Reviews

Show full reviews
First published: 21/05/18.

Argo

Mesta Livestock Trails

Mesta Livestock trails (On tentative list)

Mesta Livestock trails by Argo

Mesta was the organization is charge of managing transhumance of cattle, mainly sheep, in medieval Spain. Mesta trails are the ways that cross central Spain from north to south and that were used by shepherds and their animals.

Although the sections of these tracks proposed for inscription are not clear at all (at least to me!), we made an interesting visit on our way from Madrid to Avila in the fall of 2016. Near the village of El Tiemblo are two medieval bridges (Puente de Valsordo and Puente de Santa Justa), one after the other, on the rio Alberche. What makes the place interesting to my point of view is that a long text from medieval times is carved on a rock laying between these two bridges, and this text sets the price to be paid by shepherds to the Mesta when using these bridges (price is set depending on the number of animals). With modern words we would call it a toll place. It is almost impossible to read this text without help, but luckily there is a modern panel aside reproducing the exact text and giving brief explanation about how the Mesta organization worked.

To find this place, when driving on National road N403 and passing by El tiemblo village, take the road to Cebreros village, then after ca. one kilometre, leave this road on the right on a dust road. It will drive you down the valley for about another kilometre, until you reach …

Keep reading 0 comments