At
the beginning of the ninth century, the bishop of Iria, Teodomiro, discovered
the tomb of the apostle St James and Kings Alfonso II and Alfonso III erected
churches and founded the monasteries of Antealtares and Pinario. The cult of
Santiago, however, had aroused the distrust of the Muslim vizier, Almanzor, who
razed Compostela to the ground in 997 and took the bells off to Cordoba.
Pilgrimage then reached the height of its popularity and Alfonso VI began
construction of the Romanesque cathedral in 1075. A few years later, Count
Ramón de Borgoña and Diego Gelmírez pressed on with work on it and other
churches and the city grew quickly as a result. In 1117, the people of Santiago
rebelled against Queen Urraca y Gelmírez.
In 1211, Maestro Mateo and his school
completed the cathedral but the period up to the end of the Middle Ages was
not entirely peaceful. Los Reyes Católicos - the Catholic Monarchs -
Fernando V of Aragón and Isabella I of Castile, ushered in the Renaissance
and built the Hospital Real, now a magnificent hotel. The archbishops of the
Fonseca family left their own indelible mark by founding the university,
meeting the costs of the cathedral's superb cloister and building the
Fonseca College. The city and its cathedral, churches and monasteries were
renovated during the Baroque period to give them the appearance they have
today.
Today, Santiago, with more than 105,000
inhabitants, is a modern city where the old town has joined up with the
suburbs of the new town. The Government of Galicia is located there and its
university, with more than 35,000 students, is the most important in the
region. The host of many conferences and conventions, Santiago is home to
the Auditorium of Galicia and the modern Conference and Exhibition Centre; a
functional and versatile site with capacity for 2,100 people.
10 minutes from the centre lies the
recently-opened Tambre Business Park, where Santiago's main industries and
businesses are located.