The historic center of Valencia is partially delimited by the old Turia river bed, Guillem de Castro boulevard and Xativa and Colón streets. Its area is small, approximately a couple of square kilometers. The Historical Center of Valencia has several interesting sites such as the Plaza and Town Hall, the Cathedral, the Puerta del Castillo. Although, the most notable place is the Silk Exchange, a Unesco heritage site. Everything else is unique, but mostly on a local scale: churches, two markets, separate palaces (not the brightest) and museums. And if you look at it, the walks take place between squares, each of which is unique and significant in its own way. Around them and there is a concentration of interesting places.


However, most views have common characteristics. Many churches are linked by the wording of the historical component: "The church was built on the site of a Muslim mosque destroyed in the 13th and 14th centuries." This fact was due to the conquest of Valencia by the Muslims in 1238 and their accession to the Kingdom of Aragon. And the change of religious constructions personified the change of the Muslim culture over the Christian one.

It is said that the historic center of Valencia leads to the Plaza de la Reina. This is because most of the streets lead there, and those that do not obey this rule, still wrap behind a landmark and end up in the Plaza de la Reina.