By juancar347 on Skatehive
Leaving Albendiego and its mysteries behind doesn't mean, by any means, that a few kilometers further on, near the unique Somolinos lagoon, we won't once again encounter that shadow cast by introspective History upon the presence of medieval knights, the Templars, in this peculiar area of Guadalajara. Here, as in Albendiego, history remains silent, yet gives voice to that blessed treasure which, after all, and in the face of rationalist greed, is always tradition: Campisábalos. In the heart of Campisábalos, where the dog and cat have enough space to bury the hatchet and not spend all day fighting, stands one of the most important Romanesque churches, dating back to approximately the 12th century. This architectural style also left a rich legacy on this side of Castile, a region that, due to historical circumstances ranging from the Reconquista to the repopulation, bore the name "New Castile" for many years. However, like the rest of that nebulous Spain of Gárgoris and Habidis, of Hercu