ibiza Travel Guide

City of Ibiza


The city's stone walls reach a dramatic climax at the imposing main entrance, the Portal de ses Taules , a triple gateway designed to withstand the heaviest artillery barrage. Inside this monumental entrance you enter a UNESCO world heritage site - the entire historic enclave of Dalt Vila was bestowed the honour in December 1999. Just beyond the main gate is the Plaça de Vila, packed with restaurants and cafés. Here too, above the arch of the Portal de ses Taules, is the Museu d'Art Contemporani (summer Tues-Fri 10am-2pm & 5-8pm, Sat 10am-2pm; winter Tues-Fri 10am-2pm & 4-6pm, Sat 10am-1.30pm; ?2.40); the large stone premises house good contemporary art exhibitions and cultural events.

Heading east uphill along Sa Carrossa, you'll pass a strip of fine restaurants, and have easy access to the top of the walls, which provide great views down over the town. You'll soon reach c/General Balanzat, where the sixteenth-century church of Sant Domingo (also known as the Església de Sant Pere) stands next to its former monastery, converted in 1838 into the ajuntament , which overlooks the pretty, palm-lined Plaça d'Espanya. Across the square a long tunnel leads through the walls; a five-minute walk around their exterior will take you back into the old town at the Baluard de Santa Tecla above Plaça de la Catedral.

Some 90m above sea level, the site of the Catedral (Tues-Sun: June-Sept 9am-4pm; Oct-May 10am-2pm; free) has been a place of worship for over 2000 years. Originally a Carthaginian temple graced this pivotal position above the harbour, then a Roman replacement was constructed, dedicated to the god Mercury, and later a mosque. Today's thirteenth-century cathedral is pleasingly austere, its sombre, sturdy Gothic lines supported by giant buttresses. Inside, the decor is far less attractive: whitewashed throughout, with somewhat trite Baroque embellishments. A plaque commemorates the massacre of over a hundred churchmen, soldiers and ordinary islanders at the hands of anarchists during the Civil War. The cathedral's museum is closed for renovation at the time of writing but is scheduled to reopen with displays of ecclesiastical regalia: bishops' mitres, sandals, gloves, cloaks and so on.

Across the square is the Museu Arqueològic d'Eivissa i Formentera (April-Sept Tues-Sat 10am-2pm & 5pm-8pm, Sun 10am-2pm; Oct-March Tues-Sat 10am-1pm & 4pm-6pm, Sun 10am-2pm; ?1.80 with a collection of local archeological finds. The majority of the objects on display are from Phoenician and Carthaginian (Punic) sites, but there are also some bones from Formentera that date back to 1600 BC, and various Arab and Roman curiosities. If this whets your appetite, check with the turisme to see if the museum on Via Romana, on the slopes of Puig des Molins - a hill just west of Dalt Vila - has reopened, as this contains many finds from a huge Punic necropolis that was excavated here. Among the objects unearthed were some decorative terracotta pieces, clay figurines, amphoras and amulets depicting Egyptian gods. Ibiza, the sacred island of the goddess Tanit, functioned as a A-list burial site, with wealthy Carthaginians paying by special minted currency for the shipment of their bodies to the island upon death, in anticipation of a fast-track passage to heaven.