Route of the Valencian classics


The Route of the Valencian classics,, is a cultural route through the lands of the great classical writers of the Valencian literature of the Valencian Golden Age: Ausiàs March, Joanot Martorell and Joan Roís de Corella, the three related to the court of the Duke Alfonso of Aragon and Foix, "the Old".
The route evokes the Valencian 15th century and its heritage, of the sea, of valleys and mountains, of gastronomy and wines, and the various accents of the Valencian language with the echoes of the immortal words of the most universal Valencian writers.

Itinerary

The route includes the following monuments and towns:
Gandía:
Beniarjó:
Alfauir:
Albaida:
Cocentaina:
Xaló:
Dénia:
Beniarjó:
Alfauir:
Albaida:
Cocentaina:
The valley of Xaló: In search of the sea, it is obligatory to go through a land of mountains: the valleys of the Marina Alta, where Al-Azraq, the Muslim leader, resisted the Aragonese conquest in the 13th century. The valley of Xaló belonged to the Martorell and the March families.
Xaló
Dénia: Alfonso of Aragon and Foix was also count of Denia, a city ruled by an attorney general and Ausias’s father, called Pere March.