The
Town
While
you'll
need
transport
to get
around
the
island,
Maó
itself
is best
seen on
foot
- its
compact
centre,
with its
deep
streets
rising
high
above
the
water's
edge, is
no more
than ten
minutes'
walk
from top
to
bottom.
Maó's
fine
setting
and its
crowded
old
mansions
are its
charm,
rather
than any
specific
sight,
and you
can
explore
the
place
thoroughly
in a day.
From
near the
ferry
terminal,
set
beneath
the
cliff
that
supports
the
remains
of the
city
wall, a
generous
stone
stairway
leads up
to four
small
squares.
The
first,
the
Plaça
Espanya
, offers
views
right
across
the port
and bay
and
houses
Maó's
fish
market,
in
operation
since
1927.
Immediately
to the
left is
the
Plaça
Carme
, with a
simple
Carmelite
church
whose
cloisters
have
been
adapted
to house
a
variety
of shops
and
fruit
and
vegetable
stalls
plus a
supermarket
in the
basement.
In the
other
direction
from
Plaça
d'Espanya
lie the
Plaça
Conquesta
and
Plaça
Constitució
.
Plaça
Constitució
boasts
the
town's
main
church,
Santa
María
.
Founded
in 1287
by
Alfonso
III to
celebrate
the
island's
Reconquest
and
remodelled
on
several
subsequent
occasions,
the
church
is a
pleasing
architectural
hybrid
and
inside a
particular
highlight
is the
high
altar
, whose
larger-than-life
Baroque
excesses
shoot up
to the
roof
flanked
by
spiral
columns.
The
church's
pride
and joy
is,
however,
its
organ
, a
monumental
piece of
woodwork,
all
trumpeting
angels
and
pipes,
built in
Austria
in 1810
and
lugged
across
half of
Europe
at the
height
of the
Napoleonic
wars
under
the
concerned
charge
of
Admiral
Collingwood.
Next
door,
the
eighteenth-century
ajuntament
benefited
from
British
largesse
too, its
attractive
arcaded
facade
graced
by a
clock
that was
presented
to the
islanders
by the
first
British
governor.
A
short
walk
away, at
the end
of
c/Isabel
II, the
Baroque
facade
of
Sant
Francesc
appears
as a
cliff
face of
pale
golden
stone
set
above
the
rounded,
Romanesque-style
arches
of its
doorway.
The
church
was a
long
time in
the
making,
its
construction
spread
over the
seventeenth
and
eighteenth
centuries,
following
the
razing
of the
town by
Barbarossa
in 1535.
The nave
is
poorly
lit, but
it's
still
possible
to pick
out the
pinkish
tint in
much of
the
stone
and the
unusual
spiral
decoration
of the
pillars.
In
contrast,
the
Chapel
of the
Immaculate
Conception
, tucked
away off
the
north
side of
the
nave, is
flooded
with
light;
this
octagonal
wonderland
of
garlanded
vines
and
roses is
an
exquisite
example
of the
Churrigueresque
style.
The
chapel
is
attributed
to
Francesc
Herrara,
who
trained
in Rome
and
worked
in both
Menorca
and
Mallorca.
The
adjacent
monastic
buildings
now
house
the
Museu de
Menorca
(Tues-Sat
10am-1pm
& 4-6pm,
Sun
10am-2pm;
free)
easily
the
island's
biggest
and best
museum.
Entry to
the
collection
is
through
the
cloister
of Sant
Francesc,
whose
sturdy
pillars
and
vaulted
aisles
represent
the high
point of
Menorcan
Baroque.
Beyond,
up the
stairs,
the
museum's
first
floor
holds a
wide
sample
of
prehistoric
artefacts,
beginning
with
bits and
pieces
left by
the
Neolithic
pastoralists
who
settled
here
about
4000 BC;
there's
also an
extensive
range of
material
from the
Talayotic
period.
Most of
the
exhibits
carry
multilingual
labels.
From
the
museum,
it's a
brisk
five-minute
walk up
through
the town
to the
flowerbeds
and
fountains
of the
undistinguished
main
square,
the
Plaça
S'Esplanada
. South
from
Plaça
S'Esplanada
a
thirty-minute
walk
will
take you
to the
prehistoric
remains
of
Trepucó
(open
access;
free).
To get
there,
follow
c/Moreres
from the
northeast
corner
of the
square,
take the
first
right
down
c/Cós de
Gràcia
and then
go
straight
on down
c/Verge
de
Gràcia
to the
ring
road.
Here, go
straight
over the
traffic
island
and
follow
the
twisting
lane
directly
ahead,
past the
cemetery.
Thereafter
the
route is
not, at
present,
clearly
signed.
After
200m, go
straight
at the
fork,
and then
- 500m
later -
veer
left at
the fork
and,
after a
further
100m,
turn
right.
Surrounded
by olive
trees
and
dry-stone
walls,
the tiny
site's
focal
point is
a
4.2-metre-high
and
2.75-metre-wide
taula
, one of
the
largest
and best
preserved
of these
T-shaped
monoliths
on the
island.
The
taula
stands
inside a
circular
compound
which is
edged by
the
remains
of
several
broadly
circular
buildings.
These
were
thoroughly
excavated
by a
team of
archeologists
from
Cambridge
University
in the
late
1920s,
but even
they
couldn't
work out
how the
complex
was
structured.
There
are two
cone-shaped
talayots
close
by, the
larger
one
accessible,
the
other
not. The
shape of
the
larger
talayot
is,
however,
not
entirely
authentic
as,
during
the
invasion
of 1781,
the
French
increased
its
width to
mount
their
guns.
Back
near the
ferry
terminal,
the
Xoriguer
gin
distillery
(June-Aug
Mon-Fri
8am-7pm,
Sat
9am-1pm;
Sept-May
Mon-Fri
9am-1pm
& 4-7pm;
free) is
where
you
should
go to
help
yourself
to free
samples
of gin,
various
liqueurs
and
other
spirits.
From
here,
you can
stroll
the
entire
length
of the
quayside
to the
southeast
edge of
town, a
half-hour
trip
that
will
take you
past a
long
string
of
restaurants,
bars and
cafés as
well as
the
town's
bulging
marinas.
By day,
this
makes a
relaxing
stroll;
at night
it's
slightly
more
animated,
but not
much.