
Tower of Hercules
The Tower of Hercules has served as a lighthouse
and landmark at the entrance of La CoruΓ±a harbour in north-western Spain
since the late 1st century A.D. when the Romans built the Farum
Brigantium. The Tower, built on a 57 metre high rock, rises a further 55
metres, of which 34 metres correspond to the Roman masonry and 21
meters to the restoration directed by architect Eustaquio Giannini in
the 18th century, who augmented the Roman core with two
octagonal forms. Immediately adjacent to the base of the Tower, is a
small rectangular Roman building. The site also features a sculpture
park, the Monte dos Bicos rock carvings from the Iron Age and a Muslim
cemetery. The Roman foundations of the building were revealed in
excavations conducted in the 1990s. Many legends from the Middle Ages to
the 19th century surround the Tower of Hercules, which is unique as it
is the only lighthouse of Greco-Roman antiquity to have retained a
measure of structural integrity and functional continuity.