In which London becomes a weather standard
San Fernando is ahead of us. It is for 97,500 people living here, rather than in Cadiz. It has water around an awful look of it and so the locals call it La Isla. The are known as " Cañaíllas " or " Isleños ". The English wiki doesn’t say a lot other than the proud boast that it was never occupied by the French, during the Napoleonic Wars and it was here the Cortes of Cadiz drew up a liberal constitution - which the restored Bourbons trashed. The Spanish Wiki page is a bit more about the place. It mentions the important of fish salting. The Romans built pottery. The Catholic Monarchs built a Royal Shipyard. The Military liked the place. The Royal Institute and Observatory of the Navy and the Pantheon of Illustrious Mariners are present. As is the Teatro de las Cortes - where they did the constitutional thing. Spain’s loss of Cuba, Puerto Rico and the Philippines meant less ships were needed and with it the closure of the shipyards. At the same ...