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Doña Urraca Gate

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Doña Urraca Gate
Puerta de la Lealtad
Puerta de la LealtadPhoto: GFreihalter, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0. Cropped & resized.

In front of you is a tall, narrow opening cut through rough stone walling, its slim vertical shape squeezed into one of the most irregular bends of Zamora’s ramparts.

This is the Loyalty Gate... though for generations people knew it by a much sharper name: the Gate of Betrayal. Not because the architecture demanded it. Frankly, the structure itself is almost stubbornly plain. No grand arch, no sculpted flourish, no heroic display. Just a high, tight passage in the first ring of Zamora’s walls. Most tourists walk past without realizing that its fame comes less from stone than from accusation... and from a city council decision in two thousand and ten.

The charge at the heart of it all lands on one man: Vellido Dolfos, a Leonese noble tied forever to the Siege of Zamora in ten seventy-two. According to later chronicles and the great ballad tradition, Vellido rode out from the besieged city, killed King Sancho the Second of Castile, then raced back here with El Cid in pursuit and slipped through this very postigo - a small wall opening, basically a side gate. That story gave the place its old moral verdict. Betrayal, neatly labeled in stone.

And the legend spread hard. In a sixteenth-century printed romance, the warning begins, “King Don Sancho, King Don Sancho, do not say I failed to warn you...” There, the old counselor Arias Gonzalo names Vellido outright and counts his treacheries like unpaid debts. It is wonderfully dramatic... which is exactly the problem.

Historians have poked at the story for years. The Historia Roderici, one of the sources closest to the Cid, does not mention Vellido at all and says nothing about a treacherous killing at a gate like this. Later retellings, especially the Estoria de España and the romances that followed, built the scene into a national epic. So the question becomes awkward in the most interesting way: are we looking at history, literature, or a long marriage of the two?

Then Zamora decided to intervene. On the twenty-second of December, two thousand and ten, Mayor Rosa Valdeón presided over the official renaming of this place from Betrayal to Loyalty. A plaque went up saying that, according to tradition, Bellido Dolfos entered here after killing Sancho and freeing Zamora from the siege, with the “eternal gratitude” of the people of Zamora. Historian and councilman Miguel Ángel Mateos pushed that reinterpretation hard. For him, Vellido had not betrayed anyone; he had acted loyally for Infanta Urraca and the city’s defenders.

Medieval murder, rebranded as civic virtue. Cities, like families, are very skilled at changing the label on an old argument.

There is another twist. Some recent scholars, including Charles García, argue that the very name Gate of Betrayal may not be an ancient medieval survival at all, but a nineteenth-century Romantic invention - a patriotic flourish from a later age pretending to be timeless truth. So even the “traditional” name may have been younger, and more political, than it sounded.

So here is the question this narrow opening leaves hanging: when a city changes a place-name to lift an old stain, is it repairing the record... or choosing its side in a legend? The stone stays modest. The verdict does not.

Carry that with you to the castle, where the siege becomes harder to keep at arm’s length. It is only about a one-minute walk from here, and like the wall itself, this gate remains open all day, every day.

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