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When Rome looked at Spain: the papal visits that marked an era

Pope John Paul II made the first visit of a holy father to Spain in 1982, followed by four more of his own and three more trips led by Benedict XVI

Rosa Ausió by Rosa Ausió
7 de June de 2026
in Current Affairs
Esculturas conmemorativas de las visitas del Papa Juan Pablo II y del Papa Benedicto XVI en Santiago de Compostela./ Foto: leodaphne via IStock

Esculturas conmemorativas de las visitas del Papa Juan Pablo II y del Papa Benedicto XVI en Santiago de Compostela./ Foto: leodaphne via IStock

Few images explain contemporary Spain better than the crowds that, in November 1982, accompanied John Paul II during his first visit to the country. That visit inaugurated a unique relationship between the Polish Pontiff and Spanish society, a connection that would last for more than two decades and five apostolic trips.

From the democratic consolidation to the international projection of 21st century Spain, papal visits constituted much more than religious events: they were also diplomatic, cultural, and social milestones that reflected the evolution of a transforming country. None, however, reached the historical, symbolic, and popular dimension of the 1982 trip.

The history of papal visits to Spain is, to a large extent, the history of the transformation of the country itself. During the last decades of the 20th century and the early years of the 21st, Spain received two popes: John Paul II, who visited the country five times between 1982 and 2003, and Benedict XVI, who made three trips between 2006 and 2011. Each of them left indelible images and messages that transcended the strictly religious sphere.

John Paul II. A unique relationship with Spanish society

Between October 31 and November 9, 1982, John Paul II was the first Pope in office to visit Spain. The context was particularly significant. The country had just completed its democratic transition and was facing a new political stage after Felipe González’s electoral victory at the end of that same year.

For ten days, the Pontiff traveled through eighteen cities and eleven autonomous communities. Madrid, Toledo, Ávila, Salamanca, Seville, Zaragoza, Santiago de Compostela, and Barcelona were some of the stops on a journey that mobilized millions of people. 

The most remembered moment took place in Santiago de Compostela, where he launched his famous call for a Europe aware of its historical and cultural roots: “Europe, find yourself again. Be yourself,” a proclamation that transcended the religious sphere and was interpreted as a reflection on European identity during the Cold War. In Seville, he presided over the beatification of Sister Angela of the Cross and closed the events of the IV Centenary of Saint Teresa of Jesus.

The popular response was extraordinary and turned that trip into one of the largest civic mobilizations in democratic Spain.

John Paul II returned to Spain in October 1984 to venerate the Virgin of the Pillar in Zaragoza. In August 1989, he presided over the World Youth Day in Santiago de Compostela, a precursor to the large Catholic youth gatherings that followed, and on August 21, in Asturias, he made a prayer to the Virgin of Covadonga.

His fourth trip, in June 1993, was linked to the International Eucharistic Congress in Seville and the events of the V Centenary of the Evangelization of America, in a Spain already fully integrated into Europe.

The farewell came in May 2003. Despite his delicate health, the Pontiff traveled to Madrid to canonize five Spanish saints and consecrate the Cathedral of Almudena, the first Spanish cathedral dedicated to worship by a Pope. The visit had a marked emotional character and was perceived as the closure of a historical stage. Two years later, in April 2025, John Paul II passed away after more than a quarter of a century of papacy.

Benedict XVI and global Spain

The successor of John Paul II maintained the presence of the Holy See in Spain, albeit with a very different style. An internationally renowned theologian and figure of great intellectual influence, Benedict XVI made three visits to the country.

The first was in Valencia in 2006 to participate in the V World Meeting of Families, where he made a defense of the family institution in a context of intense social debates in Spain.

In November 2010, he traveled to Santiago de Compostela, on the occasion of the Holy Year of Santiago, and to Barcelona to consecrate the Basilica of the Sagrada Familia, one of the most relevant events in the recent history of the emblematic temple designed by Antoni Gaudí.

His last visit took place in Madrid in August 2011 during the World Youth Day. The most remembered image remains the vigil held in Cuatro Vientos under an intense storm that did not manage to disperse the hundreds of thousands of young people gathered from more than 190 countries.

A new page in history

More than four decades after the historic visit of 1982, John Paul II continues to be the Pope who left the greatest impact in Spain. No other pontiff managed to combine the religious dimension, popular mobilization, and international relevance with such intensity.

While Benedict XVI brought a particularly relevant intellectual and cultural dimension, John Paul II embodied a phenomenon of global reach that found in Spain one of its most receptive stages. His visits not only marked the religious history of the country; they also left a lasting imprint on the collective memory and on the relations between Spain and the Holy See.

Now history adds a new chapter. From June 6 to 12, 2026, Pope Leo XIV will make his first visit to Spain as Pontiff, a trip that arouses great expectation in both ecclesiastical and institutional spheres. The visit will allow measuring the extent of a new stage in the relations between Spain and the Holy See and verifying to what extent the interest that papal trips have aroused for decades continues to maintain its capacity for mobilization and its influence on Spanish public life.

Tags: destacada1EspañaFeatured1PapaVaticanoVisitas papales
Rosa Ausió

Rosa Ausió

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El papa saluda a un grupo de niños a su llegada al aeropuerto de Barajas./ Foto: Casa de SM el Rey

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Esculturas conmemorativas de las visitas del Papa Juan Pablo II y del Papa Benedicto XVI en Santiago de Compostela./ Foto: leodaphne via IStock

When Rome looked at Spain: the papal visits that marked an era

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