Plaza de la Virgen is Valencia's most historically layered public square, occupying the exact footprint of the ancient Roman forum of Valentia Edetanorum, the city founded by the consul Decimus Junius Brutus in 138 BCE. That continuity is not merely symbolic — archaeological excavations beneath the square and the adjacent Cathedral have uncovered Roman columns, drainage infrastructure, and mosaic fragments confirming this as the civic and religious nucleus of the original settlement. Through the Visigothic period, the Moorish occupation (711–1238 CE), and the Christian reconquest under King James I of Aragon, the plaza retained its role as the city's ceremonial center, accruing new monuments with each successive culture.
Three landmarks define the square's edges. The Valencia Cathedral, begun in 1252 on the site of a former mosque — itself built over a Visigothic church — presents a composite façade of Romanesque, Gothic, and Baroque elements accumulated over five centuries of construction. Immediately beside it, the Basílica de la Mare de Déu dels Desemparats (Basilica of Our Lady of the Forsaken) was completed in 1667 in an elliptical Baroque form, housing the 15th-century statue of Valencia's patron Virgin, which draws enormous crowds each May during the Traslado procession. Closing the square to the northwest, the Palau de la Generalitat — the seat of the Valencian regional government — dates to 1421 and features one of the finest Gothic civil courtyards in Spain, its two towers added in the 16th and 20th centuries respectively. A covered bridge connects the palace directly to the Cathedral, a detail that speaks to the long entanglement of ecclesiastical and secular power in Valencian governance.
The centerpiece of the open plaza is the Fuente del Turia, a Baroque fountain whose reclining male figure represents the Turia River — the lifeblood of Valencia's agricultural wealth — flanked by eight female figures personifying the ancient irrigation channels (acequias) that the Moors engineered and the Christians inherited. These channels are still governed today by the Tribunal de las Aguas, a water court that has met every Thursday at the Cathedral's Apostles' Door since at least the 10th century and was declared an Intangible Cultural Heritage by UNESCO in 2009. Sitting at the fountain's rim on a warm evening, with the Cathedral's octagonal bell tower — the Miguelete, completed in 1429 — rising against the sky, delivers a sense of civic time that few European squares can match.
The plaza is free to enter at all hours and is most atmospheric in the early morning before tour groups arrive, or at dusk when the warm Valencian light turns the honey-colored stone amber. Attend any Thursday morning between 10:00 and 11:00 to witness the Tribunal de las Aguas in session — farmers in traditional dress settling irrigation disputes in Valencian, a ritual unchanged in procedure since the medieval period. The square sits within easy walking distance of the Central Market, the Silk Exchange (Llotja de la Seda, a UNESCO World Heritage Site), and the El Carmen neighborhood, making it an ideal anchor point for a full day in the old city.