1. Lullian itinerary: Miramar, Randa (Gràcia, Sant Honorat, Cura) and surroundings.

2. Resettlement churches: Castellitx, St. Lucy, St. Peter of Escorca, St. Anne, St. Miquel of Campanet, The Blood of Muro, Santa Fe of Palma

3. Route of king James’s conquest

4. Route of the rocky castles: Santueri, King’s Castle, Alaró

Miramar. Situated between Valldemossa and Deià, and accessible by road, is the farm where Ramon Llull founded a centre of studies in 1276 for missionaries who went to preach in North Africa. Its existence was ephemeral though, as its doors closed before 1295. Nothing remains of the Lullian period. However, there are still some remains of the convent of St. Margaret of Palma’s medieval cloisters, which Archduke Luis Salvador had brought to town. Not far from the houses is the so-called cave of Ramon Llull, where it is said the holy man went to pray and meditate.

Randa. The mountain where, around 1273, Ramon Llull retired for a while and where he had revelations. Accessed via the road from Algaida to Llucmajor. Llull’s various residences, though there is no certaintly as to where he established, are the following (in ascending order):

Gràcia. The chapel was founded in the 15th century by Franciscan observants, under a great cliff, inside the cave of Aresta; however, only the apse of the primitive oratory remains from those times, kept inside the first chapel on the left-hand side. A sculpture of the Virgin, by Gabriel Mòger presides over the small church.

Sant Honorat. The construction of the chapel was started in 1394, although, of the original structure, only the stone plaque over the inner entrance gate remains.
Cura. There is considerable information regarding Llull's possible dwelling here, as well as a cave where, legend has it, he is thought to have lived, in spite of its limited dimensions. Around 1502, a grammar school was founded, which became famous during the 16th and 17th centuries.

Surroundings. The Llulls owned a property near the mountain, which so far has not been identified, even though it would seem to be the present-time farms of Sa Mata Escrita or Pola. In fact, an ancient legend linked a very special type of bush, with certain kinds of signs stamped on its leaves, to the fact that Llull had written it in Arabic characters.