Located on Monte Medo, in the heart of the San Mamede mountain range and classified as a National Historic-Artistic Monument in 1982, the Sanctuary of Our Lady of the Miracles is situated. It is of Baroque-Classical style and surrounded by a wall with 4 entrance gates. In its atrium, its facade with balconies and high space for celebrations can be appreciated. This main facade is a small preview of what the facade of the Obradoiro of Santiago de Compostela would be 7 years later. Outside, we find 7 equidistant chapels forming a Via Crucis, as well as a centuries-old oak grove, the Fountain of the Virgin, and the Cross of Mercy, built in the 16th century. The worship began in the Middle Ages and, especially, from the 16th and 17th centuries. In 1731, the second book of the Brotherhood of the Virgin expressed the intention to build the temple, which was constructed 37 years later. It was the Vincentian Fathers, who arrived in 1869, that governed this sanctuary. At that time, the Brotherhood of the Virgin encompassed Galicia, Asturias, Astorga, Benavente, and Northern Portugal. Today, from August 30 to September 8, the “novena” is celebrated; a popular pilgrimage to which more than 100,000 people come and pilgrimage each year.