"Galapagar es un municipio del noroeste de la Comunidad de Madrid (España), a 36 kilómetros de la capital del estado. Se extiende sobre una superficie de 65 km². Limita con Collado Villalba, Colmenarejo, Torrelodones, Las Rozas de Madrid, El Escorial, San Lorenzo de El Escorial, Villanueva del Pardillo, Hoyo de Manzanares, Moralzarzal y Guadarrama."
"Galapagar is served both by Cercanias train service at its station Galapagar-La Navata and to one end by the interurbano bus service linking it with Moncloa, a district of Madrid. The name Galapagar comes from the Spanish galápago, meaning turtle, as the town centre was settled near a lake full of turtles. The town first appears as a village in the eleventh century, its importance due to the frequent hunting expeditions by the Spanish royalty, and being a main stop on the road from the capital to the Royal Monastery of San Lorenzo de El Escorial. Sights in the town include the church of The Asunción (Assumption). The Spanish writer Jacinto Benavente, who won the 1922 Nobel Prize for Literature, is buried here.The British writer Malcolm Brocklehurst lived in the village between 1982 and 1983. Bullfighting, stock-breeding, meadows and beef are the main features of Galapagar. The bullfighter José Tomás was born in this place."