Everything about Navarra totally explained
Navarre (
Spanish Navarra,
Basque Nafarroa) is a region in northern
Spain, constituting one of its
autonomous communities - the "
Foral Community of Navarre" (
Spanish:
Comunidad Foral de Navarra;
Basque:
Nafarroako Foru Erkidegoa).
History
During the time of the
Roman Empire, the territory of the province was inhabited by the
Vascones, a pre-Roman tribe who inhabited the southern slopes of the
Pyrenees. The tribe managed to keep its
Basque language and traditions under the
Romans. The area was never fully subjugated either by the
Visigoths or by the
Arabs. In 778, a
Frankish army was defeated by the Basques in the
Battle of Roncevaux Pass. In
824, the chieftain Iñigo Arista was chosen
king of Pamplona which laid the foundations of the Kingdom of Navarre. The kingdom reached its zenith during the reign of
Sancho III of Navarre and covered the areas of the present-day Navarre,
Basque Country,
La Rioja, and parts of
Cantabria,
Castilla y Leon, and
Aragon. However, after his death the country was divided between his sons and never fully recovered. The army of Navarre took part in the decisive
battle of Las Navas de Tolosa alongside the other Christian
Spanish kingdoms in
1212 after which the Muslim possessions in the Iberian Peninsula were reduced to a small territory in the south. Navarre was finally absorbed into the united
Spanish Kingdom in
1513, and a small area to the north of the Pyrenees eventually became part of
France. The former state obtained some specific rights after its incorporation in united
Spain. The northern side was also part of the French empire until Louis XVI (
King of France and Navarre) was executed and the kingdom was merged into France.
Community, geography, and climate
Situated in the northeast of the
Iberian peninsula, Navarre is bordered by
France to the north,
Aragón to the east,
La Rioja to the southwest, and the
Basque Country to the west. The territory includes an enclave,
Petilla de Aragón, which is completely surrounded by Aragón.
The community is governed as an autonomous region with its own parliament (Parlamento de Navarra) and government (Gobierno de Navarra). As in other autonomous regions in Spain, health, employment, education, and social services, together with housing, urban development, and environment protection policies are under the responsibility of its own institutions. Unlike other regions (and like the
Basque Country), it has almost full responsibility for collecting and administering taxes which must follow the overall guidelines established by the Spanish government but may have some minor differences.
It is made up of 272
municipalities and has a total population of 601,874 (2006), of which approximately one-third live in the capital,
Pamplona (195,769 pop.), and one-half in the capital’s metropolitan area (315,988 pop.). There are no other large municipalities in the region. The next largest are
Tudela (32,802),
Barañáin (22,401),
Burlada (18,388),
Estella - Lizarra (13,892),
Zizur Mayor (13,197),
Tafalla (11,040),
Villava/Atarrabia (10,295), and
Ansoáin (9,952).
Despite its relatively small size, Navarre features stark contrasts in geography, from the
Pyrenees mountain range that dominates the territory to the plains of the Ebro river valley in the south.
Climate
The climate of Navarre mixes influences from the Pyrenees mountains and
Ebro river valley, creating a great difference between the climates of the north (much more humid and with frequent rainfall) and of the south (more
Mediterranean with higher temperatures and more sporadic precipitation). One can pass from the humid Cantabrian valleys in the north to the arid,
steppe-like
Bardenas Reales on the banks of the Ebro river in just a few kilometers.
Cultural heritage
Navarre is a mixture of its ancient tradition and
Mediterranean influences coming from the
Ebro. The Ebro valley is amenable to
wheat,
vegetables,
wine, and even
olive trees as in Aragon and La Rioja. It was a part of the
Roman Empire, and in the Middle Ages it became the
taifa kingdom of
Tudela. During the
Reconquista, the Northerners extended southwards. In the
Middle Ages, Pamplona was a crossroads for
Gascons from beyond the Pyrenees and
Romance speakers
Energy policy
Navarre leads Europe in its use of
renewable energy technology and is planning to reach 100% renewable energy generation by
2010.
By
2004, 61% of the region's energy was generated by renewable sources consisting of 43.6% from 28
wind farms, 12% from over 100 small-scale
water turbines, and 5.3% from 2
biomass and 2
biogas plants. In addition, the region had what was then Spain's largest
photovoltaic power plant at Montes de Cierzo de
Tudela (1.2 MWp capacity) plus several hundred smaller photovoltaic installations.
Developments since 2004 have included further photovoltaic plants at
Larrión (0.25 MWp)
(External Link
) and another at
Castejón (2.44 MWp), also once the largest in Spain
(External Link
).
Culture
Navarre has two official languages in at least part of its territory:
Spanish and
Basque. The north-western part of the community is largely Basque-speaking while the southern part is almost completely Spanish-speaking. The capital (
Pamplona/Iruña) is officially in the mixed region. Legally, Navarre is divided into three parts linguistically: regions where Basque is widespread (the Basque-speaking area) and is an official language, regions where Basque is present (the mixed region) and is quasi-official, and regions where Basque is absent (the Spanish-speaking area) and isn't official. These areas don't always conform clearly to the actual linguistic boundaries, and the Basque associations in Navarre strongly object to this framework but lack enough political representation to overturn it. See
Basque language.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Navarra'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://navarre.totallyexplained.com">Navarre Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |