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Proper noun
Pamplona- A city in Navarre of northern Spain famous for the running of the bulls.
Translations
Spanish
Proper noun
es-proper noun fExtensive Definition
For other meanings, see Pamplona
(disambiguation). Pamplona (Basque:
Iruñea or Iruña) is the capital city of Navarre, Spain and of the
former kingdom
of Navarre.
For Basque
nationalists, Pamplona is the historical capital of the
Basque Country.
The city is worldwide famous for the San
Fermín festival, from July 6 to 14, in which
the running of the bulls or encierro is one of the main
attractions. This fiesta, known as Sanfermines to the local
population, was first brought to wide spread attention by Ernest
Hemingway in his first novel, The
Sun Also Rises.
As of 2007 Pamplona Municipality comprises 27
councillors: 13 of
UPN, 8 of NaBai, 4 of
PSOE and 2 of
ANV.
Geography
Pamplona is located in the middle of Navarre, in
a rounded valley known as the Cuenca
de Pamplona, that links the mountainous North with the Ebro valley. The
climate and landscape of the Cuenca is a transition between those
two main Navarrese geographical regions. Its central position at
crossroads has served as a commercial link between those very
different natural parts of Navarre.
The historical center of Pamplona is on the right
bank of the Arga, a
tributary of the Ebro. Today the city grows on both sides of the
river. Its climate is Oceanic
with influences of
Continental Mediterranean.
History
Foundation and Roman times
In the winter of 74-75 BC, the area served as a camp for the Roman general Pompey in the war against Sertorius. He is considered to be the founder of Pompaelo, which became Pamplona, in modern Spanish language. It is thought that it was the chief town of the Vascones, and they called it Iruña, 'the city'. Roman Pompaelo was located in the province of Hispania Tarraconensis, on the road from Burdigala (modern Bordeaux) to Asturica (modern Astorga); it was a civitas stipendiaria in the jurisdiction of the conventus of Caesaraugusta (modern Zaragoza). Although it can not be considered one of the outstanding cities of Roman Hispania, recent archaeological excavations have revealed a quite high degree of development.Early Middle Ages
After the fall of the Roman Empire and during the Visigothic period (fourth to eighth centuries), the Vascones lived independently, although it is likely that Visigoths controlled, maybe only intermittently, the fortified city of Pamplona. It is known also that several Pamplonese bishops attended the Councils of Toledo. During the eighth century, Moors and Franks intermittently controlled the city. The best-known episode of that obscure period was the destruction of the city walls by Charlemagne after his failed expedition to Zaragoza in 778. He was subsequently defeated in the famous battle of Roncevaux. During the late eighth century, Pamplona and its area of influence oscillated between two powerful states but proved unable to secure permanently its rule over the Basque region. This alternation could reflect also the internal struggles of the Basque warrior nobility. Finally, in 824 Íñigo Arista was crowned as king of Pamplona. This kingdom strengthened its independence from the weakened Frankish empire and Cordoban emirate. Nevertheless, during this period Pamplona was not properly a city but just a kind of fortress.Three burgos and one city
From the 11th century reviving economic development allowed Pamplona to recover its urban life. The bishops of Pamplona recovered their ecclesiastical leading role; during the previous centuries isolated monasteries, especially Leyre, had actually hold the religious power. The pilgrimages to Santiago de Compostela contributed a lot to revive the commercial and cultural exchanges with Christian Europe beyond the Pyrenees. In the 12th century, the city enlarged with two new separate burgos (independent municipalities): San Cernin and San Nicolás, in which the population of local Navarrese was swelled by French merchants and artisans. Old Pamplona and the new burgos were almost always engaged in quarrels among themselves. The most dramatic episode was the destruction of the Navarrería by the other two boroughs and the massacre of its population in 1276. Its site was abandoned for nearly fifty years. King Charles III decreed the unification of the boroughs in a single city in 1423.A fortress-city
After the annexation of Navarre to Spain (1512), Pamplona remained as capital of the autonomous kingdom of Navarre, which preserved its own institutions and laws. Pamplona acquired a key role in the military defence of the Pyrenees. The southern side of the city was the weaker and the Navarrese king Louis I built a castle in the early 14th century in the site that is known today as Plaza del Castillo (Castle Square). After the Castilian conquest, king Ferdinand V ordered in 1513 the demolition of the mediaeval castle and the building of a new one in a very close place. But the progress of artillery demanded a complete renewal of the fortified system. King Philip II ordered the building of a star fort in the southern side of the city and the modernization of all the walls. The walls that exist today date from the late sixteenth to eighteenth centuries.During the eighteenth century, Pamplona was
considerably beautified and its urban services improved. A
continuous water supply
was established and the streets were paved, among many other
enhancements. Rich aristocrats and businessmen also built their
mansions. In the nineteenth
century this fortress-city played a key role in several wars in
which Spain was involved. During the Napoleonic
Wars French troops occupied the city in 1808 and remained in
it until 1813.
During the Carlist Wars
(1833-1839 and 1872-1876) Pamplona was
each time controlled by the liberals, not just because the few
liberals that lived in Navarre were mainly Pamplonese, but because
of the governmental control over the fortified city. Although
Carlist rebels easily ruled the countryside, the government army
had no problem in dominating the walled capital of Navarre.
Nevertheless, during the last Carlist war, modern artillery
operated by Carlists from surrounding mountains showed that the old
walls would not be enough in the face of a stronger enemy. Thus,
the Government decided to build a
fort on the top of mount San Cristóbal, just three kilometers
north of Pamplona.
Due to its military role, the city could not grow
outside its walled belt. Furthermore, building in the closest area
to the walls was banned to avoid any advantage for a besieger; thus
the city could only grow by increasing its housing density. Higher
and narrower houses were built and courtyards gradually
disappeared. During the nineteenth
century road
transportation improved, and the railway came in 1860. Nevertheless,
industry in Pamplona as well as in Navarre as a whole was weak
during century of the Industrial
Revolution. Anyway, no industrial development was feasible in
such a constrained fortress-city.
After a slight modification of the star fort
allowed an expansion of just six blocks in 1888, the First World
War demonstrated that the fortified system of Pamplona was
already obsolete. In 1915, the Army allowed
the destruction of the walls and abolished the building ban in the
city's surroundings. The southern side of the walls was destroyed
and the other three remained as they did not hinder urban growth.
The star fort continued to serve as a military facility until
1964, but just
as a garrison.
Industrialisation and modernisation
Freed from its military function, Pamplona could
lead the process of industrialisation
and modernisation in which Navarre was involved during the twentieth
century, especially during its second half. The urban growth
(see Urbanism)
has been accompanied by the development of industry and services.
Population growth has been the effect of an intense immigration
process during the 60s and 70s: from the Navarrese
countryside and from other less developed regions of Spain, mainly
Castile
and León and Andalusia. Since
the 90s the
immigration
is coming mainly from abroad.
Pamplona is listed as a city with one of the best
standards
of living and quality of
life in Spain. Its industry rate is higher than the national
average, although it is menaced by delocalization. Crime rates
are lower than the national average but cost of
living, especially housing, is considerably higher. Thanks to
its little size and an acceptable service of public
transportation, there are not big problems of transit.
Political life is seriously affected by the Basque
Nationalist conflict.
Urbanism
Like many other European cities, it is very easy
to distinguish what is so called the "old city" (Casco Viejo) and
the new neighborhoods. The oldest part of the old city is
Navarrería, which corresponds with the Roman city. During the 12th
century, the boroughs of Saint Sernin (San Saturnino or San Cernin)
and Saint Nicholas (San Nicolás) were established. Charles
III decreed the unification of the three places under a single
municipality in 1423.
The city did not grow more in extension until the
late 19th
century. In 1888, a little
modification of the star fort was allowed, but it just permitted
the building of six blocks. It was called the I Ensanche
(literally, "first widening"). The southern walls were destroyed in
1915 and the
II Ensanche ("second widening") was planned. Its plan followed the
grid
pattern model designed by Ildefons
Cerdà for Barcelona. Its
blocks were built between the 20s and the 50s. The prevailing
housing model are apartment
buildings of five to eight floors.
After the Civil
War, three new zones of Pamplona began to grow: Rochapea,
Milagrosa, and Chantrea. Only the last one was a planned
neighborhood, the other two being disorderly growths. In 1957, the municipality
designed the first general ordination plan for the city, which
established the guidelines for further urban development. According
to this, during the 60s and 70s saw the creation of
new neighborhoods like San Juan, Iturrama, San Jorge, Echavacoiz,
and Orvina.
The urban growth of Pamplona surpassed the
administrative limits of the city and involved municipalities like
Barañáin,
Burlada,
Villava,
Ansoain,
Berriozar,
Noain or Huarte
in a larger metropolitan area. During the 1980s and 1990s, new
neighborhoods were born: Azpilagaña, Mendebaldea, and Mendillorri.
Rochapea was profoundly renewed. The urbanism of those new
neighborhoods is very similar to other Spanish provincial capitals
that experienced a similar intense economic development during the
sixties and seventies. Although the grid plan is not applied, the
urbanisation is previously designed and the apartment buildings are
taller: never less than six floors and many taller than ten or even
twenty. Industry, which previously coexisted with housing, was
moved to industrial parks (the oldest and the only one within
municipal limits of Pamplona is Landaben).
In recent years, single-family
house neighborhoods have grown in the metropolitan area:
Zizur
Mayor, Cizur
Menor, Mutilva Alta,
Mutilva
Baja, Olaz,
Esquíroz,
Artica
and Alzuza. New
neighborhoods are being building in Buztintxuri, Lezkairu, and
Sarriguren.
The apartment buildings in those zones tend to be quite shorter,
usually not more than six floors and with more room for green
areas.
Economy
Pamplona has shifted in few decades from a little
administrative and even rural town to a medium-size city of
industry and services. The industry sector is diversified
although the most important activity is related to automobile
industry. Volkswagen
manufactures Polo
model in its factory of Landaben and there are many auxiliary
industries that work for Volkswagen and other companies. Other
remarkable industries are building
materials, metalworking and food
processing. Renewable energy technologies are also an
increasing economic sector (wind turbines
manufacturing and generation)
and neighboring Sarriguren
is the seat of the
National Center for Renewable Energies (CENER) and of Acciona
Energía.
Pamplona is the main commercial and services
center of Navarre. Its area of influence is not beyond the
province, except for the University
of Navarre and its teaching hospital, which provide private
educational and health services nationwide and even
internationally.
Education and culture
The city is home to two universities: the above
mentioned University
of Navarre, a corporate work of Opus Dei founded
in 1952, which
is ranked as the best private university in Spain, and the
Public University of Navarre, established by the Government of
Navarre in 1987. There is also a
local branch of the UNED (Universidad
Nacional de Educación a Distancia).
The two most important museums in Pamplona are
the Museo de
Navarra, devoted to the archaeological and artistic heritage of
Navarre, and the Museo Diocesano of religious art, located in the
cathedral. Pamplona is the first Spanish city in the French
way of the Way of
Saint James. Since 2004, Pamplona venues
Punto de Vista International Documentary Film Festival, the
most important Spanish documentary
film festival.
Transportation
Pamplona is linked by motorways with neighboring
Saragossa
(1978),
San
Sebastián, Vitoria
(1995) and
Logroño
(2006).
Buses use
since 2007 a
new bus
station in the downtown that replaces the old one (1934). The airport
(1972),
operated by Aena and located in
Noain, schedules several flights daily to Madrid and Barcelona. There
are railway (1861) links with
Madrid,
Saragossa
and northern Spain, operated by Renfe. High speed
train link with Saragossa, Madrid and Barcelona is not expected
before 2014. A
new railway
station will be built in the southern part of the city. There
are 20 daytime lines and 9 night lines of public buses, operated by
La Montañesa, the chartered company of the
Mancomunidad de la Comarca de Pamplona. A tram project is being
discussed.
Architecture and places of interest
Several notable churches, most of its sixteenth
to eighteenth
century fortified system and other civil architecture buildings
belong to the historic-artistic heritage of Pamplona.
Religious architecture
The most important religious building is the fourteenth century Gothic Cathedral, with an outstanding cloister and a Neoclassical façade. There are another two main Gothic churches in the old city: Saint Sernin and Saint Nicholas, both built during the thirteenth century. Two other Gothic churches were built during the sixteenth century: Saint Dominic and Saint Augustine. During the seventeenth and eighteenth century were built the Baroque chapels of Saint Fermin, in the church of Saint Lawrence, and of the Virgin of the Road (Virgen del Camino), in the church of Saint Sernin, the convents of the Augustinian Recolect nuns and the Carmelite friars, and the Saint Ignatius of Loyola basilica in the place where he was injured in the battle during whose subsequent convalescence he decided to be priest. The most remarkable twentieth century religious buildings are probably the new diocesan seminary (1931) and the classical-revival style memorial church (1942) to the Navarrese dead in the Nationalist side of the Civil War and that is used today as temporary exhibitions room.Military and civil architecture
From the prominent military past of Pamplona remain three of the fourth sides of the city walls and, with little modifications, the citadel or star fort. All the mediaeval structures were replaced in order to resist artillery sieges. Complete obsolete for the modern war, they are used today as parks.The oldest civil building today existing is a
fourteenth century house that was used as Cámara de Comptos (the
court of auditors of the early modern autonomous kingdom of
Navarre) from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century. There are
also several medieval bridges on the Arga: Santa Engracia, Miluce,
Magdalena, and San Pedro. The medieval palace of Saint Peter, which
was alternatively used by Navarrese kings and Pamplonese bishops,
was used during the early modern age as the Viceroy's palace
and later was the seat of the military governor of Navarre; since
the Civil War it was ruinous and it was recently rebuilt to be used
as the General Archive of Navarre.
The most outstanding Baroque civil architecture
is from the eighteenth century: town hall, episcopal palace, Saint
John the Baptist seminary, and the Rozalejo's, Ezpeleta's (today
music school), Navarro-Tafalla's (local office of PNV),
and Guenduláin's (projected hotel) mansions. The provincial
government built its own Neoclassical palace, the so-called Palace
of Navarre, during the nineteenth century.
Late nineteenth and early twentieth century
Pamplonese architecture shows the tendencies that are fully
developed in other more important Spanish cities: La Agrícola
building (1912), several
apartment buildings with some timid modernist ornamentation, etc.
The most notable architect in twentieth century Pamplona was
Víctor
Eusa (1894-1979), whose designs
were influenced by the European expressionism and other avant-garde
movements.
Parks
Pamplona has many parks and green areas. The oldest is the Taconera park, whose early designs are from the seventeenth century. Taconera is today a romantic park, with wide pedestrian paths, parterres, and sculptures.The Media Luna park was built as part of the II
Ensanche and is intended to allow relaxing strolling and
sightseeing over the northern part of the town. After its
demilitarization, the citadel (Ciudadela) and its surrounding area
(Vuelta del Castillo) shifted into a park area with large lawns and
modern sculptures.
The most remarkable parks of the new
neighborhoods include the Yamaguchi park, between Iturrama and
Ermitagaña, which includes a little Japanese
garden; the campus of the University
of Navarre; the Parque del Mundo in Chantrea; and the Arga
park.
Sports
CA Osasuna is the local soccer team. Their home stadium is called Estadio Reyno de Navarra, known as El Sadar until January, 2006.Pamplona's bull ring was rebuilt in 1923. It
seats 19,529, and is the third largest in the world, after the bull
ring of Mexico and Madrid.
Other sports with some of the top clubs in
Pamplona include handball
(Portland
San Antonio, Europe's championship winner 2001), futsal (MRA Xota)
and water
polo (Larraina).
Pamplona's favourite son may well be Miguel
Indurain, five time Tour de
France winner.
Pamplona is also home to the headquarters of the
Pelote Vasca International Federation (FIPV). Pelote Basque is
principally practiced in France, Spain, and South America.
Sister cities
References
External links
- Ayuntamiento de Pamplona.
- Article on Running of the Bulls Festival
- Best Photographers looking Pamplona
- The Running of the Bulls and Pamplona webcam
- Gallery of bull-running in Pamplona during Fiesta de San Fermin
- Camino de Santiago which passes through Pamplona
- Blog about Sanfermin Festival
- Running of the bulls & San fermin
- Encyclopaedia Britannica 1911: "Pamplona"
pamplona in Arabic: بنبلونة
pamplona in Aragonese: Pamplona
pamplona in Asturian: Pamplona
pamplona in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
Памплёна
pamplona in Bosnian: Pamplona
pamplona in Breton: Iruñea
pamplona in Bulgarian: Памплона
pamplona in Catalan: Pamplona
pamplona in Czech: Pamplona
pamplona in Welsh: Pamplona
pamplona in German: Pamplona
pamplona in Spanish: Pamplona
pamplona in Esperanto: Pamplono
pamplona in Basque: Iruñea
pamplona in Persian: پامپلونا
pamplona in French: Pampelune
pamplona in Galician: Pamplona - Iruña
pamplona in Croatian: Pamplona
pamplona in Indonesian: Pamplona
pamplona in Interlingue: Pamplona
pamplona in Italian: Pamplona
pamplona in Hebrew: פמפלונה
pamplona in Javanese: Pamplona
pamplona in Lithuanian: Pamplona
pamplona in Limburgan: Pamplona
pamplona in Dutch: Pamplona (Spanje)
pamplona in Japanese: パンプローナ
pamplona in Norwegian: Pamplona
pamplona in Occitan (post 1500): Pampalona
pamplona in Polish: Pampeluna
pamplona in Portuguese: Pamplona
pamplona in Romanian: Pamplona
pamplona in Russian: Памплона
pamplona in Slovak: Pamplona
pamplona in Serbian: Памплона
pamplona in Finnish: Pamplona
pamplona in Swedish: Pamplona
pamplona in Tagalog: Pamplona
pamplona in Tetum: Pamplona
pamplona in Turkish: Pamplona
pamplona in Venetian: Pamplona
pamplona in Volapük: Pamplona
pamplona in Chinese: 潘普洛納