- Alternate uses: Barcelona
(disambiguation)
Barcelona is the capital of Catalonia, an autonomous region in the northeast of Spain (41º 23' N, 2º
11' E). It is also the largest city of Spain after Madrid. Barcelona is located on the
Mediterranean coast, between the mouths of the rivers Llobregat and Besòs, 160 km south of the Pyrenees mountain range, the border with
France. The city has a population of around 1.6 million, and its metropolitan area of around 3 million. A decline in the inner
city population and displacement towards the outskirts and beyond threatens urban sprawl.
Barcelona was the site of the 1992 Summer Olympics. The
city's controversial Forum of Cultures started in May 9 and will
take place until September 26, 2004.
History
Legend attributes the Carthaginian foundation of Barcino to Hamilcar Barca, father of Hannibal. Later on, Romans redrew the town as a castra (a Roman military camp) centered on the Mons Taber, a little hill nearby the
contemporary city hall (Plaça de Sant Jaume). This planning is still visible today on the map of the historical center and the
remaining fragments of the Roman walls. Important Roman remains are exposed under the Plaça del Rei, entrance by the city museum,
Museu d'Història de la Ciutat. The city was conquered by the Visigoths in the 5th
century, by the Moors in the 8th century, reconquered in 801 by the Frankish kings, and sacked by Al-Mansur in 985.
Barcelona became a Frankish county, which eventually became independent and expanded to include the Principate of Catalonia,
the Kingdom of Aragon and many overseas possessions, ruling the Mediterranian Sea from
Barcelona to Athens. The forging of a dynastic link between the Catalonia-Aragon Confederation and Castile marked the beginning of Barcelona's decline. This legacy exists to this day as evidenced by the fact that
the city (and Catalonia as a whole) is still a majority Castilian-speaking area.
The city was devastated after the Catalonian Republic of 1640 - 1652, and again during the War of the Spanish Succession in 1714. King Philip V demolished half of the merchants' quarter (La Ribera)
to build a military citadel as a way of both punishing and controlling the rebel city.
During the 19th century, Barcelona grew with the industrial revolution and the introduction of many new industries. The
medieval walls were torn down and the citadel of La Ribera was converted into an urban park: the modern Parc de la Ciutadella,
site of the 1888 "Universal Exposition" (World's Fair); the exposition also left behind the Arc de Triomf and the Museu de Zoologia (a building
originally used during the fair as a cafe-restaurant). The fields that had surrounded the city to allow easy military maneuvering
became the Eixample ("extension"), a bustling modern city surrounding the old.
The beginning of the 20th century marked Barcelona's resurgence as Catalans clamoured for political autonomy and greater
freedom of cultural expression.
Barcelona was a stronghold for the anarchist cause, siding with the Republic's democratically elected government during the
Spanish Civil War (1936-39). It was overrun by Franco's forces in 1939, which ushered in a reign of terror and repression that
lasted decades. The protest movement of the 1970s and the demise of the dictatorship turned Barcelona into a centre of cultural
vitality, enabling it to become the thriving city it is today. While it may still be the second city of Spain, it has a charm and
air that is unique and prized.
While the city has been the focus of the revival of the Catalan
language, movement of Castilian speakers from other parts of Spain for economic reasons to Barcelona have limited the success
of increased use of Catalan in everyday life.
Events
Geography
To its north, the city borders the River Besòs and the municipalities of Santa Coloma de
Gramenet and Sant Adrià de Besòs; to the south it borders the Zona Franca, l'Hospitalet de
Llobregat and Esplugues de Llobregat; to the east is the Mediterranean; and to the west Montcada i Reixach and
Sant Cugat del
Vallès.
Barcelona is divided into several districts; the following list favors Catalan-language names, rather than Spanish-language names; as of 2004, they are more
commonly used:
- Ciutat Vella (old city): the Raval (also known as the Barri Xinès), the
Barri Gòtic, and the Barri de la
Ribera.
- The Eixample: Sant Antoni, Esquerra de l'Eixample ("the left side of the
Eixample" with the sea at your back), Dreta de l'Eixample ("the right side of the Eixample"), the Barri de la Sagrada
Família.
- Sants - Montjuïc: Can Tunis, Montjuïc, Hostafrancs, Sants.
- Les Corts
- Sarrià - Sant Gervasi: Pedralbes,
Sarrià, Sant Gervasi, Vallvidrera.
- Gràcia: Vallcarca, the Barri de la
Salut, Gràcia, el Camp d'en Grassot.
- Horta-Guinardó: Horta, the Barri del Carmel, la Teixonera, el Guinardó.
- Nou Barris: la Trinitat Vella, la Trinitat Nova.
- Sant Andreu: the Barri del Congrés, Sant Andreu de Palomar.
- Sant Martí: Fort Pius, Sant Martí de Provençals, Poble Nou, la Verneda.
Tourist attractions
Barcelona offers a unique opportunity for the tourist on foot to walk from Roman remains to the medieval city, and to the
modern city with its open thoroughfares and grid-iron steet pattern. The historic city center is fairly flat, while the modern
city fans out towards the surrounding hills, bordered by steep streets that are vaguely reminiscent of those found in San
Francisco.
A notable feature is La Rambla - a boulevard that runs from the city center to the waterfront, thronged with
crowds until late at night and lined by florists, bird sellers, street entertainers, cafeterias, and restaurants. Walking along
La Rambla one can see the world-famous opera house El Liceu, the food market of La Boqueria and the Plaça Reial (literally Royal square),
with its arches and palm trees, amongst other interesting buildings. It is also worth keeping an eye out for pickpockets, for
whom the boulevard is a favourite haunt. Visitors should also be aware that hawkers in Plaça Reial who offer "chocolate"
to passers-by are in fact selling hashish.
La Rambla ends at the old harbour, where a statue of Christopher Columbus points (eastward!) to the sea.
Next to it is the Museu Marítim (naval museum), which chronicles the history of life on the Mediterranean, including a full-scale model of a galley. The building of the museum are the medieval Drassanes (shipyards), where the ships which sailed the
Mediterranean were built. The old harbour offers all kinds of other amenities, including the largest Aquarium of the Mediterranean.
To the north of downtown is the Parc de la Ciutadella, which includes both the Parlament de Catalunya (Catalan Parliament) and
the Parc Zoològic de Barcelona (zoo). One of Barcelona's most famous residents, the late albino gorilla Floquet de Neu ("Snowflake"), lived (and died) at the zoo. The park also
contains science museums.
Outstanding is the legacy of architect Antoni Gaudí, who lived and
worked in Barcelona, and who left several famous works like the Palau Güell
in the city's old center, the Parc Güell at the northern tip of Gràcia, and the
immense but still unfinished church of the Sagrada Família, which has
been under construction since 1882, financed by popular donations like the cathedrals in
the Middle Ages (However, it is not a cathedral: the cathedral of Barcelona is the Cathedral of Santa Eulàlia, a Gothic building of the late Middle Ages). The Sagrada Familia is
billed for completion in 2020.
Another very notable modernist building in the older part of the city is the Palau de la Música Catalana, designed by Lluís Domènech
i Montaner and built in 1908.
Art visits include the museum of the Joan Miró Foundation, where several
paintings and sculptures of this artist are shown, together with guest exhibitions from other museums around the world. There is
further a unique museum featuring less known works by Pablo Picasso of
his earlier period. The National Museum of Art of Catalonia (in the Palau Nacional left behind by the 1929
Ibero-American Exposition) possesses a well-known collection of Romanesque art, including wall-paintings of Romanesque churches
and chapels around Catalonia that have been transferred to the museum. The Contemporary Art Museum is also worth a visit, not only because of its paintings and
sculptures, but because of its architecture, the building having been designed by American architect Richard Meier. Visitors should note that the opening times of Barcelona's museums
vary considerably and are often highly inconvenient - careful planning is recommended to avoid wasted trips.
In the modern districts of the city are several avenues on which most of the international companies of clothing, jewelry,
leathergoods and other have their stores. The most elegant avenue is the Passeig de Gràcia, where two Gaudí buildings are sited,
the Casa Milà (La Pedrera) and the Casa Batlló, along with buildings by other famous modernista architects: Casa
Ametller by Josep Puig i Cadafalch and Casa Lleó Morera
by Domènech i Montaner. In recent years, office developments along Passeig de Gràcia have been allowed to break up the
architectural unity of the 19th and early 20th century buildings lining the avenue - a process which shows no signs of
slackening.
For spectacular views over the city and the coast line there are two hills. One, Montjuïc hill, is next to the harbour and perched above a large container terminal. On its top is an old fortress
which used to guard the entrance to the port. Around the hill are the Olympic Stadium and the Sports Palace, the latter designed
by Japanese architect Arata
Isozaki, as are the Botanical Gardens. Uptown is the hill of the Tibidabo, over
500 meters high, with an amusement park and a monumental church on its summit. The church mosaics provide a curious example of
Nationalist Catholic art, much in vogue during the dictatorship.
World Heritage Sites of UNESCO in Barcelona:
Transportation
In addition to its port, of great historical and contemporary commercial importance, Barcelona is served by El Prat International Airport in the small town
of El Prat de
Llobregat.
Barcelona is a hub for RENFE, the Spanish state railway, and its main suburban train
station is Sants-Estació. The AVE high-speed rail system was recently extended from Madrid to
Lleida in western Catalonia, and is expected to reach Barcelona by 2005. Renfe and the
Ferrocarrils de
la Generalitat de Catalunya (FGC) run Barcelona's efficient and widespread commuter train service.
Barcelona's transit company, Transports Metropolitans de Barcelona (TMB), runs the Barcelona metro system and city
buses. See List of Barcelona metro stations.
Barcelona has recently adopted another transport option with two new tram lines.
http://ca.wikipedia.org/upload/c/cd/Localitzaci%C3%B3_de_Barcelona.png
Barcelona marked in the Barcelonès
External link
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