Castilblanco
Castilblanco | ||
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Municipality | ||
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Castilblanco | ||
Coordinates: ES 39°18′20″N 05°06′37″W / 39.30556°N 5.11028°WCoordinates: ES 39°18′20″N 05°06′37″W / 39.30556°N 5.11028°W | ||
Country | Spain | |
Autonomous community | Extremadura | |
Province | Badajoz | |
Founded | 12th century | |
Government | ||
• Type | Mayor-council | |
• Body | Ayuntamiento de Castilblanco | |
• Mayor | Rafael Delgado (PSOE) | |
Area | ||
• Total | 131,6 km2 (508 sq mi) | |
Elevation | 501 m (1,644 ft) | |
Population (2009) | ||
• Total | 1,151 | |
• Density | 0.87/km2 (2.3/sq mi) | |
Demonym(s) | castilblanqueño (m), castilblanqueña (f) | |
Time zone | CET (UTC+1) | |
• Summer (DST) | CEST (UTC+2) | |
Postal code | 06680 | |
Website | www.castilblanco.es |
Castilblanco is a municipality located in the province of Badajoz, Extremadura, Spain. According to the 2005 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 1146 inhabitants.
Toponymy
There is no accord about the origins of the name of Castilblanco, but it is known that it is related to an ancient castle located where the San Cristóbal church is located nowadays. It is not known who built the castle. They could have been Arabs or Christians in the beginnings of 12th century, during the Reconquista. Many historians argue both that Castilblanco was a Templar enclave and that it would have been known as castillo blanco (white castle) or castillo de los blancos because of the colour of the robe that the Templars wore.[1]
Symbols
The official symbol of Castilblanco is its coat of arms. Within it there are represented a castle -in memory of the town's origins- an oak and olive -the most common trees in the surroundings-, the villa declaration -by which Castilblanco got sovereignty in 1554- and a rock-rose flower, in memory of the comarca of La Jara (The Rock-Rose), to which Castilblanco belonged until its incorporation to the province of Badajoz after the fall of the Old Regime.
The coat of arms was approved by a decree of the Extremadura Government in 1986, and it is officially described as follows:
Escudo Cuartelado, trayendo: 1ª, de gules, un castillo árabe de plata. 2ª de plata, un olivo de sinople. 3ª, también de plata, una encina de sinople. 4ª, de azur, una cartela de plata con la leyenda "Declaración de Villa por Carlos I, año de 1554", en letras de sable. Sobre el todo una flor de jara. Al timbre, corona mural de villa.[2]
Physical geography
Location
The municipality is located within the comarca of La Siberia, which borders with the provinces of Cáceres, Ciudad Real and Toledo. The town is built on a hill southern the Guadalupe Range -which belongs to the Toledo Mountains- and between the Guadiana and Guadalupe rivers. The town belongs to the judicial district of Herrera del Duque.
Orography
The urban area is located on a hill which stick out above the surroundings with lower altitude. The northern area of the municipality consists of a wide raña soil, undermined by narrow valleys with north-south orientation. These valleys are formed by the streams which are born northern the rañas and empty into both the Guadiana and Guadalupe rivers. The eastern area of the municipality is which have the most irregular relief, while both the western and southern consist generally by fields with gentle slopes.
At the boundaries of the municipality there are located several ranges which are visible from the urban core. These ranges belong to the Toledo Mountains, which surround the town from the north, east and south. The ranges located north of the municipality are the highest altitude. Among these ranges highlight the Guadalupe Range, the Altamira Range and the Villuercas Range. The latter reaches 1600 meters. The land extending east is very irregular although it have lower altitude (around 700 meters at its highest points). In this area there highlight some ranges like Rinconada Range, Palomera Range and Umbría Range. The southern boundary of the municipality, where both the Guadiana and Guadalupe rivers converge, is also a mountainous terrain bounded by the ranges of Barbas de Oro, Pastillos, Chimenea, Escorial, Villares y Golondrinos. All these ranges have a similar altitude to the eastern ranges.
History
In December 1931, eight months after the establishment of the Second Spanish Republic, Castilblanco was the scene of a violent and unexpected incident. At the time it was a pueblo (village) of about 900 reasonably prosperous inhabitants and had no record of political or social unrest. Permission was however refused by the authorities when local socialist leaders proposed a demonstration (the second of two) against the civil governor of Badajoz. The socialist rally went ahead and the Civil Guard detachment based in the village intervened to disperse it at the instructions of the mayor of the municipality. A crowd of villagers confronted the civil guards who, as elsewhere in rural Spain, were resented as an unpopular and repressive force deliberately recruited from outside the region where they were stationed. After a shot was fired, the four civil guards present were knifed to death and their bodies mutilated. It was not possible to identify the actual killers, although six villagers were subsequently sentenced to life imprisonment.[3] The incident was the first of a series of disturbances that led up to the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1936.
Notes
- ↑ Andando por Castilblanco: Historia
- ↑ DOE núm. 64 MARTES, 5 DE AGOSTO DE 1986 Orden de 22 de julio de 1986, por la que se aprueba el Escudo Heráldico Municipal para el Ayuntamiento de Castilblanco.
- ↑ Hugh Thomas, pages 74-75 "The Spanish Civil War", Penguin Books 2003