EUH-4310: Medieval Spain
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Asturica Augusta
Today, as yesterday, communication and mobility are essential in the configuration of landscapes, understood as cultural creations. The dense networks of roads that nowadays crisscross Europe have a historical depth whose roots lie in its ancient roads. Under the might of Rome, a network of roads was designed for the first time that was capable of linking points very far apart and of organizing the lands they traversed. They represent some of the Empire’s landscapes and are testimony to the ways in which highly diverse regions were integrated under one single power: Integration Water and land: Integration Roads of conquest The rural world of the limits ports and trade of the mountains Roads of conquest The initial course of the roads was often marked by the Rome army in its advance. Their role as an instrument of control over conquered lands was a constant, with soldiers, orders, magistrates, embassies and emperors all moving along them. Alesia is undoubtedly one of the most emblematic landscapes of the war waged by Rome’s legions against the peoples that inhabited Europe. Its material remains and the famous account by Caesar, the Gallic Wars, have meant that Alesia has been recognized for two centuries now as a symbol of the expansion of Rome and the resistance of local communities. Alesia is the famous battle between Julius Caesar and Vercingetorix, the Roman army against the Gaulish tribes. The siege of Alesia took place in 52 BC, but its location was not actually discovered until the 19th century thanks to archeological research! Located on the site of the battle itself, in the centre of France, in Burgundy, in the village of Alise-Sainte-Reine, the MuseoParc Alesia opened its doors in 2012 in order to provide the key to understanding this historical event and the historical context, in order to make history accessible to the greatest number of people. -
Skeletonized Microfossils from the Lower–Middle Cambrian Transition of the Cantabrian Mountains, Northern Spain
Skeletonized microfossils from the Lower–Middle Cambrian transition of the Cantabrian Mountains, northern Spain SÉBASTIEN CLAUSEN and J. JAVIER ÁLVARO Clausen, S. and Álvaro, J.J. 2006. Skeletonized microfossils from the Lower–Middle Cambrian transition of the Cantabrian Mountains, northern Spain. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 51 (2): 223–238. Two different assemblages of skeletonized microfossils are recorded in bioclastic shoals that cross the Lower–Middle Cambrian boundary in the Esla nappe, Cantabrian Mountains. The uppermost Lower Cambrian sedimentary rocks repre− sent a ramp with ooid−bioclastic shoals that allowed development of protected archaeocyathan−microbial reefs. The shoals yield abundant debris of tube−shelled microfossils, such as hyoliths and hyolithelminths (Torellella), and trilobites. The overlying erosive unconformity marks the disappearance of archaeocyaths and the Iberian Lower–Middle Cambrian boundary. A different assemblage occurs in the overlying glauconitic limestone associated with development of widespread low−relief bioclastic shoals. Their lowermost part is rich in hyoliths, hexactinellid, and heteractinid sponge spicules (Eiffelia), chancelloriid sclerites (at least six form species of Allonnia, Archiasterella, and Chancelloria), cambroclaves (Parazhijinites), probable eoconchariids (Cantabria labyrinthica gen. et sp. nov.), sclerites of uncertain af− finity (Holoplicatella margarita gen. et sp. nov.), echinoderm ossicles and trilobites. Although both bioclastic shoal com− plexes represent similar high−energy conditions, the unconformity at the Lower–Middle Cambrian boundary marks a drastic replacement of microfossil assemblages. This change may represent a real community replacement from hyolithelminth−phosphatic tubular shells to CES (chancelloriid−echinoderm−sponge) meadows. This replacement coin− cides with the immigration event based on trilobites previously reported across the boundary, although the partial infor− mation available from originally carbonate skeletons is also affected by taphonomic bias. -
ROMANESQUE ART ROUTES R ART ROUTES Omanesque
Romanesque ART ROUTES ROMANESQUE ART ROUTES ISBN 978-84-393-9921-6 9 788439 399216 Romanesque ART ROUTES 2 3 4 Summary 6 - Catalonia, land of Romanesque art 8 - The frst European art 9 - Evolution and main characteristics 10 - Suggested routes 12 - Route 1 From La Seu d’Urgell to La Pobla de Claramunt via the Segre Valley, the La Segarra plateaus and L’Anoia 20 - Route 2 From La Val d’Aran to Lleida via Pallars and Ribagorça 32 - Route 3 From Penedès to New Catalonia via the monasteries of the Cistercian and military orders 38 - Route 4 From La Cerdanya to the Barcelona area via the Llobregat and Cardener valleys 48 - Route 5 From the Pyrenees to Barcelona via El Ripollès, Osona and Vallès 58 - Route 6 From Empordà and La Garrotxa to La Selva via Girona 69 - Romanesque art in museums 73 - Map of the Romanesque art routes 77 - Tourist information << TAÜLL. SANT CLIMENT < RIPOLL. SANTA MARIA Catalonia, land of Romanesque art Catalonia is and always has been receptive to the various artistic styles that have succeeded one another in Europe. Perhaps one of the most profoundly assimilated was Romanesque art, which emerged while Catalonia’s historical personality was taking shape during the height of feudalism. The birth and expansion of Romanesque art took place at a time when the sovereignty of the Counts of Barcelona had been recognised by the other Catalan counts. This unifcation coincided with two other major events. One was the de facto severing of all feudal ties with the French kings who had succeeded the last Carolingians; the other was the expedition to Crdoba (1010), which defnitively quashed the threat of an invasion from Al-Andalus and put the small Muslim-ruled principalities, into which the caliphate had been split up, under the protection of the Catalan counts. -
El Monestir Benedictí De Sant Benet De Bages. Fons Documental: Identificació, Edició I Estudi
El monestir benedictí de Sant Benet de Bages. Fons documental: identificació, edició i estudi. Segles X-XI JOAN SALVADÓ I MONTORIOL EL MONESTIR BENEDICTÍ DE SANT BENET DE BAGES. FONS DOCUMENTAL: IDENTIFICACIÓ, EDICIÓ I ESTUDI. SEGLES X-XI Joan Salvadó i Montoriol Dirigida per Salvador Claramunt i Rodríguez Flocel Sabaté i Curull Universitat de Barcelona Universitat de Lleida ANY 2012 Diplomatari de Sant Benet de Bages (898-1123) EL MONESTIR BENEDICTÍ DE SANT BENET DE BAGES. FONS DOCUMENTAL: IDENTIFICACIÓ, EDICIÓ I ESTUDI. SEGLES X-XI -2- Diplomatari de Sant Benet de Bages (898-1123) Taula de matèries general 1. ESTUDI DEL FONS DOCUMENTAL ........................................................................................... 8 1.1 Agraïments ..................................................................................................................................... 8 1.1.1 Introducció ................................................................................................................................ 10 1.1.2 Descripció de la tesi .................................................................................................................. 16 1.1.3 Història del fons ........................................................................................................................ 17 1.1.4 Els documents ........................................................................................................................... 19 1.1.5 Justificació ............................................................................................................................... -
Chapter 4. Power with a Name: the Rulers of the March
210 Power with a Name: the rulers of the March Introduction: ‘public’ power in late-Carolingian Catalonia Ideology: power with a name In the figures of Guifré and Ansulf we have men who held what institutional historians might consider a public authority, delegated from the count as seen in his patronage which gave these men their beneficia or castles. Their authority has titles whose etymology is one of this delegation: the vicarii , local substitutes for the count, and further up, viscounts, deputies for the count; even the counts themselves derived their title from a long-notional companionship with the distant king. These are ideas of power external to the March itself, imported with the Franks, if not, as in a few cases like the vague office of saio or the Code-backed one of judge, with the Visigoths. 1 They are structures which the historian of other areas coming to Catalonia will recognise; and so did the kings, for they appeared in royal documents. 2 They provide a template of administration for the area. 3 All the same one is entitled to ask what it was that they meant, in this local environment where the king was absent. Until 878 at least, the kings of the Franks had chosen the counts of the March, albeit from a decreasing pool of possible candidates. With the council of Troyes in 878 and Guifré the Hairy’s succession with his brother Miró to the 1 See Chapter 2 above, pp. 107-113. 2 E. g. Cat. Car. II ap. X. 3 On the personnel of Catalan authority, see P. -
Sant Pere De Rodes and La Jonquera to Montserrat
The Way of Saint James from El Port de la Selva – Sant Pere de Rodes and La Jonquera to Montserrat Generalitat de Catalunya Government of Catalonia Ministry of Innovation, Universities and Enterprise The Way of Saint James Table of Contents Marsal, Carme The Way of Saint James: on the map . 4 Introduction . 7 The Way of Saint James : from El Port de la Selva–Sant Pere de Rodes Origins of the pilgrimage . 8 and La Jonquera to Montserrat . – (Guies turístiques de Catalunya) The Way of Saint James and Catalonia . .10 A la portada: Xacobeo 2010 Catalunya . – Índex Routes in northern Catalonia . .12 ISBN 9788439385752 Preparing for the pilgrimage . .15 Equipment . .16 I . Domínguez, Rafa II . Agència Catalana de Turisme III . Catalunya . Advice if you go on foot . .18 Departament d'Innovació, Universitats i Empresa IV . Títol V . Some advice for cyclists . .20 Col·lecció: Guies turístiques de Catalunya . Anglès From El Port de la Selva – Sant Pere de Rodes 1 . Camí de Sant Jaume – Guies 2 . Catalunya – Guies and La Jonquera to Figueres . .23 914 .671(036) La Jonquera-Vilabertran . .25 El Port de la Selva – Sant Pere de Rodes-Figueres . .35 From Figueres to Montserrat . .55 Figueres-Bàscara . .57 Bàscara-Girona . .67 Girona-Amer . .83 Amer-Sant Esteve d’en Bas . .95 Sant Esteve d’en Bas-L’Esquirol . 103 L’Esquirol-Vic . 111 Vic-L’Estany . 121 L’Estany-Artés . 129 Artés-Manresa . 137 Manresa-Montserrat . 147 © Generalitat de Catalunya Variant from Olot to Sant Esteve d’en Bas . 157 Ministry of Innovation, Universities and Enterprise Olot-Sant Esteve d’en Bas . -
Connectivity Study in Northwest Spain: Barriers, Impedances, and Corridors
sustainability Article Connectivity Study in Northwest Spain: Barriers, Impedances, and Corridors Enrique Valero, Xana Álvarez * and Juan Picos AF4 Research Group, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Engineering, Forestry Engineering College, University of Vigo, Campus A Xunqueira, s/n, 36005 Pontevedra, Spain; [email protected] (E.V.); [email protected] (J.P.) * Correspondence: [email protected]; Tel.: +34-986-801-959 Received: 9 August 2019; Accepted: 14 September 2019; Published: 19 September 2019 Abstract: Functional connectivity between habitats is a fundamental quality for species dispersal and genetic exchange throughout their distribution range. Brown bear populations in Northwest Spain comprise around 200 individuals separated into two sub-populations that are very difficult to connect. We analysed the fragmentation and connectivity for the Ancares-Courel Site of Community Importance (SCI) and its surroundings, including the distribution area for this species within Asturias and in the northwest of Castile and León. The work analysed the territory’s connectivity by using Geographic Information Systems (GIS). The distance-cost method was used to calculate the least-cost paths with Patch Matrix. The Conefor Sensinode software calculated the Integral Connectivity Index and the Connectivity Probability. Locating the least-cost paths made it possible to define areas of favourable connectivity and to identify critical areas, while the results obtained from the connectivity indices led to the discovery of habitat patches that are fundamental for maintaining connectivity within and between different spaces. Three routes turned out to be the main ones connecting the northern (Ancares) and southern (Courel) areas of the SCI. Finally, this work shows the importance of conserving natural habitats and the biology, migration, and genetic exchange of sensitive species. -
Law, Liturgy, and Sacred Space in Medieval Catalonia and Southern France, 800-1100
Law, Liturgy, and Sacred Space in Medieval Catalonia and Southern France, 800-1100 Adam Christopher Matthews Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy under the Executive Committee of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2021 1 ©2021 Adam Christopher Matthews All Rights Reserved 2 Abstract Law, Liturgy, and Sacred Space in Medieval Catalonia and Southern France, 800-1100 Adam Christopher Matthews With the collapse of the Visigothic kingdom, the judges of Catalonia and southern France worked to keep the region‘s traditional judicial system operable. Drawing on records of judicial proceedings and church dedications from the ninth century to the end of the eleventh, this dissertation explores how judges devised a liturgically-influenced court strategy to invigorate rulings. They transformed churches into courtrooms. In these spaces, changed by merit of the consecration rite, community awe for the power infused within sacred space could be utilized to achieve consensus around the legitimacy of dispute outcomes. At the height of a tribunal, judges brought litigants and witnesses to altars, believed to be thresholds of Heaven, and compelled them to authenticate their testimony before God and his saints. Thus, officials supplemented human means of enforcement with the supernatural powers permeating sanctuaries. This strategy constitutes a hybridization of codified law and the belief in churches as real sacred spaces, a conception that emerged from the Carolingian liturgical reforms of the ninth century. In practice, it provided courts with a means to enact the mandates from the Visigothic Code and to foster stability. The result was a flexible synthesis of law, liturgy, and sacred space that was in many cases capable of harnessing spiritual and community pressure in legal proceedings. -
Iberian Forests
IBERIAN FORESTS STRUCTURE AND DYNAMICS OF THE MAIN FORESTS IN THE IBERIAN PENINSULA PABLO J. HIDALGO MATERIALES PARA LA DOCENCIA [144] 2015 © Universidad de Huelva Servicio de Publicaciones © Los Autores Maquetación BONANZA SISTEMAS DIGITALES S.L. Impresión BONANZA SISTEMAS DIGITALES S.L. I.S.B.N. 978-84-16061-51-8 IBERIAN FORESTS. PABLO J. HIDALGO 3 INDEX 1. Physical Geography of the Iberian Peninsula ............................................................. 5 2. Temperate forest (Atlantic forest) ................................................................................ 9 3. Riparian forest ............................................................................................................. 15 4. Mediterranean forest ................................................................................................... 17 5. High mountain forest ................................................................................................... 23 Bibliography ..................................................................................................................... 27 Annex I. Iberian Forest Species ...................................................................................... 29 IBERIAN FORESTS. PABLO J. HIDALGO 5 1. PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE IBERIAN PENINSULA. 1.1. Topography: Many different mountain ranges at high altitudes. Two plateaus 800–1100 m a.s.l. By contrast, many areas in Europe are plains with the exception of several mountain ran- ges such as the Alps, Urals, Balkans, Apennines, Carpathians, -
Potential Range and Corridors for Brown Bears
POTENTIALRANGE AND CORRIDORSFOR BROWNBEARS INTHE EASTERN ALPS, ITALY LUIGIBOITANI, Department of Animaland HumanBiology, Viale Universita 32,00185-Roma, Italy,email: boitani @ pan.bio.uniromal .it PAOLOCIUCCI, Department of Animaland HumanBiology, Viale Universita 32,00185-Roma, Italy,email: ciucci@ pan.bio.uniromal .it FABIOCORSI, Istituto Ecologia Applicata, Via Spallanzani 32,00161 -Roma,Italy, email: corsi @ pan.bio.uniromal .it EUGENIODUPRE', Istituto Nazionale Fauna Selvatica, Via Ca Fornacetta,40064-Ozzano Emilia, Italy, email: infseuge@ iperbole.bologna.it Abstract: Although several techniqueshave been used to explore the spatialfeatures of brownbear (Ursus arctos) range (e.g., potentialdistribution ranges,linkages between isolated sub-populations, and analyses of habitatsuitability), quality and quantity of datahave often constrainedthe usefulness of the results.We used 12 environmentalvariables to identifypotentially suitable areas for bears in the Italianpart of the EasternAlps. We usedMahalanobis distancestatistic as a relativeindex of the environmentalquality of the studyarea by calculatingfor eachpixel (250 meters)the distancefrom the centroid of the environmentalconditions of 100 locationsrandomly selected within known bear ranges. We used differentlevels of this suitabilityindex to identify potentialoptimal and sub-optimal areas and their interconnecting corridors. The model identified4 majorareas of potentialbear presence having a total size of about 10,850 km2.Assuming functionalconnectivity among the areasand mean density -
Asturias (Northern Spain) As Case Study
Celts, Collective Identity and Archaeological Responsibility: Asturias (Northern Spain) as case study David González Álvarez, Carlos Marín Suárez Abstract Celtism was introduced in Asturias (Northern Spain) as a source of identity in the 19th century by the bourgeois and intellectual elite which developed the Asturianism and a regionalist political agenda. The archaeological Celts did not appear until Franco dictatorship, when they were linked to the Iron Age hillforts. Since the beginning of Spanish democracy, in 1978, most of the archaeologists who have been working on Asturian Iron Age have omit- ted ethnic studies. Today, almost nobody speaks about Celts in Academia. But, in the last years the Celtism has widespread on Asturian society. Celts are a very important political reference point in the new frame of Autonomous regions in Spain. In this context, archaeologists must to assume our responsibility in order of clarifying the uses and abuses of Celtism as a historiographical myth. We have to transmit the deconstruction of Celtism to society and we should be able to present alternatives to these archaeological old discourses in which Celtism entail the assumption of an ethnocentric, hierarchical and androcentric view of the past. Zusammenfassung Der Keltizismus wurde in Asturien (Nordspanien) als identitätsstiftende Ressource im 19. Jahrhundert durch bürgerliche und intellektuelle Eliten entwickelt, die Asturianismus und regionalistische politische Ziele propagierte. Die archäologischen Kelten erschienen allerdings erst während der Franco-Diktatur, während der sie mit den eisen- zeitlichen befestigten Höhensiedlungen verknüpft wurden. Seit der Einführung der Demokratie in Spanien im Jahr 1978 haben die meisten Archäologen, die über die asturische Eisenzeit arbeiten, ethnische Studien vernachlässigt. -
CATALONIA Fam Trip with ATTA Collaboration 18/09 – 24/09/2017
CATALONIA Fam trip with ATTA collaboration 18/09 – 24/09/2017 Monday 18th September Morning Arrival of the different flights. 13:00 Transfer to VAL D’ARAN. 300 km – 3h 45 min The Val d’Aran has its own distinctive personality. This high mountain territory is the only valley in the Catalan Pyrenees with an Atlantic climate. Its exceptional location, former links with Occitania, and century-old isolation during the winter months have left this small area with its own language (Aranese), officially recognized throughout Catalonia, and deep-rooted traditions originating in what is now the south of France. With impressive landscapes, glacial lakes, and peaks over 3000 metres high, the Val d’Aran is an ideal destination for skiing and adventure sports; Baqueira Beret resort is considered to have the best winter sports infrastructure in the whole of the Iberian Peninsula. 17:00 Check-in at 4* Hotel in Vielha. 18:30 Stroll around Vielha. Vielha, the capital of Val d’Aran, is a small Pyrenean city with approximately 4000 inhabitants and it is located at 974 meters above sea level. It is surrounded by peaks over 2000 meters. The village is built along the Garona River, at the point where both the Garona and Nere rivers meet. 20:00 Dinner in a typical aranese restaurant based on local food. Tuesday 19th September 09:00 Breakfast and check-out. 09:30 E-bike activity. You will be able to know a bit more about Val d’Aran history and its small towns while cycling. 12.00 Hiking route around Aigüestortes i Estany de Sant Maurici National Park.