Difference between revisions of "Catalonia" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Irrigation]] is important in the drier areas of Catalonia, notably in the Central Depression and in the south. The Canal de Aragó i Catalunya and the Canal d'Urgell distribute the waters of the Segre across the ''comarques'' of Noguera and Segrià, where it is used for  
 
[[Irrigation]] is important in the drier areas of Catalonia, notably in the Central Depression and in the south. The Canal de Aragó i Catalunya and the Canal d'Urgell distribute the waters of the Segre across the ''comarques'' of Noguera and Segrià, where it is used for  
growing [[cereal]]s, [[almond]]s, and [[olive]]s. Irrigation is also important in the ''comarques'' of Baix Ebre and Montsià, where the cultivation of [[rice]] is widespread. The Ebro delta is dominated by [[rice]] fields, but the delta also contains small [[fruit]] plantations and salt pans.
+
growing [[cereal]]s, [[almond]]s, and [[olive]]s. Irrigation is also important in the ''comarques'' of Baix Ebre and Montsià, where the cultivation of [[rice]] is widespread. The Ebro delta is dominated by [[rice]] fields, but the delta also contains small [[fruit]] plantations and [[salt]] pans.
  
 
===Climate===
 
===Climate===

Revision as of 17:13, 17 February 2009

Catalunya (Catalan)
Cataluña (Spanish)
Catalonha (Occitan)
Catalonia
Flag of Catalonia.svg Escudo de Cataluña.svg.png
Flag Coat of arms
Anthem: Els Segadors
Localització de la CA de Catalunya.png
Capital Barcelona
Official language(s) Catalan, Spanish
and Aranese.
Area
 – Total
 – % of Spain
Ranked 6th
 32,114 km²
 6.3%
Population
 – Total (2008)
 – % of Spain
 – Density
Ranked 2nd
 7,354,411
 16%
 222.16/km²
Demonym
 – English
 – Spanish
 – Catalan

 Catalan
 catalán (m); catalana (f)
 català (m); catalana (f)
Statute of Autonomy 9 September 1932,
31 December 1979

current: 9 August 2006

Parliamentary
representation

 – Congress seats
 – Senate seats


 47
 16
President José Montilla Aguilera (PSC)
ISO 3166-2 CT
Generalitat de Catalunya

Catalonia is an Autonomous Community in northeast Spain. It covers an area of 32,114 km² and has an official population of 7,364,078,[1] more than one-third of whom live in the capital city, Barcelona. Official languages are Catalan, Spanish, and Aranese.

Though Catalonia is today an autonomous region within Spain, it has an older history as an independent territory of the Crown of Aragon, which in some ways predates Spain itself. The region gained its current autonomous status first in the Republican era (1930s), when Barcelona was a center of the Loyalist cause, and then again after Francisco Franco's death in 1975, and it continues to press for more political and economic autonomy, mainly in the form of the right to collect and spend more of its taxes locally. This has been the source of some conflict with other regions of Spain.

With 25 percent of national production, Catalonia is the principal Spanish industrial area, but growth is expected to contract as a result of the global recession of 2008–2009.

Etymology

From the 12th century; this is thought to be the first written document in the Catalan language

The name Catalunya (Catalonia) began to be used in the twelfth century to refer to the group of counties that comprised the Marca Hispanica, which gradually became independent from the French. The origin of the term is subject to diverse interpretations. The prevalent theory suggests that Catalunya derives from the term "Land of Castles," having evolved from the term castlà, the ruler of a castle. This theory, therefore, suggests that the term castellà ("Castilian") would have been synonymous.

Another theory suggests that Catalunya derives from Gothia, "Land of the Goths," since the Spanish March was one of the places known as Gothia, whence Gothland and Gothlandia theoretically derived, though critics usually consider it rather simplistic. Yet another theory points to the Lacetani, an Iberian tribe that lived in the area, and whose name, due to the Roman influence, could have evolved to Katelans and then Catalans.

Geography

Catalonia borders France and Andorra to the north, Aragon to the west, the Valencian Community to the south, and the Mediterranean Sea to the east (with a 580 km coastline).

Regions

  • The Costa Brava, in the northeast, has rocky cliffs and a mix of pebble beaches and sandy beaches.
  • The Costa Daurada (Golden Coast), in the southeast, has sandy beaches.
  • The Pyrenees, in the north on the border with France, contain several national parks.
  • The Terres de l'Ebre, in the south, has two national parks and a river delta.
Provinces of northern Spain

Rivers

The main economic importance of the Catalan rivers is probably the role of their valleys as communication routes, particularly through the Coastal and Prelitteral Ranges. Hence, routes inland from Barcelona pass either through the valley of the Llobregat or that of the Besòs, and the Francolí valley is an important route inland from Tarragona.

All of the larger rivers, with the exception of the Llobregat, have been dammed for hydroelectric power. By far the largest dams are those on the Ebro (Ebre in Catalan).

The rivers can be classified into four groups according to their source.

  • Rivers of the Ebro basin, which can be further divided into the lower basin of the Ebro itself and the basin of the Segre
  • Rivers of the western Pyrenees: the Muga, Fluvià, Ter, roughly corresponding with the province of Girona
  • Rivers of the Prelitteral Range: Tordera, Besòs, Foix, Gaià, Francolí
  • Rivers of the Coastal Range: these are very short and of local importance

The frontier between Catalonia and the Valencian Community is formed for much of its length by the Sénia, while the Noguera Ribagorçana forms the frontier with Aragon for much of its length. The Congost de Mont-rebei is a spectacular gorge through which the Noguera Ribagornza runs, dividing Catalonia from Aragon. The only way through is along a mule track, much of which is dug out of sheer rock. The walls of the gorge reach heights of more than 500 meters with a minimum width in places of 20 meters.

Irrigation is important in the drier areas of Catalonia, notably in the Central Depression and in the south. The Canal de Aragó i Catalunya and the Canal d'Urgell distribute the waters of the Segre across the comarques of Noguera and Segrià, where it is used for growing cereals, almonds, and olives. Irrigation is also important in the comarques of Baix Ebre and Montsià, where the cultivation of rice is widespread. The Ebro delta is dominated by rice fields, but the delta also contains small fruit plantations and salt pans.

Climate

The Medieval church, Sant Climent in Taüll, which is located at the foothills of the Pyrenees.
The quaint town of Cadaqués, a popular tourist destination, is located on the Mediterranean coast.

The climate of Catalonia is diverse. The populated areas by the coast in Tarragona, Barcelona, and Girona feature a Mediterranean climate. Inland areas have a mostly continental Mediterranean climate. The Pyreneean peaks have a mountain or even alpine climate at the highest summits.

In the Mediterranean area, summers are dry, hot, and humid with sea breezes, and the maximum temperature is around 30°C. Summer is the rainiest season in the Pyreneean valleys, with frequent storms. Winter is cool or cold depending on the location. It snows frequently in the Pyrenees, and it occasionally snows at lower altitudes, even by the coastline. Overall, spring and autumn are typically the rainiest seasons.

Inland Catalonia is hotter and drier in summer. Temperature may reach 35°C. Nights are cooler than at the coast, with the temperature around 14° to 16°C. Fog is not uncommon in valleys and plains, with freezing drizzle episodes during winter by the Segre and other river valleys.

Flora and fauna

The Ebro delta is the most important wetland area on the Spanish Mediterranean coast, and the second largest in the Iberian Peninsula. It attracts millions of birds throughout the year. The delta contains several natural habitat types such as lagoons of varying salinity and depth, dunes, shallow beaches and bays, as well as the river and its riparian woodlands.

History

Roman amphitheater in Tarragona
Roman aquaduct in Tarragona
Counties of the Marca Hispanica
Catalan Court
Bisbe Irurita Street in Barcelona's Barri Gòtic
Barcelona Cathedral
Santa Maria de Montserrat
Palau de la Música Catalana, built between 1905 and 1908

Like some other areas on the Mediterranean coast of the Iberian Peninsula, Catalonia was colonized by the ancient Greeks, who settled around the Roses area. Both Greeks and Carthaginians (who, in the course of the Second Punic War, briefly ruled the territory) interacted with the main Iberian substratum. After the Carthaginian defeat, the region became, along with the rest of Hispania, part of the Roman Empire, with Tarraco becoming one of the main Roman posts in the Iberian Peninsula.

After Rome's collapse, the area was subject to Gothic rule for four centuries. In the eighth century, it came under Moorish al-Andalus control. After the defeat of Emir Abdul Rahman Al Ghafiqi's troops at Tours in 732, the Frankish Empire conquered former Visigoth states that had been captured by the Muslims or had become allied with them in what today is the northernmost part of Catalonia.

Charlemagne created in 795 what came to be known as the Marca Hispanica, a buffer zone beyond the province of Septimania made up of locally administered separate small kingdoms that served as a defensive barrier between the Umayyad Moors of Al-Andalus and the Frankish Empire.

The Catalan culture started to develop in the Middle Ages stemming from a number of these petty kingdoms organized as small counties throughout the northernmost part of Catalonia. The counts of Barcelona were Frankish vassals nominated by the emperor then the king of France, to whom they were feudatories (801-987).

In 987 the count of Barcelona did not recognize the French king Hugh Capet and his new dynasty, which put it effectively outside Frankish rule. Two years later, Catalonia declared its independence. Then, in 1137, Ramon Berenguer IV, Count of Barcelona, married Queen Petronila of Aragon, establishing the dynastic union of the County of Barcelona with the Kingdom of Aragon which was to create the Crown of Aragon.

Maritime power

It was not until 1258, by means of the Treaty of Corbeil, that the king of France formally relinquished his feudal lordship over the counties of the Principality of Catalonia to the king of Aragon, James I, descendant of Ramon Berenguer IV. This treaty transformed the country's de facto independence into a de jure direct transition from French to Aragonese rule. It also solved a historic incongruence. As part of the Crown of Aragon, Catalonia became a great maritime power, helping to expand the Crown by trade and conquest into the Kingdom of Valencia, the Balearic Islands, and even Sardinia or Sicily.

In 1410, King Martin I died without surviving descendants. As a result, by the Pact of Caspe, Ferdinand of Antequera from the Castilian dynasty of Trastamara received the Crown of Aragon as Ferdinand I of Aragon.

His grandson, King Ferdinand II of Aragon, married Queen Isabella I of Castile in 1469; retrospectively, this is seen as the dawn of the Kingdom of Spain. At that point both Castile and Aragon remained distinct territories, each keeping its own traditional institutions, parliaments, and laws. Political power began to shift away from Aragon toward Castile and, subsequently, from Castile to the Spanish Empire.

For an extended period, Catalonia, as part of the former Crown of Aragon, continued to retain its own usages and laws, but these gradually eroded in the course of the transition from feudalism to a modern state, fueled by the kings' struggle to have more centralized territories. Over the next few centuries, Catalonia was generally on the losing side of a series of local conflicts that led steadily to more centralization of power in Spain, like the Reapers' War (1640–1652).

Special status abolished

The most significant conflict was the War of the Spanish Succession, which began when Charles II of Spain (the last Spanish Habsburg) died without a successor in 1700. Catalonia, as the other territories which used to form the Crown of Aragon in the Middle Ages, mostly rose up in support of the Habsburg pretender Charles of Austria, while the rest of Spain mostly adhered to the French Bourbon claimant, Philip V. Following the fall of Barcelona on September 11, 1714, the special status of the territories belonging to the former Crown of Aragon and its institutions were abolished by the Nueva Planta decrees, under which all its lands were incorporated, as provinces, into a united Spanish administration, as Spain moved towards a centralized government under the new Bourbon dynasty. —Suppression of nationalism=== In the latter half of the nineteenth century, Catalonia became an industrial center; to this day it remains one of the most industrialized parts of Spain. In the first third of the twerntieth century, Catalonia gained and lost varying degrees of autonomy several times, receiving its first statute of autonomy during the Second Spanish Republic (1931). This period was marked by politic unrest and the preeminence of the Anarchists during the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939). After the defeat of the Republic in the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939) which brought General Francisco Franco to power, his regime suppressed any kind of public activities associated with Catalan nationalism, anarchism, socialism, democracy, or communism, such as publishing books on the matter or simply discussing them in open meetings. As part of this suppression the use of Catalan in government-run institutions and in public events was banned. During later stages of the Francoist regime, certain folkoric or religious celebrations in Catalan were resumed and tolerated. Use of Catalan in the mass media was forbidden, but was permitted from the early 1950s[2] in the theater. Publishing in Catalan continued throughout the dictatorship.[3]

Autonomy

After Franco's death (1975) and with the adoption of a democratic Spanish constitution (1978), Catalonia recovered political and cultural autonomy. Today, Catalonia is one of the most economically dynamic regions of Spain. The Catalan capital and largest city, Barcelona, is a major international cultural center and a major tourism destination.

Economy

Catalonia shows a dynamism envied in the peninsula. Barcelona and its zone of influence has a third less unemployment than the rest of the country. With 25 percent of national production, Catalonia is the principal Spanish industrial area, With automotive engineering, electronics, chemistry, and textiles as growth industries and for a few years the agroalimentary one. Services represent 60 percent of the activity, industry 36 percent, and agriculture less than 4 percent. Influenced by European standards more than Spanish ones, the province has associated with the Languedoc-Roussillon and Midi-Pyrenees region to form a Euroregion. The Catalan economy is distinguished in the Spanish context by a more industrial profile.[4]

In 2007 the regional GDP of Catalonia was € 202,509 million and per capita GDP was € 24,445.[5] GDP growth was 3.7 percent.[6] In the context of the 2008-2009 financial crisis, Catalonia is expected to suffer a recession amounting to almost a 2 percent contraction of its regional GDP in 2009[7]

Catalonia is the foremost tourist destination of Spain, particularly the city of Barcelona, the beaches of the Costa Brava at Girona, and the Costa Daurada at Tarragona. In the Pyrenees there are several ski resorts.

Savings banks have a great implantation in Catalonia. 10 of the 46 Spanish savings banks are Catalan and "La Caixa" is the first savings bank of Europe[8] The first private bank originated in Catalonia is Banc Sabadell ranking fourth of the Spanish private banks.[9]

The stock market of Barcelona, which in 2004 traded almost 205,000 million euros, is the second most important in Spain after the stock market of Madrid.

The main economic cost for Catalan families is the purchase of a house. According to data of the Society of Appraisal on December 31, 2005 Catalonia was, after Madrid, the second most expensive area for houses. Barcelona is the most expensive city in Spain for housing.

Transportation

Airports

  • Barcelona International Airport (BCN) Barcelona/El Prat de Llobregat {El Prat/Barcelona};
  • Girona-Costa Brava Airport (GRO) Girona/Gerona{Vilobi d`Onyar};
  • Reus Airport Reus/Tarragona/Costa Daurada (REU){Contanti/Reus/Tarragona};
  • Sabadell Airport (QSA){Sabadell SAB)}.

Commercial and passenger ports

Roads

There are 12,000 km of roads throughout Catalonia. The principal highway is AP-7, also known as Autopista del Mediterrani. It follows the coast from the French border to Valencia, located south of Tarragona. The main roads generally radiate from Barcelona. The A-2 and AP-2 connect to Madrid.

Railways

Catalonia saw the first railway construction in the Iberian Peninsula in 1848, linking Barcelona with Mataró. Given the topography, most lines radiate from Barcelona. The city has both suburban and inter-city services. The main east coast line runs through the province and connects with French Railways at Portbou on the coast. The railroad companies operating in Catalonia are FGC and RENFE.

High-speed AVE (Alta Velocidad Española) services from Madrid currently reach Lleida, Tarragona, and Barcelona. The official opening between Barcelona and Madrid was on 20 February 2008. The journey between Barcelona and Madrid lasts about two and a half hours. Construction has commenced to extend the high-speed line northwards to connect with the French high-speed network. This new line passes through Girona and a rail tunnel through the Pyrenees.

Government and politics

The capital city is Barcelona. Catalonia is divided into forty-one comarques that are part, in turn, of four provinces: Barcelona, Girona, Lleida, and Tarragona. Its territory corresponds to most of the historical territory of the former Principality of Catalonia.

Catalonia is a Spanish Autonomous Community with a high level of self-government. Politics of Catalonia are primarily related to the autonomous Parliament of Catalonia and the Generalitat institutional system.

But regional Catalan politics also influences Spanish politics as a whole due to the presence of Catalan nationalist parties in the Spanish Parliament, whose political support is often required by any given winner of the Spanish general elections to form majorities. Catalan politics is also noted, to a lesser extent, for the influence exerted by the regional socialdemocrat party (PSC) on its sister major party, the Spain-wide PSOE.

19th and 20th centuries

During the 19th and 20th centuries, Catalonia was one of the main centers of Spanish industrialization. During these years, the struggle between the Barcelonan conservative industrial bourgeoisie and the working class dominated Catalan politics, as it did elsewhere in Europe during the industrialization process. In Catalonia this situation was nuanced by the fact that immigrants from the rest of the Spain were an increasing portion of the workers, since the local workforce was not enough to cover the demands of a rising economy.

Catalan nationalist and federalist movements arose in the nineteenth century, and when the Second Republic was declared in 1931, Catalonia became an autonomous region. Following the fall of the Second Republic after the Spanish Civil War of 1936-39, the dictatorship of General Francisco Franco annulled Catalonia's autonomy statute and prohibited any public usage, official promotion or recognition of the Catalan language. Its private everyday use was never officially proscribed by law but diminished because of the political situation, mostly in the major urban nuclei. During the last decade of Franco's rule, there was a resurgence of nationalist sentiment in Catalonia and other 'historic' regions of Spain such as the Basque country.

"Dual vote" and current affairs

Following Franco's death in 1975 and the restoration democracy by 1978, Catalonia regained its autonomous status and became one of the Autonomous Communities within Spain. The Catalan conservative nationalist leader Jordi Pujol came to power in the first regional elections in 1980 and his two-party coalition, Convergence and Unity (Convergència i Unió, CiU), won successive regional elections by absolute majority for 19 years and ruled the Generalitat for 23 consecutive years.

Legal status within Spain

The Spanish Constitution of 1978 declares that Spain is an indissoluble nation that recognizes and guarantees the right to self-government of the nationalities and regions that constitute it, including Catalonia, the Basque Country, Galicia, and Andalusia. The Preamble of the 2006 Statute of Autonomy of Catalonia states the Parliament of Catalonia defined Catalonia as a nation, but that the Spanish Constitution recognizes Catalonia's national reality as a nationality. While this Statute was approved by and sanctioned by both the Catalan and the Spanish parliaments, and later by referendum in Catalonia, it has been legally contested by the surrounding Autonomous Communities of Aragon, Balearic Islands, and the Valencian Community. The objections are based on various issues such as disputed cultural heritage but, especially, on the statute's alleged breaches of the principle of "solidarity between regions" enshrined by the constitution in fiscal and educational matters. As of November 2008, the Constitutional Court of Spain is assessing the constitutionality of the challenged articles.

After Franco's death in 1975 and the adoption of a democratic constitution in Spain in 1978, Catalonia recovered, and extended, the powers granted in the statute of autonomy of 1932[10] it had lost with the fall of the Second Spanish Republic[11] at the end of the Spanish Civil War in 1939.

The historical region has gradually achieved a greater degree of autonomy since 1979. The Generalitat holds exclusive jurisdiction in various matters including culture, environment, communications, transportation, commerce, public safety and local governments while it shares jurisdiction with the Spanish government in education, health and justice.[12]

There is significant Catalan nationalist sentiment present in a part of the population of Catalonia,[13] which ranges from the desire for independence from Spain expressed by Catalan independentists,[13] to a more generic demand of further autonomy.[13]

Law and government of Catalonia

Girona

The Statute of Autonomy of Catalonia is the fundamental organic law, second only to the Spanish constitution from which the statute originates. The Catalan Statute of Autonomy establishes that Catalonia is organized politically through the Generalitat de Catalunya, conformed by the Parliament, the Presidency of the Generalitat, the Government or Executive Council, and the other institutions created by the Parliament.

The seat of the Executive Council is the city of Barcelona. Since the restoration of the Generalitat through the return of democracy in Spain, the presidents of Catalonia have been Jordi Pujol (1980-2003), Pasqual Maragall (2003-2006), and incumbent José Montilla Aguilera.

Catalonia is divided into four provinces: Barcelona, Girona, Lleida, and Tarragona. Local governments include comarques (roughly equivalent to counties), as well as smaller forms of municipal administration.

Catalonia has its own police force, the Mossos d'Esquadra, whose origins trace back to the eighteenth century. Since 1980 they are under the commandment of the Generalitat, and since 1994 it is expanding to replace the Spain-wide Guardia Civil and Policía Nacional, which report directly to the Homeland Department of Spain. These corps are to retain a certain number of agents within Catalonia to exercise specific functions such as overseeing ports, airports, coasts, international borders, custom offices, identification documents, and control of armaments, among others.

Most of the justice system is administered by national judicial institutions. The legal system is uniform throughout Spain, with the exception of so-called "civil law," which is administered separately within Catalonia.[14]

After Navarre and the Basque Country, Catalonia is the Spanish region with the highest degree of autonomy.

Demographics

The autonomous community of Catalonia covers an area of 32,114 km² with an official population of 7,354,411 (2008), of whom immigrants represent an estimated 12.3 percent.[15][16]

The Urban Region of Barcelona includes 3,327,872 people and covers an area of 2.268 km². About 1.7 million persons live in a radius of 15 km from Barcelona. The metropolitan area of the Urban Region includes cities like l'Hospitalet de Llobregat, Badalona, Santa Coloma de Gramenet, and Cornellà. Other important cities are Sabadell, Tarragona, Lleida, Girona, Mataró, and Reus.

In 1900 the population of Catalonia was 1,984,115 people and in 1970 it was 5,107,606.[17] That increase was produced due to the demographic boom produced in Spain during the 1960s and early 1970s and also to the large-scale internal migration from the rural interior of Spain to its industrial cities. In Catalonia that wave of internal migration arrived from several regions of Spain, especially Andalusia, Murcia, and Extremadura.

According to the most recent linguistic census, a plurality claims Catalan as "their own language" (48.8% Catalan compared to 44.3% Spanish), and in most everyday uses, people who use exclusively Catalan or both languages equally are in the majority. 53.4% of citizens declared Spanish as a native language, either exclusively or along with Catalan.[18]

UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Catalonia

There are several UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Catalonia:

Dalí Museum, Figueres
  • Archaeological Ensemble of Tarraco, Tarragona
  • Catalan Romanesque Churches at Vall de Boí
  • Poblet Monastery, Poblet, Tarragona province
  • Palau de la Música Catalana and Hospital de Sant Pau, Barcelona
  • Works of Antoni Gaudí:
    • Sagrada Família, Barcelona
    • Parc Güell, Barcelona
    • Palau Güell, Barcelona
    • Casa Milà (La Pedrera), Barcelona

Culture

Places of interest

Catalonia has a great variety of different landscapes very close to each other, mountains on the Pyrenees (at the border with France), green hills in the north of the country, agricultural plains on the west and beaches on the east.

  • Reus
  • Montserrat: An unusual rock mountain, with a sanctuary on top
  • Volcanoes: near the city of Olot, and La Fageda d'en Jordà, a very nice forest and extinct volcanoe.
  • Adventure sports
  • Barcelona: with beaches as well as prominent art, science, and maritime museums
  • Figueres: the Dalí Museum
  • La Llacuna- Beautiful Mediterranean outback village, with typical gastronomy and landscape
  • Les Alexandrias - Rugged western hamlet located near the Aragonese mountain range. Famous for its bull fighting festivals in which the bull holds a red cape and bullfighters run after it.

Languages

Originating in the historic territory of Catalonia, Catalan is one of the three official languages and has enjoyed special status since the approval of the Statute of Autonomy of 1979 which declares it to be the language "proper to Catalonia." The other languages with official status are Spanish, which is the official language throughout Spain, and Aranese (a dialect of Occitan spoken in the Aran Valley).

Under the Franco dictatorship Catalan was, until the 1970s, excluded from the state education system and all other official and public use, including the prohibition of giving children Catalan names. Rural-urban migration originating in other parts of Spain also reduced the social use of the language in urban areas. Lately, a similar sociolinguistic phenomenon has occurred with foreign immigration. In an attempt to reverse this, the re-established self-government institutions of Catalonia embarked on a long-term language policy to increase the use of Catalan and has, since 1983, enforced laws that attempt to protect, and extend, the use of Catalan. Some groups consider these efforts a way to discourage the use of Spanish, while others, including the Catalan government and the European Union consider the policies respectful, or even as an example which "should be disseminated throughout the Union".[19]

Today, Catalan is the language of the Catalan autonomous government and the other public institutions that fall under its jurisdiction. Basic public education is given in Catalan except for two hours per week of Spanish-medium instruction. Businesses are required to display all information (e.g., menus, posters) in Catalan under penalty of fines; there is no obligation to display this information in either Aranese or Spanish, although there is no restriction on doing so in these or other languages and this is often done, in particular in Spanish. The use of fines was introduced in a 1997 linguistic law that aims to increase the use of Catalan. The law ensures that both Catalan and Spanish – being official languages – can be used by the citizens without prejudice in all public and private activities. Even though the Generalitat usually uses Catalan in its communications and notifications addressed to the general population, citizens can also receive information from the Generalitat in Spanish if they so desire.

Also, starting with the Statute of Autonomy of 1979, Aranese (a dialect of Gascon) has been official and subject to special protection in the Aran Valley. This small area of 7,000 inhabitants was the only place where a dialect of Occitan has received full official status. Then, on August 9, 2006, when the new statute came into force, Occitan became official throughout Catalonia.

Popular culture

Castellers are one of the main manifestations of the Catalonian popular culture. The activity consists in constructing human towers by competing colles castelleres (teams). This practice originated in the southern part of Catalonia during the 18th century.

The sardana is the most characteristic Catalonian popular dance; other groups also practice Ball de bastons, moixiganga or jota in the southern part. Musically the Havaneres are also characteristic in the marine localities of the Costa Brava, especially during the summer months when these songs are sung outdoors accompanied by a tasting of burned rum. As opposed to other parts of Spain, flamenco is not popularly performed, but rather the rumba is a more prevalent dance style.

In the greater celebrations other elements of the Catalonian popular culture are usually present: the parades of giants and correfocs of devils and firecrackers. Another traditional celebration in Catalonia is La Patum de Berga declared oral and immaterial patrimony of Humanity by UNESCO in November 2005.

In addition to the traditional local Catalonian culture, people can enjoy traditions from other parts of Spain as a result of sizable migration from other regions.


Gallery of images

Torre Agbar in Barcelona

References
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