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Castellón de la Plana

Castellón de la Plana

FieldValue
nameCastellón de la Plana
settlement_typeMunicipality
native_nameCastelló de la Plana
image_skylineCastellón aéreo 2 (36985918570).jpg
image_captionAerial view of Castellón
image_flagBandera de Castelló de la Plana-2.svg
image_shieldCoat of Arms of Castellón City.svg
mapframeyes
mapframe-zoom4
mapframe-markercity
map_captionLocation of Castellón de la Plana
pushpin_mapSpain Valencia#Spain
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameSpain
subdivision_type1Autonomous community
subdivision_name1Valencian Community
subdivision_type2Province
subdivision_name2Castellón / Castelló
subdivision_type3Comarca
subdivision_name3Plana Alta
seat_type
coordinates
elevation_m30
elevation_min_m0
elevation_max_m609
area_total_km2108.78
established_title
population_as_of
population_footnotes
population_total
population_demonymscastellonenc, -ca (va)
castellonense (es)
population_density_km2auto
timezoneCET
utc_offset+1
timezone_DSTCEST
utc_offset_DST+2
postal_code_typePostal code
postal_code12001-06
area_code_typeDialing code
area_code964
leader_titleAlcaldesa
leader_nameBegoña Carrasco (2023)
leader_partyPP
blank_name_sec2Climate
blank_info_sec2BSh
website

| mapframe-zoom = 4 | mapframe-marker = city • castellonense (es)

Plaza Mayor

Castellón de la Plana or Castelló de la Plana (or simply Castellón or Castelló), is the capital city of the province of Castellón, in the Valencian Community, Spain. It is located near the eastern coastline of the Iberian Peninsula by the Mediterranean Sea. The main urban core lies some kilometres inland while the detached district of was built around . The Desert de les Palmes mountain range rises to the north.

According to the 2018 census, Castellón has a population of 174,264 inhabitants, ranking as the fourth most populated municipality in the Valencian Community. Castellón is part of a larger metropolitan area along with the neighbouring municipalities of Villarreal, Almassora, Benicàssim, Borriol, and Borriana. The Prime Meridian, or Greenwich Meridian, intersects the 40th parallel at Castellón de la Plana and is commemorated with a monolith in Meridian Park (Parc del Meridià) located at the exact point where this occurs.

History

The town inherited the name from a Moorish castle on the top of the hill of Magdalena (the ), a dominating over a demarcation roughly consisting of the current-day municipalities of Castellón and Almassora. The area capitulated to James I of Aragon in 1233. This was followed by a series of attempts to create new settlements in the area starting with the alqueria of Benimahomet, the first Christian project to leave the castle, with mixed results. Following the 1247 mudéjar revolt, James I decreed the expulsion of the mudéjares from the area in 1248. The current settlement was however not founded until the 1250s, after James I, on 8 September 1251, granted Ximén Pérez d'Arenós a privilege authorising him to move from the castle to a new unspecified place in the plains (plana). Tradition claims that the move was completed by the third Sunday of Lent, 1252.

During the Middle Ages, the city was protected by moats, walls and towers, and a church was built, later becoming a cathedral. Due to its geographic proximity to Valencia, the city prospered as a port. During the late medieval period, many members of the community participated in maritime trade, or in industries supporting the merchant community. During the late Middle Ages, the Jewish community of Castellón de la Plana maintained a synagogue and active communal life, but like many communities in Spain, it was dismantled following the 1492 expulsion.

In the 16th century the town was one of the last strongholds in the Revolta de les Germanies (local guilds). It also supported Archduke Charles of Austria in the War of the Spanish Succession (1701–14), but was later taken by the troops of Philip d'Anjou.

In the 19th century, the city walls were torn down and it slowly began to expand, a process interrupted by the War of Independence against Napoleon (1804–14) and the Carlist Wars (1833–63). In 1833 Castelló became the capital of the newly constituted province. In the second half of the 19th century, the city again began to expand, marked by the arrival of the railway, the enlargement of the port and the construction of representative buildings (Provincial Hospital, Casino, Theater) and parks.

In 1991 a university (Jaume I University) was established, set upon a modern campus. The local economy is based on industry, tourism and craft-work.

Geography and climate

Coat of arms of Castellón de la Plana.

Castellón de la Plana has a hot semi-arid climate (Köppen: BSh) with mild winters and hot, dry, muggy summers with high humidity levels. Autumn is the wettest season and the average sunshine hours are around 2,800 per year. Annual rainfall reaches 435 mm, with significant changes throughout the year, with very marked minimums in summer and maximums in the autumn months due to the effect of the meteorological phenomenon of the cold drop, with a secondary maximum in spring.

|Jan record high C = 28.0 |Feb record high C = 28.8 |Mar record high C = 30.8 |Apr record high C = 30.6 |May record high C = 35.0 |Jun record high C = 38.8 |Jul record high C = 40.6 |Aug record high C = 39.4 |Sep record high C = 36.0 |Oct record high C = 33.4 |Nov record high C = 29.0 |Dec record high C = 25.4 |year record high C = |Jan record low C = -4.4 |Feb record low C = -2.2 |Mar record low C = 0.4 |Apr record low C = 2.8 |May record low C = 5.2 |Jun record low C = 10.2 |Jul record low C = 12.0 |Aug record low C = 12.2 |Sep record low C = 9.8 |Oct record low C = 5.4 |Nov record low C = -1.8 |Dec record low C = -0.6 |year record low C=

Main sights

Most of the historical buildings are located in the diminutive old town, around the Plaça Major (Main Square). These include:

  • The Concatedral de Santa Maria (co-cathedral of Saint Mary), built in a Gothic-style in the 13th century and reconstructed one century later after destruction by fire. The present building is another reconstruction after the demolition ordered by the council during the Spanish civil war (1936).
  • The Ajuntament (City Hall), erected at the beginning of the 18th century. It features a Tuscan-style façade rising up over a colonnade.
  • [[File:Planetario de Castellón de la Plana.JPG|thumb|Planetario de Castellón]]The free-standing bell-tower of the procathedral, known as El Fadrí (the single man), built in the 15th century.
  • The Llotja del Cànem (Hemp Exchange Market), built during the first half of the 17th century to be used by traders in hempen cloth and ropes, a very important activity in the area at the time. Today the building is used by the university for cultural events and temporary exhibitions.
  • On the northeast edge of the town, at the end of a broad avenue decorated with orange trees, stands the Basílica of Santa Maria del Lledó (European Hackberry or Celtis australis), a basilica devoted to an image of the Virgin Mary found in 1366 by a farmer when he was ploughing his lands. The original 14th-century chapel was extended to its present Baroque form during the 16th century.
  • Espai d'Art Contemporani de Castelló, Museum for Modern Art
  • Teatre Principal

Events

The celebration of the city's founding, known as the Magdalena Festivities, is the main festival of the city. Lasting a week, it takes place three weeks before Easter. It commemorates the founding of the city when the inhabitants of the mountain areas moved down to the plains with the authorization of James I. The most notable event is the Romería de las Cañas, a pilgrimage to the Hermitage of La Magdalena. The most striking symbol of these celebrations is the Gaiatas—mobile structures that recreate the lanterns used by the first settlers—built by different associations, each representing a neighborhood and also called Gaiatas.

Sports

The city has the professional basketball team AB Castelló, which plays in LEB Oro, Spanish second basketball division.

The local professional football club is CD Castellón, which currently plays in the Segunda división (Spanish second division). It holds home games at Nou Estadi Castàlia, which has a capacity of 15,500 seats. Despite its stadium and social support, the club financial problems and unstable history brought it to play in semi-pro and amateur regional divisions, not playing in La Liga since the 1990–91 season. On 21 March 2018, Castellón beat the record of seasonal tickets in the fourth-tier division with 12,701, and is considered a giant amongst minnows. The presence of Villarreal CF in the adjacent town (only 8 km away) has created a fierce rivalry for geographical reasons, especially due to the success of Villarreal in the last decades.

The city is host to futsal club CFS Bisontes Castellón, which under the name Playas de Castellón was one of the best Spanish and European futsal clubs in the late 90s and early 2000s, having won the premier professional futsal league in Spain twice in 2000 and 2001, and the UEFA Futsal Cup three consecutive times in 2001, 2002 and 2003.

Education

Ayuntamiento de Castellón de la Plana

Jaume I University was founded in 1991, and in 2014 there were approximately 15,000 students enrolled who share a single campus.

Twin towns

  • France Châtellerault, France
  • Romania Târgoviște, Romania
  • Japan Ube, Japan
  • Spain Lleida, Spain

Notable people

  • Pierre Méchain (born 1744), mathematician and astronomer.
  • Sergio Aragonés (born 1937), comics cartoonist.
  • José Luis Ballester (born 1969), Olympic butterfly swimmer.
  • Joan Barreda Bort (born 1983), Rally raid motorcyclist.
  • Roberto Bautista-Agut (born 1988), professional tennis player.
  • María Egual (1655–1735), poet and dramatist.
  • Pablo Fornals (born 1996), professional footballer for West Ham United.
  • Sergio García (born 1980), professional golfer.
  • Pablo Hernandez Dominguez (born 1985), footballer, formerly with Valencia CF.
  • Pablo Herrera (beach volleyball) (born 1982), beach volleyball player, six-time Olympian.
  • Roberto Merhi, (born 1991), racing driver.
  • José Manuel Pérez-Aicart (born 1982), racing driver.
  • Félix Porteiro (born 1983), racing driver.
  • Matilde Salvador (1918–2007), musician, composer and painter artist.
  • Miguel Angel Silvestre, (born 1982), actor.
  • Xavi Valero (born 1973), professional football goalkeeping coach.
  • Carlos Fabra Carreras (born 1945), politician
Teatro Principal (Castellón de la Plana)

Transport

Castellón-Costa Azahar Airport

The small Castellón Airport offers charter and general aviation services, as well as scheduled passenger services to London, Bucharest and Poznań. The new Castellón-Costa Azahar Airport is designed to support large international jet flights and was completed in 2011. It has become a symbol of the wasteful spending prior to the 2008–13 Spanish financial crisis. Valencia Airport is about 70 km south whilst Alicante Airport is another 185 km (115 mi) further down the coast.

The city is served by the Castellón de la Plana railway station. The Euromed railway line links Alicante to Barcelona.

Castellón-Costa Azahar Airport

Since 2008, the city has been served by a trolleybus system, which is branded as the TRAM.

Notes

References

;Citations ;Bibliography

References

  1. Lorda, Jesús. (4 February 2023). "El área metropolitana de Castelló afianza su peso con el 52,67% de los habitantes de la provincia".
  2. Igual Luis, David. “Great and small Trade in the Crown of Aragon. The example of Valencia in the Late Middle Ages”. ''Imago temporis: medium Aevum'', no. 3, pp. 231-48, doi:10.21001/imagotemporis.vi3.208809.
  3. Beinart, Haim. (2001). "The Expulsion of the Jews from Spain". The Littman Library of Jewish Civilization in association with Liverpool University Press.
  4. "Climate Summary for Castellón de la Plana". weatherbase.com.
  5. "How the cold drop that shakes the Mediterranean works". hidrologiasostenible.com.
  6. "AEMET OpenData". Aemet.es.
  7. [http://www.memoriarepublicana.com/Persecrelig/monumvalencia.html]. Obras religiosas destruidas durante la guerra civil (Spanish)
  8. (21 March 2018). "El CD Castellón hace historia al superar el récord de abonados en Tercera División".
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