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National Day of Catalonia
Catalan national day
Catalan national day
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| holiday_name | National Day of Catalonia |
| Catalan: Diada Nacional de Catalunya | |
| type | National day |
| longtype | National day |
| significance | Commemorates the last stand of the defense of Barcelona during the War of the Spanish Succession in 1714. |
| image | Rafael Casanova 11 Setembre.jpg |
| caption | Floral offerings at the monument to Rafael Casanova on Barcelona's Ronda de Sant Pere, 2005. Casanova was one of the Catalan commanders during the Siege of Barcelona. |
| official_name | Diada Nacional de Catalunya |
| nickname | Diada, Onze de Setembre |
| observedby | Catalonia (Spain) |
| duration | 1 day |
| frequency | annual |
| date | 11 September |
| scheduling | same day each year |
| celebrations | Flag hoisting, floral offerings, singing patriotic songs, speeches, pro-independence demonstrations, entertainment and cultural events |
Catalan: Diada Nacional de Catalunya
The National Day of Catalonia ( ), also known as the Diada, is a day-long festival in Catalonia and one of its official national symbols, celebrated annually on 11 September. It is one of the public holidays in Catalonia.
It commemorates Catalan last stand at the siege and fall of Barcelona at the end of the War of the Spanish Succession in 1714 and the subsequent repression and loss of the Principality of Catalonia's institutions, legal system and, thus, its separate status.
History
Main article: History of Catalonia, War of the Catalans
After the evacuation of the pro-Habsburg armies from Spain at the end of the War of the Spanish Succession, as a result of the Peace of Utrecht (1713) in which the Bourbon pretender Philip V was recognized king of the Iberian dominions of the Spanish Monarchy, the Principality of Catalonia unilaterally decided to remain in the war by vote of its Junta de Braços (Catalan assembly of Estates) on 9 July 1713, in order to protect the Catalan constitutions and lives from the expected repression, beginning a brief and separate conflict, the War of the Catalans. After months of intense fighting, the Army of Catalonia raised for that purpose, as well the Coronela (urban militia) of Barcelona were finally defeated at the Siege of Barcelona by the combined Spanish and French armies on 11 September 1714 after 14 months of siege, in which the Chief Councillor (mayor) of Barcelona, Rafael Casanova, was severely wounded during the defence of the wall. The subsequent promulgation of the Nueva Planta decrees (1716) abolished most of the Catalan constitutions and institutions (among them the Catalan Courts, the Generalitat, and the Consell de Cent), meaning the end of the Principality of Catalonia as a separate state, being incorporated as province of a centralized Kingdom of Spain, reorganized as a French-inspired absolute monarchy.
The commemoration was first celebrated on 11 September 1886. In 1888, coinciding with the inauguration of the Barcelona Universal Exposition, a statue in honor of Rafael Casanova was set up, which would become the point of reference of the events of the Diada. The celebration gained popularity over the following years; the Diada of 1923 was a great mass event, with more than a thousand floral offerings, acts throughout Catalonia and a certain institutional participation. But the demonstrations caused 17 wounded, five policemen and 12 protesters, and several arrests. The dictatorship of Primo de Rivera banned the celebration. During the Second Spanish Republic (1931–1939), the Generalitat de Catalunya (the autonomous government of Catalonia established in 1931) institutionalized the celebration. The National Days that took place during the Spanish Civil War (1936, 1937 and 1938) had a marked anti-fascist character and the anarchist trade union CNT took part of the celebrations.
It was suppressed, as part of the anti-Catalan policies, by the Francoist dictatorship in 1939, relegated to the family and private sphere where the holiday continued to be celebrated clandestinely. The monument of Rafael Casanova was removed. Since 1940 the National Front of Catalonia took advantage of the day to carry out some propaganda actions: distribution of anti-fascist leaflets, clandestine hanging of Catalan flags, etc. It was celebrated again publicly for the first time on 11 September 1976, one year after the death of Francisco Franco, being followed the next year by a huge demonstration in Barcelona demanding the restitution of Catalan self-government, in which the Casanova's statue was repositioned in its place, and the celebration was reinstated officially in 1980 by the Generalitat de Catalunya, upon its reestablishment after the Spanish transition to democracy, being the first law approved by the also restored Parliament of Catalonia.
Observances
Catalan organizations, political parties and institutions traditionally lay floral offerings at monuments of those who led the defence of the city such as Rafael Casanova and General Moragues, marking their stand against the Bourbon king Philip V of Spain. Typically, Catalan pro-independence organizations carry demonstrations and meet at the Fossar de les Moreres in Barcelona, where they pay homage to the defenders of city who died during the siege and were buried there.
Throughout the day, there are patriotic demonstrations and cultural events in many Catalan villages and many citizens wave senyeres and estelades. The event has become more explicitly political and particularly focused on independence rallies in the 2010s.
Gallery
File:Fossardelesmoreres3.jpg|Fossar de les Moreres File:Generlidad Cataluña Ayuntamiento Barcelona Rafael Casanova.jpg|Francesc Macià, first president of the restored Generalitat, at the homage to Rafael Casanova during the National Day of 1931 File:2012 Catalan independence protest (6).JPG|Balconies showing a great number of senyeres, 2012 File:Imatges oficials Diada Nacional de Catalunya 2013 gencat (10).jpg|Floral offerings to the monument of Rafael Casanova by President of Catalonia, Artur Mas, in 2013. On the right, Mossos d'Esquadra in gala dresses File:Via Lliure 2015 a la Meridiana. Fotos de Toniher - 11s2015 50.jpg|Pro-independence demonstration during the Diada of 2015
References
References
- [http://www.gencat.cat/diada/eng/ National Day of Catalonia – Generalitat de Catalunya] {{webarchive. link. (7 July 2014)
- (2007). "The Wreck of Catalonia. Civil War in the Fifteenth Century". Oxford University Press.
- Mercader, J. (1968) ''Felip V i Catalunya.'' Barcelona
- [http://arxiuhistoric.bcn.cat/onzesetembre/1931/la-commemoracio-durant-la-segona-republica-i-la-guerra-civil La conmemoració durant la Segona República i la Guerra Civil.] {{Webarchive. link. (25 October 2021 arxiuhistoric.bcn.cat)
- [https://web.gencat.cat/ca/diada-nacional-de-catalunya/historia/celebracions-historiques/index.html Institutionalisation during the Spanish Republic (1931–1939). Generalitat de Catalunya]
- link. (10 December 2011 , in: ''[[Gran Enciclopèdia Catalana]]'' (online))
- Jones, Sam. (10 September 2017). "Catalans to celebrate Their National Day with Independence Protests". [[The Guardian]].
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