Online Encyclopedia

ALAVA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 479 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ALAVA  , one of the Basque Provinces of

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northern Spain; bounded on the N. by Biscay and Guipflzcoa, E. by Navarre, S. by Logrono, and W. by
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Burgos . Pop . (1900) 96,385;
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area 1175 sq. m . The countship of Trevino (Igo sq. m.) in the centre of Alava belongs to the province of Burgos . The
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surface of Alava is very mountainous, especially on the north, where a
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part of the Pyrenees forms its natural boundary . It is separated from Logrofio by the
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river Ebro, and its other rivers are the Zadorra and the Ayuda . The
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climate is mild in summer, fitful in autumn and spring, and very cold in winter, as even the plains are high and shut in on three sides by mountains snow-clad during several months . The
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soil in the valleys is fertile, yielding wheat, barley, maize,
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flax, hemp and fruits . Oil and a poor kind of wine called chacoli are also produced . Many of the mountains are clothed with forests of oak, chestnuts, beeches and other trees, and contain iron, copper, lead and marble . Salt is also found in large quantities; but
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mining and
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quarrying are not practised on a large scale; only lead, lignite and asphalt being worked . There are
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mineral waters in many places .

Other

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local
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industries of some importance include smelting, and manufactures of beds, furniture, railway carriages, matches, paper, sweets and woollen and cotton goods .
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Bread-stuffs, colonial products and machinery are largely imported . Few provinces in Spain are inhabited by so laborious, active and well-to-do a population . The
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primary
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schools are numerously attended, and there are very good normal schools for teachers of both sexes, and a model agricultural
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farm . The public roads and other
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works of the province are excellent, and, like those of the rest of the Basque provinces, entirely kept up by local initiative and taxes .
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Railways from
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Madrid to the French frontier, and from Saragossa to
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Bilbao,
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cross the province . The capital is
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Vitoria (pop . 1900, 30,701), which is the only
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town with more than 3500 inhabitants . For a fuller account of the
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history,
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people and customs of Alava, see
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BASQUES and BASQUE PROVINCES, with the works there cited . A very elaborate bibliography is given in the Cdtalogo de
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las obras referentes d las provincias de Alava y Navarra, by A . A . Salazar (Madrid, 1887.) The following books by J.1 .

Landazuri y Romarate contain much material for a provincial history:—Historia ecclesiastica, &c . (

Pamplona, 1797); Historia
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civil, &c . (Vitoria, 1798); Compendios historicos de ?a
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Ciudad y villas de Alava, &c . (Pamplona, 1798) ; Suplemento d los cuatro libros de la historia de Alava (Vitoria, 1799); and Los varones
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illustres Alavenses (Vitoria, 1798) . See also M . Risco in vol . 33 of Hispania Sagrada, by H . Florez, &c . (Madrid, 1754-1879) .

End of Article: ALAVA
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