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ASTURIAS , an See also: ancient province and principality of See also: northern See also: Spain, bounded on the N. by the See also: Bay -of Biscay, E. by .Old See also: Castile, S. by Leon and W. by See also: Galicia
.
Pop
.
(1900) 627;o69; See also: area, 4205 sq. m
.
By the division of Spain in 1833, the province took the name of See also: Oviedo, though not to the exclusion, in ordinary usage, of the older designation
.
A full description of its See also: modern condition is therefore given under the heading Ov1Eno; the See also: present article being confined to an account of its See also: physical features, its See also: history, and the resultant character of its inhabitants
.
Asturias consists of a portion of the northern slope of the Cantabrian Mountains,and is covered in all directions with offshoots from the See also: main chain, by which it is almost completely shut in on the See also: south
.
The higher summits., which often reach a height of 7000-8000 ft., are usually covered with snow until See also: July or See also: August, and the whole region is one of the wildest and most picturesque parts of Spain
.
Until the first railway was opened, in the See also: middle of the ,9th century, few of the passes across the mountains were practicable for carriages, and most of them are difficult even for horses
.
A narrow See also: strip of level moorland, covered with See also: furze and See also: rich in deposits of peat, See also: coal and See also: amber, stretches inland, from the edge of the sheer cliffs which See also: line the See also: coast, to the See also: foot of the mountains
.
The province is watered by numerous streams and See also: rivers, which have hollowed out deep valleys; but owing to the narrowness of the level See also: tract, their courses are. See also: short, rapid and subject to floods
.
The most important is the Nalon or Pravia, which receives the See also: waters of the Caudal, the Trubia and the Narcea, and has a course
1 Servius, in speaking of it as oppidum, must be, referring to 'the See also: post-station
.
ASTURIAS
of 62 m.; after it See also: rank the Navia and the See also: Sella
.
The estuaries of these rivers are rarely navigable, and along the entire littoral, a distance of 130. m., the only important harbours are at Gijon and Aviles . A country so rugged, and so isolated bySee also: land and See also: sea, naturally served as the last See also: refuge of the older races of Spain when hard pressed by successive invaders
.
Before the See also: Roman See also: conquest, the Iberian tribe of Astures had been able to maintain itself See also: independent of the Carthaginians, and to extend its territory as far south as the Douro
.
It was famous for its See also: wealth in horses and gold
.
About 25 B.C., the See also: Romans subjugated the See also: district south of the Cantabrians, to which they gave the name of Augustana
.
Their capital was Asturica See also: Augusta, the modern See also: Astorga, in Leon
.
The warlike mountaineers of the northern districts, known as Transmontana, never altogether abandoned their hostility to the Romans, whose See also: rule was ended by the Visigothic conquest, See also: late in the 5th century
.
In 713, two years after the defeat and See also: death of See also: Roderick, the last Visigothic See also: king, all Spain, except Galicia and Asturias,
See also: fell into the hands of the Moors
.
One of the surviving Christian leaders, Pelayo the Goth, took refuge with three See also: hundred followers in the celebrated cave of Covadonga, or Cobadonga, near Cangas de Onfs, and from this hiding-place undertook the Christian reconquest of Spain
.
The Asturians See also: chose him as their king in 718, and although Galicia was lost in 734, the Moors proved unable to penetrate into the remoter fastnesses held by the levies of Pelayo
.
After his death in 737,the Asturians continued to offer the same heroic resistance, and ultimately enabled the See also: people of Galicia, Leon and Castile to recover their liberty
.
The title of See also: prince of Asturias; conferred on the heir-apparent to the See also: crown of Spain, See also: dates from 1388, when it was first bestowed on a Castilian prince
.
The title of count of Covadonga. is assumed by theSee also: kings of Spain
.
In modern times Asturias formed a captaincy-general, divided into Asturias d'Oviedo, which corresponds with the limits of the ancient principality, and Asturias de See also: Santillana, which now constitutes the western See also: half of Santander
.
-Owing to their almost entire immunity from any See also: alien domination except that of the Romans and Goths, the Asturians may perhaps be regarded as the purest representatives of the Iberian See also: race; while their dialect (linguaje bable) is sometimes held to be closely akin to the See also: parent speech from which modern Castilian is derived
.
It is See also: free from Moorish idioms, and, like Galician and Portuguese it often retains the See also: original Latin f which Castilian changes into h
.
In physique, the Asturians are like the Galicians, a people of See also: hardy mountaineers and fishermen, finely built, but rarely handsome, and with none of the See also: grace of the Castilian or Andalusian
.
Unlike the Galicians, however, they are remarkable for their keen spirit of independence, which has been fostered by centuries of See also: isolation
.
Despite the harsh land-See also: laws and grinding See also: taxation which prevent them, with all their industry and See also: thrift, from securing the See also: freehold of the patch of ground cultivated by each peasant See also: family, the Asturians regard them-selves as the aristocracy of Spain
.
This See also: pride in their land, race and history they preserve even when, as often happens, they emigrate to other parts of the country or to South See also: America, and See also: earn their living as servants, See also: water-See also: carriers, or, in the See also: case of the See also: women, as nurses
.
They make admirable soldiers and sailors, but lack the enterprise and commercial aptitude of the See also: Basques and Catalans; while they are differentiated from the inhabitants of central and See also: southern Spain by their See also: superior industry, and perhaps their See also: lower See also: standard of culture
.
It is, on the whole, true that by the exclusion of the Moors they lost their opportunity of playing any conspicuous See also: part in the See also: literary and See also: artistic development of Spain
.
One class of the Asturians deserving See also: special mention is that of the nomad cattle-drovers known as Baqueros or Vaqueros, who tend their herds on the mountains of Leitariegos in summer, and along the coast in winter; forming a See also: separate caste, with distinctive customs, and rarely or never intermarrying with their neighbours
.
For the modern condition of the principality (including See also: climate, See also: fauna and See also: flora), see S
.
Canals, Asturias: information sabre su preseete estado (See also: Madrid, 190o); and G
.
Casal, Memorias de historia
natural y medsca de Asturias (Oviedo, moo)
.
For the history. and antiquities, there is much that is valuable in Asturias monumental, epigrdfica y diplomdtica, by 'C
.
M
.
See also: Vigil (Madrid, 1887)-folio, with' maps and illustrations
.
See also F. de Aramburu y See also: Zuloaga, Monografia de Asturias (Oviedo, 1899)
.
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