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GALICIA (the ancient Gallaecia or Cal...

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Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 403 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GALICIA (the ancient Gallaecia or Callaecia, KaMauci,a or KaXau da)  , a captaincy-general, and formerly a
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kingdom,countship and province, in the north-western angle of Spain; bounded on the N. by the
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Bay of Biscay, E. by Leon and
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Asturias, S. by
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Portugal, and W. by the
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Atlantic Ocean . Pop . (1900) 1,980,515;
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area, 11,254 sq. m . In 1833 Galicia was divided for administrative purposes into the provinces of Corunna,
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Lugo,
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Orense and
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Pontevedra . Galicia is traversed by mountain ranges, sometimes regarded as a continuation of the Cantabrian chain; and its
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surface is further broken in the east by the westernmost ridges of that
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system, which,
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running in a south-
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westerly direction, rise above the basin of the Mino . The high
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land north of the headwaters of the Mino forms the
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sole connecting
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link between the Cantabrians properly so-called and the mountains of central and western Galicia . The
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average
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elevation of the province is considerable, and the maximum height (6593 ft.) is reached in the Pena Trevinca on the eastern border of Orense . The
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principal
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river is the Mino (Portuguese Minho;
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Lat . Minius; so named, it is said, from the minium or
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vermilion found in its bed) . Rising near Mondonedo, within 25 M. of the
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northern coast, the Mifio enters the Atlantic near the
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port of Guardia, after a course of 170 M . S. and S.W . Its
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lower reaches are navigable by small vessels .

Of its numerous affluents the most important is the Sil, which rises among the lofty mountains between Leon and Asturias . Among other

rivers having a westerly direction may be mentioned the Tambre, the Ulla and the Lerez or Ler, which falls into the Atlantic by estuaries or Has called respectively Ria de Muros y Noya, Ria de Arosa and Ria de Pontevedra . The rivers of the northern versant, such as the Nera, are, like those of Asturias, for the most
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part short, rapid and subject to violent floods . The coast-
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line of Galicia, extending to about 240 m., is every-where bold and deeply indented, presenting a large number of secure harbours, and in this respect forming a marked contrast to the neighbouring province . The Eo, which bounds Galicia on the east, has a deep estuary, the Rivadeo or Ribadeo, which offers a safe and commodious anchorage .
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Vivero Bay and the Ria del Barquero y Vares are of a similar character; while the harbour of Ferrol ranks among the best in
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Europe, and is the chief
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naval station on the northern coast of Spain . On the opposite side of Betanzos Bay (the µc yas Xtuily or
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Portus Magnus of the ancients) is the
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great port of Corunna or Coruna .. The principal port on the western coast is that formed by the deep and sheltered bay of
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Vigo, but there are also good roadsteads at Corcubion under Cape Finisterre, at Marin and at Carril . The
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climate of the Galician coast is mild and equable, but the interior, owing to the great elevation (the
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town of Lugo is r 500 ft. above sea-level), has a wide range of temperature . The rainfall is exceptionally large, and snow lies on some of the loftier elevations for a considerable portion of the
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year . The
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soil is on the whole fertile, and the produce very varied . A considerable quantity of
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timber is grown on the high lands, and the rich valley pastures support large herds of cattle, while the abundance of oaks and chestnuts favours the rearing of
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swine .

In the

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lowland districts good crops of maize, wheat, barley, oats and
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rye, as well as of turnips and potatoes, are obtained . The fruit also is of excellent quality and in great variety, although the culture of the
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vine is limited to some of the warmer valleys in the
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southern districts . The dehesas or moorlands abound in
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game, and fish are plentiful in all the streams . The
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mineral resources of the province, which are considerable, were known to some extent to the ancients . Strabo (c . 63 B.C.-A.D . 21) speaks of its gold and tin, and Pliny (A.D . 23-79) mentions the gemma Gallaica, a precious stone . Galicia is also remarkable for the number of its
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sulphur and other warm springs, the most important of which are those at Lugo, and those from which Orense is said to take its name (Aquae urentes) . Ethnologically the Galicians (Gallegos) are allied to the Portuguese, whom they resemble in dialect, in appearance and in habits more than the other inhabitants of the peninsula . The men are well known all over Spain and Portugal as hardy, honest and industrious, but for the most part somewhat unskilled, labourers; indeed the word Gallego has come to be almost a synonym in
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Madrid for a " hewer of wood and drawer of
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water." It is also used as a
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term of abuse, meaning " boor." Agriculture engages the greater part of the
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resident population, both male and
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female; other
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industries, except the
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fisheries, are little
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developed . The largest town in Galicia is Corunna (pop .

1900, 43,971);

Santiago de Compostela is the ancient capital and an archiepiscopal see; Lugo,
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Tuy, Mondonedo and Orense are bishoprics . Gallaecia, the country of the Galacci, Callaici or Gallaici, seems to have been very imperfectly known to the earlier geographers . According to Eratosthenes (276-196 B.C.) the entire population of the peninsula were at one time called Galatae . The region properly called by their name, bounded on the south by the Douro and on the east by the Navia, was first entered by the
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Roman legions under Decius Junius Brutus in 137-136 B.C . (Livy Iv., lvi., Epit.); but the final subjugation cannot be placed earlier than the time of Augustus (31 B.C.-A.D . 14) . On the '
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partition of Spain, which followed the successful invasions of the Suevi, Alans and Vandals, Gallaecia fell to the lot of the first named (A.D . 411) . After an
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independent subsistence of nearly 200 years, the Suevian kingdom was annexed to the Visigothic dominions under
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Leovigild in 585 . In 734 it was occupied by the Moors, who in turn were driven out by
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Alphonso I. of Asturias, in 739 . During the 9th and loth centuries it was the subject of dispute between more than one count of Galicia and the suzerain, and its coasts were repeatedly ravaged by the
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Normans . When Ferdinand I. divided his kingdom among his sons in 1063, Galicia was the portion allotted to Garcia, the youngest of the three .

In 1072 it was forcibly reannexed by Garcia's

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brother Alphonso VI. of Castile and thenceforward it remained an integral part of the kingdom of Castile or of Leon . The honorary title of count of Galicia has frequently been borne by younger sons of the
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Spanish
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sovereign . See Annette B . Meakin, Galicia, the
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Switzerland of Spain (
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London, 1909) .

End of Article: GALICIA (the ancient Gallaecia or Callaecia, KaMauci,a or KaXau da)
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GALICIA (Ger. Galizien; Pol. Halicz)
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GIOVANNI ANTONIO GALIGNANI (1752-1821)

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