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GUADALAJARA , the capital of theSee also: Spanish province of Guadalajara, on the See also: left See also: bank of the See also: river Henares, and on the See also: Madrid-Saragossa railway, 35 M
.
E.N.E. of Madrid
.
Pop
.
(1900) 11,144
.
Guadalajara is a picturesque See also: town, occupying a somewhat sterile plain, 2100 ft. above the See also: sea
.
A See also: Roman aqueduct and the Roman See also: foundations of the See also: bridge built in 1758 across the Henares bear witness to its antiquity
.
Under Roman and Visigothic See also: rule it was known as Arriaca or Caraca; its See also: present name, which sometimes appears in See also: medieval See also: chronicles as Godelfare, represents the See also: Wad-al-hajarah, or " Valley of Stones," of the Moors, who occupied the town from 714 until Io8r, when it was captured by Alvar Yanez de Minaya, a comrade of the more famous See also: Cid
.
The See also: church of
See also: Santa Maria contains the image of the " Virgin of Battles," which accompanied See also: Alphonso VI. of See also: Castile (1072-1109) on his See also: campaigns against the Moors; and there are several other See also: ancient and interesting churches in Guadalajara, besides two palaces, dating from the 15th century, and built with that blend of Christian and Moorish architecture which Spaniards See also: call the Mudejar See also: style
.
The more important of these is the palace of the ducal See also: house del Infantado, formerly owned by the See also: Mendoza See also: family, whose panteon, or See also: mausoleum, added between 1696 and 1720 to the 13th-century church of See also: San Francisco, is remarkable for the See also: rich sculpture of its tombs
.
The town and provincial halls date from 1585, and the See also: college of See also: engineers was originally built by See also: Philip V., early in the 18th century, as a
See also: cloth factory
.
Manufactures of See also: soap, See also: leather, woollen fabrics and bricks have superseded the See also: original cloth-See also: weaving industry for which Guadalajara was long celebrated; there is also a considerable See also: trade in agricultural produce
.
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