Online Encyclopedia

GUADALAJARA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 644 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

GUADALAJARA  , the

capital of the
See 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 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 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 church of
See also:
Santa Maria contains the image of the " Virgin of Battles," which accompanied
See also:
Alphonso VI. of Castile (1072-1109) on his
See also:
campaigns against the Moors; and there are several other 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 call the Mudejar style . The more important of these is the palace of the ducal house del Infantado, formerly owned by the 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 rich sculpture of its tombs . The town and provincial halls date from 1585, and the college of engineers was originally built by Philip V., early in the 18th century, as a
See also:
cloth factory . Manufactures of
See also:
soap, leather, woollen fabrics and bricks have superseded the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 trade in agricultural produce .

End of Article: GUADALAJARA
[back]
HUACO GUACO
[next]
GUADALQUIVIR (ancient Baetis, Moorish Wadi al Kebir...

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.