Online Encyclopedia

LEON

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 444 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LEON  , an episcopal see and the

capital of the
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Spanish province of Leon, situated on a hill 2631 ft. above sea-level, in the angle made by the Torio and Bernesga, streams which unite on the south, and form the
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river Leon, a tributary of the Esla . Pop . (1900) 15,580 . Leon is on the main railway from
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Madrid to
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Oviedo, and is connected with Astorga by a branch
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line . The older quarter§ of the city, which contain the
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cathedral and other
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medieval buildings, are surrounded by walls, and have lost little of their beauty and
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interest from the restoration carried out in the second
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half of the 19th century . During the same period new suburbs grew up outside the walls to house the
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industrial population which was attracted by the development of iron-founding and the manufacture of machinery, railway-plant, chemicals and leather . Leon thus comprises two towns—the old, which is mainly ecclesiastical in its character, and the new, which is industrial . The cathedral, founded in 1199 and only finished at the close of the 14th century; is built of a warm cream-coloured stone, and is remarkable for simplicity, lightness and strength . It is one of the finest examples of Spanish
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Gothic, smaller, indeed, than the cathedrals of
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Burgos and Toledo, but exquisite in design and workmanship . The chapter library contains some valuable
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manuscripts . The collegiate church of
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San Isidoro was founded by Ferdinand I. of Castile in 1063 and consecrated in 1149 . Its architecture is Romanesque .

The church contains some

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fine
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plate, including the
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silver reliquary in which the bones of St Isidore of Seville are preserved, and a silver processional
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cross dating from the 16th century, which is one of the most beautiful in the country . The convent and church of San Marcos, planned in 1514 by Ferdinand the Catholic, founded by Charles V. in 1537, and consecrated in 1541, are Renaissance in style . They are built on the site of a
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hostel used by pilgrims on their way to Santiago de Compostela . The provincial museum occupies the chapterhouse and contains some interesting
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Roman monuments . The
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lower
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part of the city walls consists of Roman
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masonry dating from the 3rd century . Other buildings are the high school, ecclesiastical seminaries, hospital, episcopal palace and municipal and provincial halls . Leon (Arab . Liyun) owes its name to the Legio Septima Gemina of Galba, which, under the later emperors, had its head-quarters here . About 540 Leon fell into the hands of the Gothic king
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Leovigild, and in 717 it capitulated to the Moors . Retaken about 742, it ultimately, in the beginning of the loth century, became the capital of the
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kingdom of Leon (see SPAIN:
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History) . About 996 it was taken by Almansur, but on his
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death soonafterwards it reverted to the Spaniards . It was the seat of several ecclesiastical
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councils, the first of which was held under Alphonse V. in 1o12 and the last in 1288 .

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