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MERIDA (anc. Augusta Emerita, capital...

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Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 165 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MERIDA (anc.
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Augusta Emerita, capital of Lusitania)
  , a
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town of western Spain, in the province of Badajoz, on the right
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bank of the
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river Guadiana, 30 M . E. of Badajoz . Pop . (1900), 11,168 . Merida is an important railway junction, for here the
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Madrid-Badajoz railway meets the lines from Seville, Huelva and
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Caceres . No
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Spanish town is richer in
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Roman antiquities . Most of these are beyond the limits of
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modern Merida, which is greatly inferior in
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area to the ancient city . Chief among them is the Roman
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bridge, constructed of granite under Trajan, or, according to some authorities, under Augustus, and restored by the Visigoths in 686 and by Philip III. in Oro . It comprised 81 arches, 17 of which were destroyed during the siege of Badajoz (1812), and measured 2575 ft. in length . There are a few remnants of Romantemples and of the
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colossal wall which encircled the city, besides a Roman triumphal arch, commonly called the Arco de Santiago, and a second Roman bridge, by which the road to Salamanca was carried across the small river Albarregas (
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Alba Regia) . The Moorish alcdzar or citadel was originally the chief Roman fort . From the Lago de Proserpina, or Charca de la Albuera, a large Roman
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reservoir, 3 M. north,
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water was conveyed to Merida by an aqueduct, of which 37 enormous piers remain
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standing, with ten arches in three tiers built of brick and granite .

The massive Roman

theatre is in good preservation; there are also a few vestiges of an amphitheatre and of a circus which measured 485 yds. by 120 . Other Roman remains are exhibited in the archaeological museum, and much Roman
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masonry is incorporated in the 16th century Mudejar palace of the dukes of La Roca, the palace of the
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counts of Los Corbos, and the convent of
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Santa Eulalia, which is said by tradition to mark the spot where St Eulalia was martyred (c . 300) .
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Augusta Emerita was founded in 25 B.C . As the capital of Lusitania it soon became one of the most splendid cities in Iberia, and was large enough to contain a garrison of 90,000 men . Under the Visigoths it continued to prosper, and was made an archbishopric . Its fortifications included five castles and eighty-four gateways; but after a stubborn resistance it was stormed by the Moors in 713 . Its Moorish
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governors frequently, and sometimes successfully, asserted their independence, but Merida was never the capital of any large Moorish • state . In 1129 its archbishopric was formally transferred to Santiago de Compostela, and in 1228, when
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Alphonso IX. of Leon expelled the Moors, Merida was entrusted to the order of Santiago, in whose keeping it soon sank into decadence .

End of Article: MERIDA (anc. Augusta Emerita, capital of Lusitania)
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