Online Encyclopedia

MURCIA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 33 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

MURCIA  , the

capital of the
See also:
Spanish province of Murcia; on the
See also:
river Segura, 25 M . W. of the Mediterranean Sea . Pop . (1900), 111,539 . Murcia is connected by
See also:
rail with all parts of Spain, and is an important
See also:
industrial centre,
See also:
sixth in respect of population among the cities of the
See also:
kingdom . It has been an episcopal see since 1.291 . It is built nearly in the centre of a low-lying fertile plain, known as the huerta or garden of Murcia, which includes the valleys of the Segura and its right-hand tributary the Sangonera, and is surrounded by mountains . Despite the proximity of the sea, the
See also:
climate is subject to
See also:
great variations, the summer heat being severe, while frosts are
See also:
common in winter . The city is built mainly on the
See also:
left
See also:
bank of the Segura, which curves north-eastward after receiving the Sangonera below Murcia, and falls into the Mediterranean about 30 M . N.E . A
See also:
fine stone
See also:
bridge of two arches gives access to the suburb of
See also:
San Benito, which contains the bull-ring . As a
See also:
rule the streets are broad, straight and planted with avenues of trees, but the Calle de Platerfa and Calle de la Traperfa, which contain many of the
See also:
principal shops, are more characteristically Spanish, being lined with old-fashioned balconied houses, and so narrow that wheeled
See also:
traffic is in most parts impossible .

In summer these thoroughfares are shaded by awnings . The Malecon, or

See also:
embankment, is a fine
See also:
promenade skirting the left bank of the Segura; the river is here crossed by a weir and supplies power.to several
See also:
silk-mills . The principal square is the Arenal or Plaza de la Constitucion, planted with orange trees and adjoining the Glorieta Park The
See also:
cathedral, dating from 1388-1467, is the
See also:
work of many architects; in the main it is
See also:
late
See also:
Gothic, but a Renaissance dome and a tower 48o ft. high were added in 1521, while a Corinthian
See also:
facade was erected in the 18th century . There are some good paintings and fine wood-
See also:
carving in the interior . Other noteworthy buildings are the colleges of San F ulgencio and San Isidro, the bishops' palace, the hospital of San Juan de Dios, the Moorish Alhondiga, or grain warehouse, the buildings of the municipal and provincial
See also:
councils and the Contraste, which is adorned with sculptured coats-of-arms, and was originally designed to contain standard weights and ti1X . 4measures; it has become a picture-gallery . There are two training
See also:
schools for teachers, a provincial institute and a museum . Since 1875 the industrial importance of Murcia has steadily increased . Mulberries (for silkworms), oranges and other fruits are largely cultivated in the huerta, and the silk industry, which
See also:
dates from the period of Moorish rule, is still carried on . Manufactures of woollen,
See also:
linen and cotton goods, of saltpetre,
See also:
flour; leather and hats, have been established in more
See also:
modern times, and Murcia is the chief market for the agricultural produce of a large
See also:
district . A numerous colony of gipsies has settled in the west of the city . Murcia was an Iberian
See also:
town before the Punic
See also:
Wars, but its name then, and under
See also:
Roman rule, is not known, though some have tried to identify it with the Roman Vergilia .

To the

Moors, who took possession early in the 8th century, it was known as Medinat Mursiya . Edrisi described it in the 12th century as populous and strongly fortified . After the fall of the
See also:
caliphate of Cordova it passed successively under the rule of
See also:
Almeria, Toledo and Seville . In 1172 it was taken by the Almohades, and from 1223 to 1243 it became the capital of an
See also:
independent kingdom . The Castilians took it at the end of this period, when large- numbers of immigrants from north-eastern Spain and Provence settled in the town; French and Catalan names are still not uncommon . Moorish princes continued to rule in name over this mixed population, but in 1269 a rising against the suzerain,
See also:
Alphonso the Wise, led to the final incorporation of Murcia (which then included the
See also:
present province of
See also:
Albacete) into the kingdom of Castile . During the War of the Spanish Succession Bishop Luis de Belluga defended the city against the archducal army by flooding the huerta . In 18,o and I&12 it was attacked by the French under Marshal Soult . It suffered much from floods in 1651, 1879 and 1907, though the construction of the Malecon has done much to keep the Segura within its own channel . In 1829 many buildings, including the cathedral, were damaged by an
See also:
earthquake .

End of Article: MURCIA
[back]
SIR RODERICK IMPEY MURCHISON (1792-1871)
[next]
MURDER

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.