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SAN SEBASTIAN (Basque Iruchulo)

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Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 155 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SAN SEBASTIAN (Basque Iruchulo)  , a seaport and the capital of the
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Spanish province of Guipilzcoa, on the
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Bay of Biscay, and on the
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Northern railway from
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Madrid to France . Pop . (19oo) 37,812 . In 1886
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San Sebastian became the summer residence of the court . The influx of visitors, attracted by the presence of the royal
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family, by the prolonged
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local festivities, the bull-fights and the bathing, increases the number of the inhabitants in summer to about 50,000 . The city occupies a narrow sandy peninsula, which terminates on the northern or seaward side in a lofty mass of
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sandstone,
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Monte Urgull; it is flanked on the east by the estuary of the
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river Urumea, on the west by the broad bay of La Concha . The old
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town, rebuilt after the fire of 1813, lies partly at the
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foot of Monte Urgull, partly on its
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lower slopes . Until 1863 it was enclosed by walls and ramparts, and a strong fort, the
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Castillo de la Mola, still crowns the heights of Urgull . There are also batteries and redoubts facing landward and seaward below this fort; but the other defences have been either razed or dismantled . The
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Alameda, one of many
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fine avenues, was laid out on the site of the chief landward wall, and separates the old town from the new—in which the houses are uniformly
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modern, and built in straight streets or
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regular series of squares . The bay of La Concha has a broad sandy
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shore, the Playa de Banos, admirable for bathing and sheltered from sea-winds by the rocky islet of
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Santa Clara . Its centre is faced by the casino, a handsome
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building, and the summer palace and park of Miramar occupy the rising ground towards its western extremity .

The other noteworthy buildings are the bull-

ring, capable of seating 10,000 spectators, the theatre, fine provincial and municipal halls, barracks, a hospital, a Jesuit college, the
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American International School for girls, and many other
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schools . There are numerous breweries, saw and
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flour mills, and manufactures of preserves,
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soap, candles, glass and paper, especially in the busy suburb that has sprung up on the right
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bank of the Urumea . The
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fisheries are important . The harbour consists of three artificial basins, opening into La Concha Bay, and situated in the midst of the old town; it is chiefly frequented by
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coasting and fishing vessels, and cannot accommodate large
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ships . From its position near the frontier San Sebastian was long a first-class fortress, and has sustained many sieges . 'I he last and most memorable was in August 1813, when the allied
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British, Portuguese and Spanish armies under Lord Wellington captured the city from the French, and then sacked and burned it .

End of Article: SAN SEBASTIAN (Basque Iruchulo)
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