In 581 AD the Visigoth king Liuvigild founded
the city of Victoriacum,
trying to emulate the Roman foundations, as a celebration of the victory against
the Vascones near what is assumed to be the
hill occupied by the primitive village of Gasteiz. This however is not
sufficiently proven, and some historians and experts believe that Victoriacum
was located not on the site of present-day Vitoria-Gasteiz but nearby. Several
possible locations have been proposed, the foremost of which is the late Roman
military camp of Iruña-Veleia (cf.
J.M. Lacarra). Veleia is located some 11 km north of modern Vitoria, on
the banks of the same river. However, modern archeological studies of the site
suggest that Veleia was last inhabited c.5th century AD, and archeologists are
still to find a 6th-century visigothic resettlement in the site. Another
theory has suggested that Victoriacum was located at the foot of Mount Gorbea where there is a village
called Vitoriano. The town of Armentia, nowadays in the outskirts of
Vitoria, has also been proposed as a possible location of Victoriacum. In
either case, Victoriacum vanishes from history shortly after its foundation.
In 1181, Sancho the Wise, King of Navarre founded the town of Nova
Victoria as a defensive outpost on top of a hill at the site of the
previous settlement of Gasteiz. The existence of Gastehiz,
apparently inhabited by vasconic people, can be traced back to the lower
Middle Ages; it is certain that by the 11th century, prior to the foundation
of Nova Victoria, the settlement was already walled. It is assumed
that Sancho the Wise gave the new city its name in memory of the old settlement
of Victoriacum, which must had long since been abandoned. In 1199, the
town was besieged and captured by the troops of Alfonso VIII of Castile, who annexed the town to the Kingdom of
Castile. The town was progressively enlarged and in 1431 it was granted a
city charter by King Juan II of Castile. In 1463, it was one of the
five founding villas of the Brotherhood of Álava
alongside Sajazarra, Miranda de Ebro, Pancorboand Salvatierra/Agurain.
The Battle of Vitoria of the Peninsular War occurred near Vitoria-Gasteiz along the
river Zadorra on 21 June 1813. An allied
British, Portuguese, and Spanish army under General the Marquess of Wellington broke the French army under Joseph Bonaparte and Marshal Jean-Baptiste Jourdan. The victory assured the eventual end of
French control in Spain. There is a monument commemorating this battle in the
main square of the city known as the Monument to Independence.
When news came to Vienna in late July of that year, Johann Nepomuk Mälzel commissioned Ludwig van Beethoven to compose a symphony, the op. 91 Wellingtons Sieg oder
die Schlacht bei Vittoria (Wellington's
Victory, or the Battle of Vitoria) or Siegessymphonie.
Work began on the Institute for Middle Education in 1843, with
classes beginning during the 1853–54 academic year. It is now current
headquarters of the Basque Parliament and formerly the convent of Santa Clara.
The Free University opened in the wake of the revolution of 1868. The
University operated from 1869, to just prior to the 1873–1874 term, largely
because of the second Carlist War. Chief academics were Ricardo Becerro de
Bengoa, Julián Apraiz, Federico Baraibar, and so on. This latter, great
Hellenist (1851–1918), was also among the first teachers of Basque in
Vitoria-Gasteiz as an off-syllabus subject.
During the Spanish transition to democracy, the Church of St. Francis of Assisi was the
scene of a police shooting on March 3, 1976 during a peaceful labour assembly. Under
the orders of Interior Minister Manuel Fraga, the police shot tear-gas into the church where 5,000
demonstrators and others had reunited, firing on them as they struggled their
way out of the religious temple. It resulted in five dead and over one hundred
wounded by gunshot.
On 20 May 1980, by decision of the Basque Parliament,
Vitoria-Gasteiz became the place of the common institutions of the Basque
Autonomous Community.
Today, Vitoria-Gasteiz is the seat of government and the capital city of the Basque Autonomous Community and of the province of Araba/Álava in northern Spain. It holds the autonomous community's House of Parliament, the headquarters of the Government, and the Lehendakari's (Prime Minister's) official residency. The municipality — which comprises not only the city but also the mainly agricultural lands of 63 villages around — is the largest in the Basque Autonomous Community, with a total area of 276.81 km2 (106.88 sq mi), and it has a population of 242,082 people (2014). Vitoria-Gasteiz is a multicultural city with strengths in the arts, commerce, education, healthcare, architectural conservation, aeronautics, vehicle industry, oenology and gastronomy. It is the first Spanish municipality to be awarded the title of European Green Capital (in 2012) and it is consistently ranked as one of the 5 best places to live in Spain. The old town holds some of the best preserved medieval streets and plazas in the region and it is one of very few cities to hold two Cathedrals. The city also holds well known festivals such as the Azkena rock festival, FesTVal, Vitoria-Gasteiz jazz festival, and the Virgen Blanca Festivities.
Vitoria-Gasteiz's vicinity is home to world-renowned wineries such as Ysios (by Santiago Calatrava) and Marques de Riscal (by Frank Gehry); relevant heritage sites including the Neolithic remains of Aizkomendi, Sorginetxe and La chabola de la Hechicera; Iron Age remains such as the Settlement of Lastra and the Settlement of Buradón; antique remains such as the settlement of La Hoya and the salt valley of Añana; and countless medieval fortresses such as the Tower of Mendoza and the Tower of Varona.
******Copied from Wikipedia, Vitoria-Gasteiz
Sagrada Familia |
Krea-Gasteiz Monastery |
Maria Imaculad (Catedral interior) |
Artium |
Parque Florida |
Plaza Virgen Blanca |
Casa Pando-Arguelles |
Calle Eduardo |
Street scene |
Plaza Virgen Blanca, Monument to Spanish Independence (Wellington's victory, Battle of Vitoria) |
Abetxuko Bridge |
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