Elorrio
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Elorrio | |||||
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Location | |||||
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Location of Elorrio in Biscay |
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Coordinates : Time zone : CET (GMT +1) - summer : CEST (GMT +2) |
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General information | |||||
Native name | Elorrio (Basque) | ||||
Spanish name | Elorrio | ||||
Founded | 1356 | ||||
Postal code | 48230 | ||||
Area code | +34 (Spain) + 48 (Biscay) | ||||
Website | http://www.elorrio.net/ | ||||
Administration | |||||
Country | Spain | ||||
Autonomous Community | Basque Country | ||||
Province | Biscay | ||||
Mayor | Niko Moreno (ANV) | ||||
Geography | |||||
Land Area | 37.40 km² | ||||
Altitude | 19 m AMSL | ||||
Population | |||||
Population | 7116 () | ||||
Density | 190.26 hab./km² () |
Elorrio is a town and municipality located in the province of Biscay, in the autonomous community of the Basque Country, northern Spain.
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[edit] Geography
Elorrio lies in eastern Biscay, in the mountainous terrain of the Durangaldea region, at the point where the provinces of Biscay, Guipuscoa, and Álava meet. The town is surrounded by various mountains, such as Intxorta (797m) and Udalatx (1092m), and is traversed by the River Zumelegi that, after joining the River Arrazola in Atxondo, goes on to form the River Ibaizabal.
The town is situated 39km from the provincial capital of Bilbao, and its population (as of 2004) is 7,112 inhabitants.
[edit] History
The Argiñeta tombs that today lie just outside the town of Elorrio are both pre-Christian and Christian (the earliest date of the latter is recorded as 893). In 1053, the San Agustín de Etxabarria monastery was founded, which in time was renovated and eventually became present-day church (an example of Gothic architecture). In 1356, Don Tello, Lord of Biscay, officially created Elorrio (through a foundational charter) on the land where the monastery stood, as a means of creating a town to defend his borders against invasion from neighboring Guipuscoa. In 1468 the town was the site of a major battle between warring clan factions in the Basque Country (the Oñacinos and the Gamboinos). However, incidents of this type decreased, and between the sixteenth and the eighteenth centuries, the town's fortunes grew, gaining renown for its iron-forges, and especially the production of lances. As a result of this economic expansion, a number of important buildings were constructed (mostly during the sixteenth century) that are today considered monuments of significant historical and architectural importance. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Elorrio, although it remained a predominantly rural town, became a tourist destination, as people visited the locality to attend one of its two well-known spas. After the Spanish Civil War, Elorrio went through a period of industrialization, with a number of small, family firms and worker cooperative enterprises emerging. In 1964, the whole town was the first one in Bizkaia to be declared a Centre of Historical and Artistic Importance. Its population, which grew from 3,500 in 1950 to 8,000 in 1981, currently (2004 records) numbers just over 7,000 people.[1]
[edit] Famous people from Elorrio
- Saint Balendin Berrio-Otxoa (Valentín de Berrio-Ochoa in Spanish), one of the Vietnamese Martyrs, was born in Elorrio in 1827. Ordained in 1851, he became a Dominican and was later sent to Manila and Tonkin as a missionary. At the age of thirty-one, he was named a bishop, but was later killed in Tonkin in 1861. He was canonized by Pope John Paul II in 1988.[2]
- José Antonio Ardanza, born in 1941, was lehendakari or president of the Basque Autonomous Community, 1985-1999. He is currently the CEO of Euskaltel, a Basque telecommunications company.
- Alejandro Goicoechea, born in 1895, was the engineer who developed with José Luis Oriol the Talgo railway vehicle. He dead in 1984.
- Anne Igartiburu, born in 1969, is a Spanish TV presenter and actress.
[edit] References
- ^ Adapted from Igor Basterretxea Kerexeta, "Elorrioko Historia"
- ^ See Diocese of Bilbao
[edit] External links
- Elorrio Official Website In Basque and Spanish