Santiago de Compostela

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Santiago de Compostela
Flag of Santiago de Compostela Coat of arms of Santiago de Compostela
Flag Coat of Arms
Location

Location of Santiago de Compostela
Coordinates : 42°52′57″N 008°32′28″W / 42.8825, -8.54111Coordinates: 42°52′57″N 008°32′28″W / 42.8825, -8.54111
Time zone : CET (GMT +1)
- summer : CEST (GMT +2)
General information
Native name Santiago de Compostela (Galician)
Spanish name Santiago de Compostela
Postal code 15700
Website santiagodecompostela.org
Administration
Country Spain
Autonomous Community Galicia
Province A Coruña
Comarca Santiago
Mayor Xosé Antonio Sánchez (PSOE)
Geography
Land Area 223 km²
Altitude 260 m AMSL
Population
Population 92.919 (2007)
Density 416,68 hab./km² (2007)

Santiago de Compostela (also Saint James of Compostela) is the capital of the autonomous community of Galicia and a UNESCO's World Heritage Site. Located in the northwest region of Spain in the Province of A Coruña, it was the "European City of Culture" for the year 2000. The city's cathedral is the destination of the important medieval pilgrimage route, the Way of St. James (Galician: Camiño de Santiago, Spanish: Camino de Santiago).

Contents

[edit] Railway and Air Communications: National & International

[edit] The city

Santiago's old Town UNESCO World Heritage Site
Santiago's old Town UNESCO World Heritage Site

The cathedral borders the main Praza of the old and well-preserved city. Across the square is the Pazo de Raxoi (Raxoi's Palace), the town hall and seat of the Galician Xunta, and on the right from the cathedral steps is the Hostal dos Reis Católicos, founded in 1492 by the Catholic Monarchs, Isabella of Castille and Ferdinand of Aragon, as a pilgrim's hospice (now a parador). The Obradoiro façade of the cathedral, the best known, is depicted on the Spanish euro coins of 1 cent, 2 cents, and 5 cents (€0.01, €0.02, and €0.05).

Santiago also has a fine University first established in the early-16th century. The main campus can be seen best from an alcove in the large municipal park in the centre of the city. The University ensures youthful night life. Within the old town there are many narrow winding streets full of historic buildings. The new town all around it has less character though some of the older parts of the new town have some big apartments in them.

Santiago de Compostela’s cultural aspects give way to a bustling nightlife. Divided between the new town (la zona nueva) and the old town (la zona vieja), one can often find a mix of middle-aged residents and younger students running throughout the city until the early hours of the morning. Radiating from the center of the city, the historic cathedral is surrounded by paved granite streets, tucked away in the old town, and separated from the newer part of the city by the largest of many parks throughout the city, Parque Alameda. Whether in the old town or the new town, party-goers will often find themselves following their tapas by dancing the night away.

Santiago gives its name to one of the four military orders of Spain: Santiago, Calatrava, Alcantara and Montesa.

The prevailing wind from the Atlantic and the surrounding mountains combine to give Santiago some of Europe's highest rainfall: about 1,900 mm (75 inches) annually.

[edit] Demography

Santiago de Compostela (Old Town)*
UNESCO World Heritage Site

The Obradoiro façade of the grand Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela: an all-but-Gothic composition generated entirely of classical details.
State Party Flag of Spain Spain
Type Cultural
Criteria i, ii, vi
Reference 347
Region Continental Europe
Inscription history
Inscription 1985  (9th Session)
* Name as inscribed on World Heritage List.
Region as classified by UNESCO.
A Coruña Province Population c. 1787
District population
City of Coruña 13,575
City of Ferrol (Civilian Pop. Only) 24,993
Santiago de Compostela 15,584
Towns, Villages and Hamlets c.229,123
All the Province (Total): 283,275
(Ferrol - Urban History, 2004) [1]
A Coruña Province Population c. 1833
District population
City of Coruña 23,000
City of Ferrol (Civilian Pop. Only) 13,000
Santiago de Compostela 28,000
Towns, Vilages and Hamlets c.233,000
All the Province (Total): c.297,000
(U. P. Gazetteer By Th.Baldwin, 1847) [2]
A Coruña Province Population c. 1900
District population
City of Coruña 43,971
City of Ferrol (Civilian Pop. Only) 25,281
Santiago de Compostela 24,120
Towns, Vilages and Hamlets 580,184
All the Province (Total): 653,556
(Encyclopædia Britannica, 1911) [3]


Demographic evolution of Santiago de Compostela between 1900 and 2006
1900 1930 1950 1981 2004 2006
24,120 38,270 55,553 82,404 92,298 93,458

[edit] The etymology of the name Compostela

The popular etymology of the name "Compostela" holds that it comes from Latin campus stellae, i.e. "field of stars", making Santiago de Compostela "St. James of the Field of Stars". This name would come from the belief that the bones of St. James were taken from the Middle East, to Spain. These bones were then buried where a shepherd had spotted a star and a church was eventually built over the bones and later replaced with the Cathedral de Santiago de Compostela.

Another etymology is Compositum, i.e. "The well founded", or Composita Tella, meaning "burial ground".

Yet another etymology derives it from "San Jacome Apostol".

[edit] History


Santiago de Compostela was founded by Suebi people at the end of the 4th century or the beginning of the 5th century.

[edit] History of the Way of St. James Pilgrimage

Way of St. James.
St. James' shell
St. James' shell

The legend that St James found his way to the Iberian peninsula, and had preached there is one of a number of early traditions concerning the missionary activities and final resting places of the apostles of Jesus. Although the 1884 Bull of Pope Leo XIII Omnipotens Deus accepted the authenticity of the relics at Compostela, the Vatican remains uncommitted as to whether the relics are those of Saint James the Great, while continuing to promote the more general benefits of pilgrimage to the site.

According to a tradition that cannot be traced before the 12th century, the relics were said to have been discovered in 835 by Theodomir, bishop of Iria Flavia in the far northwest of the principality of Asturias. Theodomir was guided to the spot by a star, the legend affirmed, drawing upon a familiar myth-element, hence "Compostela" was given an etymology as a corruption of Campus Stellae, "Plain of Stars."

[edit] The establishment of the shrine

As suggested already, it is probably impossible to know whose bones were actually found, and precisely when and how. Perhaps it does not matter. What the history of the pilgrimage requires, but what the meagre sources fail to reveal, is how the local Galician cult associated with the saint was transformed into an international cult drawing pilgrims from distant parts of the world.

The 1000 year old pilgrimage to the shrine of St. James in the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela is known in English as the Way of St. James and in Galician as the Camiño de Santiago. Over 100,000 pilgrims travel to the city each year from points all over Europe, and other parts of the world. The pilgrimage has been the subject of many books and television programmes notably Brian Sewell's The Naked Pilgrim produced for UK's Five.

[edit] Pre-Christian legends

As the lowest-lying land on that stretch of coast, the city's site took on added significance. Legends supposed of Celtic origin made it the place where the souls of the dead gathered to follow the Sun across the sea. Those unworthy of going to the Land of the Dead haunted Galicia as the Santa Compaña.

[edit] Main sights

[edit] Sister Cities

These are the official sister cities of Santiago de Compostela:

Flag of Portugal Santiago do Cacém, Portugal (1980s)
Flag of Argentina Buenos Aires, Argentina (1980s)
Flag of Iran Qom, Iran (2000s)
Flag of Iran Mashhad, Iran (2000s)
Flag of Mexico Santiago de Querétaro, México (2005)

[edit] See also

Saunders, Tracy, Pilgrimage to Heresy: Don´t Believe Everything They Tell You (iUniverse 2007), for a somewhat different slant on the occupant of the tomb in Compostela. Though a fictionalised history, it looks at what we know of Bishop Priscillian of Avila, arrested on charges of "heresy and witchcraft" along with eight of his followers, including a noblewoman, Euchrotia, and subsequently decapitated in 385 CE by the Romans with the full knowledge of the newly formed Catholic Church, and whose remains have been suggested (by Prof. Henry Chadwick and others)may be entombed in the sepulchre which is said to contain the remains of St. James. See also: Priscillian, and Priscillianism, and The Way of St. James

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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