Toro, Zamora

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Toro is a town and municipality in the province of Zamora, part of the autonomous community of Castile-Leon, Spain. It is located on a fertile high plain, northwest of Madrid at an elevation of 739 meters. The inhabitants of Toro are called "toresanos".

Toro is known as a center of Mudéjar art and as a wine-producing region. It is located on the Duero River roughly half way between Zamora, the provincial capital and Tordesillas in the province of Valladolid. A four-lane freeway (autovia) --A 11--now connects these two cities and passes just north of Toro. Highway N122 passes through the town. The distance to Madrid by highway is 220 km. Distances to other cities are: 32 km to Zamora; 62 km. to Valladolid; and 72 km. to Salamanca.

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[edit] History

Toro is an ancient town, possibly the Arbukala of the Vaccai tribe which was conquered by Hannibal in 220 BCE but survived to trouble the Romans. The modern name may derive from the bull totem of that Celtiberian people. After the Muslims had been rolled back a bit, Alfonso III repopulated the town in about 910.

Fernando III el Santo was crowned King of León in Toro in 1230 and his wife Beatrix of Swabia died here. Enrique II, first of the Trastámara line, summoned his first Cortes here in 1369. Juan II was born here in 1404, but the town was to have greater significance for his daughter Isabella of Castile.

Isabella had a rival for the succession in Juana la Beltraneja, supposedly the daughter of her half-brother Enrique IV, but more likely of the queen's lover, the courtier Beltrán de la Cueva. La Beltraneja's supporters arranged her betrothal to Alfonso V of Portugal who was feeling upset over his earlier rejection by Isabella.

Alfonso invaded Castilla in May 1475, backed by a number of dissident Castilian nobles. Isabella made Tordesillas her headquarters, while Ferdinand moved to secure the loyalty of Salamanca, Toro, and Zamora. Alfonso reached Arévalo in July and both Zamora and Toro went over to him, a serious blow for the young monarchs.

Intrigue seethed as troops marched. Zamora swung back to Isabella's cause. The Portuguese crown prince arrived with reinforcements and in March 1476 the rival armies met at Peleagonzalo, a few kilometres southwest of Toro. Ferdinand was victorious in this battle decided by light cavalry. The Portuguese broke and Alfonso took refuge in Castronuño. The fortresses of Zamora and Toro surrendered to Ferdinand soon thereafter. After that Alfonso gave up the fight and la Beltraneja retired to a Lisbon convent where she died in 1530, aged sixty-eight.

In January 1505, after Isabella's death, Ferdinand summoned a Cortes at Toro. Isabella's legal successors in Castilla were her daughter Juana and her husband Philip of Hapsburg who were at the time in the Netherlands. The Cortes took the oath to Ferdinand as temporary ruler and agreed that if Juana be deemed incurably ill, which she showed every sign of being, he should become regent.

When the pair reached Spain in the spring of 1506, the two men agreed that Juana was incapable of ruling. Ferdinand turned over the sole rule to her husband Philip the Handsome and left for Aragón. Less than three months later, Philip was dead. Juana became totally insane and in August 1508 ceded her rights to her father and was retired to Tordesillas.

When in 1520 the towns of Castilla, the Comuneros, rose against her son Charles I, who had succeeded his Spanish grandfather in 1516, Toro sided with them. Charles defeated the Comuneros at Villalar de los Comuneros, east of Toro, the next year.

During the Peninsular War, in the bitter cold of December 1808, Sir John Moore began his famous retreat from Toro in the face of superior French forces. The ghastly ordeal ended in Moore's death before La Coruña (Galicia) in January. In May 1813, 100,000 British troops gathered in Toro under Wellington's command and from here Wellington launched the final campaign which expelled Napoleon's armies from Spanish soil after five terrible years.

English traveller Richard Ford visited Toro in 1831 and reported a population of 9,000; it has just under 10,000 now. In 1838 it lost its status as a provincial capital, its province being merged with Zamora.

[edit] Monuments

The town of Toro is built in the shape of a fan and in its centre stands the collegiate church of Santa María la Mayor, from the 12th century. Outstanding on the outside is the multicoloured western door, called the door of His Majesty; and on the inside, the famous Flemish painting La Virgen de la Mosca, a splendid way of the cross and an unusual pregnant Virgin.

The painting of the Virgin of the Fly is especially unique because of the realistic portrayal of a fly on the tunic which covers the Virgen's knee. Studies of the work demonstrate that this insect was added later. These same studies have pointed out numerous touchings-up in the original painting, such as the halo that surrounds the head of the Virgin, previously covered by a veil, or the rich embroidery on the dress of Santa Catalina, whose face has a great resemblance with some paintings of Isabel la Católica.

Next to the collegiate church is the Espolón viewing point, which offers views of a fertile plain known as the Oasis of Castile. The town also has the remains of a wall from 910; and the gates of Corredera and Santa Catalina, from the 17th and 18th centuries. Noteworthy civil buildings include the façade of the Law Palace, the City Hall, and the palaces of the Counts of Requena, the Marquis of Alcañices or the Marquis of Castrillo. And among the ecclesiastical buildings, the churches of San Lorenzo el Real, in the Mudéjar style; San Salvador de los Caballeros, which contains a Museum of Religious Art; San Sebastián, and the monasteries of Sancti Spiritus, Santa Clara and Santa Sofía.

[edit] Demographics

Population data released by the INE on January 1, 2005, indicates a population of 9,466 people.

[edit] Notable inhabitants

[edit] Toro wine

Toro has been long famous for its wine. The Toro wines were so prestigious that King Alfonso IX of Leon conceded privileges for its production in the 12th Century. Columbus took Toro wine with him on the expedition to discover America in 1492, because it could survive large journeys, due to its structure and body. Friar Diego de Deza, from Zamora, one of Isabel the Catholic’s confessors, collaborated economically in the expedition, for which he was allowed to name one of the caravels, the Pinta that was half full of Toro wine. The Designation of the Toro Region is recent, beginning in the mid 70s, under the Specific Designation (Denominación Específica), which preceded the attainment of Designated Region (Denominación de Origen) on the 29th of May 1987. [1]

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] Sources Consulted

  • Guia Total, Castilla y León, (Madrid 1995).
  • A River in Spain, Rober White (London 1998).

Coordinates: 41°31′N, 5°24′W