San Lorenzo de El Escorial

San Lorenzo de El Escorial
—  Municipality  —

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San Lorenzo de El Escorial
Location in Spain
Coordinates:
Country Spain
Autonomous community Madrid
Province Madrid
Comarca Cuenca del Guadarrama
Founded 18th century
Government
 • Mayor José Luis Fernández-Quejo del Pozo (PP)
Area
 • Total 56.4 km2 (21.8 sq mi)
Elevation 1,032 m (3,386 ft)
Population (2009)
 • Total 17,889
 • Density 317.2/km2 (821.5/sq mi)
Demonym Sanlorentinos / Gurriatos
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 • Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 28200
Official language(s)
Website Official website

San Lorenzo de El Escorial, also known as El Escorial de Arriba is a town and municipality in the Community of Madrid, Spain, located to the northwest of the region in the southeastern side of the Sierra de Guadarrama, at the foot of Mount Abantos and Las Machotas, 47 kilometres (29 mi) from Madrid. It is head of the same name judicial party. The settlement is popularly called El Escorial de Arriba, to differentiate it from the neighbouring village of El Escorial, also known as El Escorial de Abajo. The town is approximately 47 kilometres (29 mi) from the capital.

The Monastery of El Escorial is the most prominent building in the town and is one of the main Spanish Renaissance monuments. The Valley of the Fallen also falls within the boundaries of the municipality.

The monastery and its historic surroundings were declared a World Heritage Site UNESCO on November 2, 1984, under the name of "El Escorial, monastery and site".

The site also enjoys protection on Spain's heritage register; since June 21, 2006, it has been protected by the Community of Madrid as a Property of Cultural Interest.

San Lorenzo de El Escorial is located on the southern slopes of the Mount Abantos (elevation 1753 m). The average altitude of the municipality is 1,032 metres (3,386 ft), and most of the urban area is above 1,000 metres (3,300 ft). The hamlet initially sprang up around Monastery of El Escorial, gradually extending up the mountain. In the 20th and 21st centuries, the town underwent a strong urban expansion, particularly towards the southeastern side of Mount Abantos.

Contents

Geography

Elevation and hydrography

The township's average altitude is 1,032 metres (3,386 ft). Most of the town is situated at about 1,000 metres (3,300 ft) above sea level, including the Monastery of El Escorial, which lies approximately 28 metres (92 ft) above the town. The highest part is the top of Mount Abantos, which is 1,753 metres (5,751 ft) above sea level.

The town covers a total area of 56.4 square kilometres (21.8 sq mi), most of which is mountainous terrain. In the south of the municipality is the Circo de El Escorial, bordered by the southern slopes of Mount Abantos to the south and the Las Machotas mountains to the north. North, along the slope to Cuelgamuros, lies the Valley of the Fallen, near the border with Guadarrama Abantos Southeast. Towards the Southwest, the municipality extends down to El Escorial by the parks and gardens of the Casita del Principe.

San Lorenzo de El Escorial lies in the watershed of the River Guadarrama. The streams that originate in Abantos flow to the Aulencia, the main tributary of the Guadarrama, originating in Las Machotas and crossing the neighbouring village of El Escorial. The streams include small reservoirs.

Vegetation

The types of vegetation differ due to the municipality's fluctuation in altitude. In its lower altitudes, about 3,000 ft (900 m), are adehesadas fresnedas of Fraxinus angustifolia; and in the forest of the Herrería, the melojares of Quercus pyrenaica, chestnut (Castanea sativa) and the Montpellier Maple (Acer monspessulanum) grow.

In the higher altitudes (3,300–6,300 mi (1,000–1,200 m)) appear pine trees Pinus pinaster and Pinus pinea, as well as Holm (Quercus ilex), junipers (Juniperus oxycedrus) and jarales Cistus ladanifer. The 3,900 and 5,600 ft (1,200 and 1,700 m), include pine Pinus (Pinus sylvestris) and black pine trees (Pinus nigra), and roquedo in ecosystems on the summits of Abantos graníticos.

San Lorenzo de El Escorial also has some allochthonous in its mountain areas, plant species as beech (American beech), cedars (Cedrus sp.), larch (Larix SP.), cypresses (Chamaecyparis lawsoniana), and maple (Acer pseudoplatanus). Students of a forestry school planted these trees during the early 20th century.

There are also trees of historical significance, including sequoias (Sequoiadendron giganteum), planted in the 18th century in parks and gardens of the Casita del Principe.

Much of the municipality is contained within the Pinar Abantos and the Herrería zone, a protected nature area since 1961 and extends to an area that San Lorenzo de El Escorial shares with Saint Mary of the Alameda.

On the edge of San Lorenzo, is a center of environmental education Arboretum Luis Ceballos, which houses a collection of over 200 species of trees and bushes native to Spain and the Balearic Islands.

History

The history of San Lorenzo de El Escorial is inexorably linked to the construction of the monastery and the town named El Escorial. The first historical references of this building date year 1558 where Philip II of Spain appointed a commission to find a proper place for the site, architects, doctors and quarrymen, among other guilds.[1]

Hamlet El Escorial met physical conditions for carrying out such company.[2] Its abundance of forests, quarries and game reserves, the quality of its water and its place in the geographic center of Spain, at the foot of the mount Abantos, were determining factors for the final choice, which took place in 1561.

Builders placed the first stone of the monastery on April 23, 1563. A year earlier, Philip II of Spain began efforts to acquire the land adjacent to the site of the future monastery, with the intention of creating a territory of realengo, real site de El Escorial, intended for agriculture, fishing, hunting and recreational uses. Among them were the Dehesa of the ironworks of Fuentelámparas (today called La Herrería), located in the current term of San Lorenzo de El Escorial, and La Granjilla of the Fresneda, farms in the neighbouring village of El Escorial.

Construction lasted 21 years, which transformed the urban and social environment of El Escorial. The hamlet became a villa in 1565.[3] A Lord Mayor exercised rule over the villa. The Lord Mayor's authority did not extend to the game reserves that the Crown managed directly, nor to agricultural uses managed by the monastery's Prior.

Through two Papal Bulls issued dated 1585 and 1586, the Roman Catholic Church removed the monastery from the control of the powerful Archbishop of Toledo and placed it under the monastery's Prior.

This administrative structure remained well into the 18th century, when the monarch Carlos III imposed a new territorial and administrative framework. The construction of houses, expressly prohibited in the outskirts of the monastery, was the cause of a dispute that faced the municipal authorities, who promoted a modification of the rules, and those who sought to restrict new construction. The subject was particularly delicate in those days, given the frequent visits of the Royal family to the site; these visits led to an increase in demand for land to build houses and support buildings mainly for civil servants working in the Royal household.

The resolution of the conflict came from King Carlos III, who, on May 3, 1767, authorized housing next to the market of the monastery, which was the birth of the municipality of San Lorenzo de El Escorial and the beginning of a process which culminated in the emancipation of the town from El Escorial. The development of this new Hamlet was very fast, reaching a population of more than a thousand only a few years afterCarlos III allowed the town's expansion.

The new settlement emerging at the foot of the monastery did not achieve self-rule until much later. The administrative structure designed by Philip II of Spain was blurring, first with the appointment of a Governor by Carlos III—detrimental to the powers of the Lord Mayor and El Escorial's Prior—and, subsequently, with the privatization of land.

This was key to the structural development of the current municipality of San Lorenzo de El Escorial, since thisprivatization extended over most of the royal lands except for the Herrería farms, land surrounding the monastery, the Príncipe and the Infante Casitas.

On September 26, 1836, San Lorenzo de El Escorial became an independent municipality. In 1887, it elected its first mayor. To date, 22 people have served in this role.

During the Spanish Civil Ward (1936–1939), the people remained loyal to the Republican government and briefly changed the town's name to El Escorial of the Sierra.[4]

Today the city of San Lorenzo de El Escorial consists of 12 localities: Colmenar of the Arroyo, Colmenarejo, El Escorial, Fresnedillas the olive, Navalagamella, Chavela Robledo, Saint Mary of the Alameda, Valdemaqueda, Valdemorillo, Villanueva of the pardillo and Zarzalejo, and the monastery of San Lorenzo de El Escorial.

Demography

San Lorenzo de El Escorial has 17,346 inhabitants, according to the National Institute of statistics (INE), data relating to 2008. It has a density of population of 118.75 inhabitants/square mi (307.55 inhabitants/km²), similar to other municipalities (case El Escorial, with 83.47 inhabitants/square mi (216.18 inhabitants/km²) area, but much lower than the average regional (301.86 inhabitants/square mi (781.82 inhabitants/km²)). In relation to the Spanish average, located in the aforementioned 35.3 inhabitants/square mi (91.4 inhabitants/km²), year local exceeded the national datum.

As of 2006, 51.7% of San Lorentinos are women and the remaining 48.3% are men. Foreigners represent 10.07%. The average age is 37.8 years. The relative growth of the population is of 4.2%, according to statistics2006.

The transient population of San Lorenzo de El Escorial is very high. This is a major residential site; second homes proliferated with usage during weekends and vacation periods. In addition, the municipality receives daily large numbers of tourists attracted by its historical and natural heritage.

Population developments of San Lorenzo de El Escorial
1996 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
10,828 10,995 11,350 11,783 12,455 13,164 14,358 14,971 14,364 16,005 16,531 17,346

Note: 1996 figures are referring to May 1 and the other to January 1. Source: INE

Economy

Tourism, hospitality and trade are the main economic activities of San Lorenzo de El Escorial. The municipality is one of the most important tourist destinations in the community of Madrid. Visitors usually make day trips with Madrid tourism as a starting point. The number of tourists staying overnight are insignificant as in other historical cities in the region, such as Alcalá de Henares, Aranjuez or Chinchón.

In recent years, the town has attempted to consolidate hotel tourism, trade fairs, conventions and cultural and educational nature courses. The Universidad Complutense holds summer courses to promote San Lorenzo de El Escorial as a Euroforum installations. The municipality has 10 hotels with a total of 611 rooms (year 2006).

Inside of this municipality are two of the most visited monuments in the nation national. The Monastery of El Escorial is the second most visited monument with highest number of visits (504,238 tourists 2004), short of the Royal Palace in Madrid (720,710 in the same year). The Valley of the Fallen, located on the outskirts of town, is the third in the national list (407,578).

Construction is another economic activity on the rise in San Lorenzo de El Escorial. Although much of its area is protected, as with the Herrería forests, the town has experienced strong urban growth in recent years, with the creation of new housing developments in areas that lack legal protection from development. This is the case of the southeastern slope of Mount Abantos, which has many newly constructed neighbourhoods, especially after the August 21, 1999, fire that burned 450 acres (1.8 km2) of pine.

Main sights

The town has an important historical-artistic, urban and cultural heritage, a result of its link with the Spanish crown. It adds relevant ecological, geological and archaeological values.

Part of the monument is listed with the heritage UNESCO.[5] In addition, this site has been awarded good of cultural interest, in the category of historical sites, with the name of "Escorial: monastery, natural and cultural environment", from the community of Madrid.[6]

The last legal figure, approved by Decree 52/2006 (June 21), also includes the towns of El Escorial, Zarzalejo and Saint Mary of the Alameda. This is the area which was within the so-called domain of Philip II, with which the monarch delineated the perimeter of the royal site in the area around the Monasterio.[7]

World Heritage sites

On November 2, 1984, together with the celebration of the IV centenary of the placement of the last stone during the monastery's construction, the World Heritage Committee (World Heritage Committee) of the UNESCO, meeting in Buenos Aires Argentina), included "El Escurial, monastery and site" on the list of the heritage (World Heritage List).

This entry defines territorial protection for the Monasterio de El Escorial, the Casita of Infante (or up) and the Casita del Principe (or down), Palace, El Escorial: * "' Monasterio de El Escorial" '. This building, one of the main monuments renacentistas Spain, was erected in the last third of the 16th century on the mount Abantos, slope 3,373 ft (1,028 m). Juan Bautista de Toledo, originated the project that was finished, after his death, by Juan de Herrera, who imposed a new architectural style.[8] Occupies an area of 358,729 square feet (33,327 square meters) and has 16 patios, 88 sources, 13 oratorios, 15 Cloisters, 86 stairs, 9 towers, 1,200 doors and 2,673 Windows. Its main façade is 679 feet (207 m) in length. The most important parts of the building, include the Pantheon of Kings, the Real Basilica and Real library. From the sixteenth, the Escorial monastery has been described as "the eighth wonder of the world".

The Príncipe and the Infante cottages are two mansions neoclásicos 18th century. Both were built by Villanueva John as recreation sites for Carlos IV, then Prince of Asturias, and his brother Infante Bourbon Gabriel, respectively.

The territorial scope of protection laid down in the list of the heritage is currently in the process of being enlargement. The Spanish authorities intend to extend the UNESCOheritage declaration to all the space that was included within the original decree of Philip II.

Historical site

The municipality of San Lorenzo de El Escorial and other historical-artistic group have been incorporated into the legal figure of the historical territory (historical site) of "El Escorial: monastery, site and natural and cultural environment", according to Decree 52/2006 (June 21 BOCM) community of Madrid.

Here are different buildings and natural enclaves located within its Township and other located El Escorial, Zarzalejo and Saint Mary of the Alameda. Monumental sets and landscape sanlorentinos are highlighted below:

Celebrities

San Lorenzo de El Escorial had close historical ties with the Crown Spanish, as place of residence and burial of different las Casas monarchs of the Austrias and the Bourbons. However, only one of them came in the locality. Was born in Royal Monastery October 14, 1784 and died Fernando VII, trafficking in Madrid September 29, 1833.

The presence of the Kings attracted towards the municipality different personalities from the world of culture and the arts. Apart from the long list of architects, sculptors and painters who participated in the 16th century in the Monasterio de El Escorial, building the population hosted in 18th century the Girona musician Antonio Soler (Olot, 1729), who died in San Lorenzo of El Escorial in 1783, where he developed most of his career.

In the 19th and 20th centuries, the town became a residential kernel, which went relevant political and cultural figures. Including highlighted the Serafín Alvarez and Joaquin Álvarez Quintero, comediógrafos who lived temporarily in the municipality.

Between children born in San Lorenzo de El Escorial in 20th century, protrude poet Luis Felipe Vivanco (1907–1975), the architect John Herreros (1958) and the botanist Luis Ceballos and Fernández de Córdoba (1896–1967).

Festivals and traditions

The people of San Lorenzo hold their feasts on August 10, the day of the feast of San Lorenzo Lorenzo mártir, the saint to which Philip II of Spain dedicated the Monasterio de El Escorial to and that, by extension, the municipality takes its name. This building was built to commemorate the victory of the battle of San Quintín, which took place on August 10, 1557.

The pilgrimage of Our Lady, Virgin of Grace is without a doubt the most important tradition of San Lorenzo de El Escorial. It occurs at the beginning of September among the religious masses in Spain.[12] Since 1948 it has been declared tourist attractions by the community of Madrid.

Holy week in San Lorenzo stands out as one of the of great visual richnesses of the Guadarrameña region. At Christmastime, large crowds take to the streets to commemorate the Bethlehem nativity scene where Christ was born.

Education

Associated Press

There are 5 crèches (2 public and 3 private), 2 public schools education primary, 1 Institute of secondary education, 3 schools private (with and without concert) in San Lorenzo de El Escorial, 1 Center overseas and 1 University Centre attached to the Complutense University (University Maria Cristina).

See also

References

External links

Municipal web

Statistical

Street, maps and aerial photography

Media related to [//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:San_Lorenzo_de_El_Escorial San Lorenzo de El Escorial] at Wikimedia Commons