Álava Araba |
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— Province — | |||
Historical Territory of Álava1 | |||
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Country | Spain | ||
Autonomous Community | Basque Country | ||
Capital | Vitoria-Gasteiz | ||
Government | |||
• Deputy General | Javier de Andrés (People's Party) | ||
Area | |||
• Total | 2,963 km2 (1,144 sq mi) | ||
Population (2009) | |||
• Total | 313,819 | ||
• Density | 105.9/km2 (274.3/sq mi) | ||
• Ranked | 41 | ||
• Percent | 0.68% | ||
Official languages | Spanish, Basque | ||
Parliament | Cortes Generales | ||
Congress seats | 4 | ||
Senate seats | 4 | ||
Juntas Generales de Álava | 51 | ||
Website | Diputación Foral de Álava | ||
:1.^ Complete official names: Territorio Histórico de Álava |
Álava (IPA: [ˈalaβa] in Spanish is a province of Spain and a historical territory of the Basque Country, heir of the ancient Lord of Álava. Its capital city is Vitoria-Gasteiz which is also the capital of the autonomous community. It limits with the Basque provinces of Biscay and Gipuzkoa at north, the community of La Rioja at south, the province of Burgos (in the community of Castile and León) at west and the community of Navarre at east, northern Spain.
It is the largest of the three Basque provinces, with 2.963 km2, and also the least populated with 317.352 inhabitants. The County of Treviño is an exclave of the province of Burgos (Castile and León) surrounded by Alavese land.
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Built around the Roman mansion Alba located on the ab Asturica Burdigalam (possibly the current village of Albeniz near Agurain), it has sometimes been argued the name may stem from that landmark. However, according to the Royal Academy of the Basque Language, the origin may be another: The name is first found on Muslim chronicles of the 8th century referring to the Alavese Plains (Spanish Llanada Alavesa, Basque Arabako Lautada), laua in old Basque (currently lautada) with the Arab article added (al + laua), developing into Spanish Álava and Basque Araba (a typical development of l to r between vowels).
The province numbers 51 municipalities, a population of 315,5256 inhabitants in an area of 3,037 km2 (1,173 sq mi), with an average of 104,50 inhab/km².[1] The vast majority of the population clusters in the capital city of Álava, Vitoria-Gasteiz, which also serves as the capital of the Autonomous Community, but the remainder of the territory is sparsely inhabited with population nuclei distributed into seven counties (cuadrillas): Añana; Ayala; Campezo; Laguardia; Salvatierra; Vitoria-Gasteiz; Zuya.
Álava is an inland territory and features a largely transitional climate between the humid, Atlantic neighbouring northern provinces and the dry and warmer lands south of the Ebro River. According to the relief and landscape characteristics, the territory is divided into five main zones:
Unlike Biscay and Gipuzkoa, but for Ayala and Aramaio, the waters of Álava pour into the Ebro and hence to the Mediterranean by means of two main waterways, i.e. the Zadorra (main axis of Álava) and Bayas Rivers. In addition, the Zadorra Reservoir System harvests a big quantity of waters that supply not only the capital city but other major Basque towns and cities too, like (Bilbao, etc.).
While in 1950 agriculture and farming shaped the landscape of the territory (42.4% of the working force vs 30.5% in industry and construction), the trend shifted gradually during the 60s and 70s on the grounds of a growing industrial activity in the Alavese Plains (Llanada Alavesa), with the main focus lying on the industrial estates of Vitoria-Gasteiz (Gamarra, Betoño and Ali Gobeo) and, to a lesser extent, Salvatierra-Agurain and Araia. At the turn of the century, only 2% of the working Alavese people was in agriculture, while a 60% was in the third sector and 32% in manufacturing.[1] Industry associated to iron and metal developed earlier in the Atlantic area much in tune with Bilbao's economic dynamics, with droves of people flocking to and clustering in Amurrio and Laudio, which have since become the third and second main towns of Álava.
List of rulers (modern Spanish names):
The title is attributed to the Castilian kings after 1332.
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