Sagunto

Sagunto
Sagunt
Municipality

Flag

Coat of arms
Sagunto

Location in Spain

Coordinates: 39°40′35″N 0°16′24″W / 39.67639°N 0.27333°WCoordinates: 39°40′35″N 0°16′24″W / 39.67639°N 0.27333°W
Country  Spain
Autonomous community  Valencian Community
Province Valencia
Comarca Camp de Morvedre
Judicial district Sagunto
Founded Before 219 BC
Government
  Alcalde Sergio Muniesa (2014) (PP)
Area
  Total 132 km2 (51 sq mi)
Elevation 49 m (161 ft)
Population (2014)
  Total 65,005
  Density 490/km2 (1,300/sq mi)
Demonym Saguntí, saguntina
Morvedrí, morvendrina
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
  Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 46500, 46520, 46529
Official language(s) Valencian
Website Official website
View of the city of Sagunto and the Roman theatre, from the castle.

Sagunto (Spanish: [saˈɣunto]) or Sagunt (Valencian: [saˈɣunt]) is an ancient city in Eastern Spain, in the modern fertile comarca of Camp de Morvedre in the province of Valencia. It is located in a hilly site, c. 30 km north of Valencia, close to the Costa del Azahar on the Mediterranean Sea. It was historically known as Saguntum (Latin), and later Morvedre (Spanish: Murviedro).

History

During the 5th century BC, the Celtiberians built a walled settlement on the hill overseeing the plain; a stretch of cyclopean limestone slabs from the former temple of Diana survives, close to the modern church of Santa Maria, but the settlement site is still older. The city traded with Greek and Phoenician coastal colonies, and under their influence, minted its own coins. During this period the city was known as Arse (Ripollès i Alegre 2002). By 219 BC Saguntum was a large and commercially prosperous town, which sided with the local Greek colonists and Rome against Carthage, and drew Hannibal's first assault, his siege of Saguntum, the opening move of the Second Punic War. After a harsh resistance over a course of eight months, related by the Roman historian Livy, Saguntum was captured in 219 BC by the armies of Hannibal.

Hispania was not meekly pacified and Romanized, as the Iberian career of Quintus Sertorius makes clear. Saguntum minted coins under his protection, and continued to house a mint when, as Roman Saguntum, it was rebuilt and flourished with the rank of municipium. This later prosperity lasted most of the empire through, and is attested by inscriptions and ruins (notably a theater, demolished by Napoleon's marshal Louis Gabriel Suchet, who also destroyed the Roman tower of Hercules). With the Arian Visigothic kings, Saguntum received its Catholic patron saint, a bishop named Sacerdos, "the priest", who died peacefully of natural causes about AD 560.

In the early 8th century, the Muslim Arabs came and the city became part of the Caliphate of Cordoba and at that time the city reached an era of splendor, with baths, palaces, mosques and schools open for its cosmopolitan population. Then, the town was known as Morvedre (Morviedro in Spanish), a name derived from Latin muri veteres "ancient walls." However, as Valencia grew, Saguntum declined.

In 1098, the city was conquered by El Cid but the Muslims recovered it shortly thereafter. The city had been under the Muslim Arab rule for over five hundred years when James I of Aragon conquered it in 1238.

During the Peninsular War a Spanish attempt to raise the French siege of the castle failed in the Battle of Saguntum on 25 October 1811.

Saguntum was badly damaged in warfare, but has retained many Valencian Gothic structures. In the late 19th century a steel-making industry grew up that supported the modern city, which extends in the coastal plain below the citadel hill. The last steel oven closed in April 1984. It has been restored and is now a tourist attraction.

Main sights

The Castle of Sagunto.

The famed composer Don Joaquín Rodrigo, who composed Concierto de Aranjuez, among others, was born in Sagunt.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sagunt - Sagunto.

References