Demonym(s) Villafranquinos Elevation 505 m Population 3,251 (2014) | Time zone CET (UTC+1) Local time Monday 3:03 PM | |
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Weather 19°C, Wind S at 3 km/h, 43% Humidity |
Una tarde en villafranca del bierzo hd
Vilafranca del Bierzo (Vilafranca do Bierzo in Galician language) is a village and municipality located in the comarca of El Bierzo, in the province of León, Castile and León, Spain.
Contents
- Una tarde en villafranca del bierzo hd
- Map of 24500 Villafranca del Bierzo LeC3B3n Spain
- Los pueblos castilla a ras del suelo villafranca del bierzo
- History
- Main sights
- Municipalities
- Local festivities
- Marquisses of Villafranca del Bierzo
- References
Map of 24500 Villafranca del Bierzo, Le%C3%B3n, Spain
It is one of Galician speaking councils of Castilla y León.
Villafranca del Bierzo lies 187 kilometers from Santiago de Compostela and is located between Ponferrada and O Cebreiro on the Way of St. James pilgrimage route to Santiago de Compostela.
Los pueblos castilla a ras del suelo villafranca del bierzo
History
The first human settlements in the area date to the Neolithic age, while the first historically known people living here were the Celtiberians, who lived in Bergidum, later known as Bergidum Flavium after the Roman conquest.
In the Middle Ages, the town is first mentioned in 791. The origin of the modern town are connected to the Way of St. James, as a rest place for the pilgrims which started to reach Santiago de Compostela from the 9th century. In the Codex Calixtinus Villafranca is mentioned as an intermediate stage between Rabornal and Triacastela. In 1070, during the reign of Alfonso VI of León, a Cluniac monastery was founded here to cultivate wine, and a borough of French pilgrims rose around it, from which the town's name (meaning "French Town") stems. The town later received numerous hotels and hospitals for the pilgrims.
In the late 12th century Alfonso VII of León gave the lordship of Villafranca to his sister Sancha. Later it went to Urraca, wife of King Ferdinand II and then to Teresa, wife of Alfonso IX, and then to numerous other noble people. In 1486 the lordship became a marquisate assigned to Luis Pimentel y Pacego: his daughter married Pedro Álvarez de Toledo, whose family thenceforth held the marquisate for centuries.
During the Peninsular War Villafranca was the headquarters of the Galician army and was sacked three times by the English troops, and was later occupied by the French troops. The Spanish general Antonio Filangieri died here. The town was freed in 1810.
Main sights
Municipalities
The municipality comprehends several villages: