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Encyclopedia > Extremadura, Spain
Comunidad Autónoma de
Extremadura
Capital Mérida
Area
 – Total
 – % of Spain
Ranked 5th
 41 634 km²
 8,2%
Population
 – Total (2003)
 – % of Spain
 – Density
Ranked 13th
 1 073 050
 2,6%
 25,77/km²
Demonym
 – English
 – Spanish

 —
 extremeño/a
Statute of Autonomy February 26, 1983
ISO 3166-2 EX
Parliamentary
representation

 – Congress seats
 – Senate seats
 10
 2
President Juan Carlos Rodríguez Ibarra (PSOE)
Junta de Extremadura (http://www.juntaex.es)

Extremadura is an autonomous community of Spain. It includes the provinces of Cáceres and Badajoz.


Some important cities are Cáceres, Badajoz, Plasencia and Mérida, the capital of the autonomous community. For other municipalities, see lists by province:

Extremadura borders Portugal to the west. It is an important area for wildlife, particularly with the major reserve at Monfragüe


Badajoz and Cáceres are, respectively, the largest and second-largest provinces of Spain.

Map of Extremadura

Extremadura, was the source of many of the most famous conquerors ("conquistadores") and settlers in America. Hernán Cortés, Francisco Pizarro, Pedro de Alvarado, Pedro de Valdivia, etc. were all born in Extremadura and many towns and cities in America carry a name from their homeland: Mérida is the administrative capital of Extremadura, and also an important city in Mexico and Venezuela, Medellín is now a little town in Extremadura, but also the second largest city in Colombia, Albuquerque is the largest city in New Mexico, its name is due to transcription mistake of Alburquerque, another town in Extremadura. Moreover, the two Spanish astronauts up to date, Miguel López-Alegría and Pedro Duque, have family connections in Extremadura.


Extremadura should not be confused with Estremadura, a historical province of Portugal.


The Extremadura Regional Government has authored its own Linux distribution, LinEx.


Extremeño dialect

"...possesses a marked aspiration for f h, and employs i u for e o as finals; while modifying variously medial unaccented vowels as andaluz also does. The region is sparsely populated for various reasons: it was much thinned by the emigration to America...the language also shows remarkable archaisms. To the north of Cáceres in Plasencia, Coria and Garrovillas, the medieval distinction between voiced z and voiceless ç remains perceptible...Extremeño is in other respects a dialect of transition between andaluz and the patois of southern León."
Source: Entwistle, William J. The Spanish Language. (pp. 223–224)

See also



  Results from FactBites:
 
Francisco Pizarro - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (3589 words)
Pizarro sailed from Panama for Spain in the spring of 1528, reaching Seville in early summer.
Pizarro left behind his mestizo children with their mother, Inés Huaillas Yupanqui, daughter of Atahualpa and granddaughter of Huayna Capac, who gave birth to Gonzalo (legitimized in 1537 and died when he was fourteen); by the same woman, a daughter, Francisca.
Francisca eventually married her uncle Hernando Pizarro in Spain, on October 10, 1537; a third son of Pizarro, Francisco, by a relative of Atahualpa, who was never legitimized, died shortly after reaching Spain.
Patron Saints Index: Saint Peter of Alcantara (240 words)
Commissioner of his Order in Spain in 1556.
18 October 1562 at Estremadura, Spain of natural causes
Brazil (named by Pope Blessed Pius IX in 1862); Estremadura Spain (named in 1962); Extremadura Spain (named in 1962); night watchmen; watchmen
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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