Alcarràs

Alcarràs is a municipality in the comarca of the Segrià in Catalonia. It includes a small exclave to the south.

Alcarràs
Flag of Alcarràs
Coat of arms of Alcarràs
Alcarràs is located in Province of Lleida
Alcarràs
Alcarràs
Location in Province of Lleida
Alcarràs is located in Catalonia
Alcarràs
Alcarràs
Location in Catalonia
Alcarràs is located in Spain
Alcarràs
Alcarràs
Location in Spain
Coordinates: 41°33′58″N 0°31′34″E
Country Spain
Community Catalonia
ProvinceLleida
ComarcaSegrià
Government
  MayorMiquel Serra Godia (2015)[1]
Area
  Total114.3 km2 (44.1 sq mi)
Elevation
137 m (449 ft)
Population
 (2018)[3]
  Total9,422
  Density82/km2 (210/sq mi)
DemonymsAlcarrassí, Alcarrassina
Websitealcarras.cat

Etymology

Of Arabic origin, in ancient documents (12th century) it appears with the form Alcaraz.[4] According to Arabist Miguel Asín, it would come from the Arabic "al-Karas" with the meaning of "cherry".[5]

History

The current town is of Islamic origin, but it does not appear historically documented until the 12th century. In the Ordinatio of diocese of Lleida from 1168, it appears as Alcarraz, just like in other documents, referring to the Saracen castle and the church. According to Zurita, count Ermengol VI of Urgell conquered Alcarràs, Alguaire and Aitona in 1147-48 (while Ramon Berenguer IV was in Almeria) and the conqueror is named by father Finestres (1752) Guillem d'Alcarràs, son of Guerau de Jorba, lord of Montmeneu, Òdena, and Rubinat and relative of the counts of Barcelona. This surname, adopted after the conquest, would have been maintained by his descendants, closely linked to the hospitallers and the templars.

In the 16th century, his successors became related to Castilian families and even ceased to reside in Barcelona. The population again suffered the consequences of the Reapers' War and the French governor of M. de Rogles occupied the castle (1642), where they put a garrison, and then the castle was definitely disabled as confirmed by Marquis Filipo de Corsini, who accompanied Cosimo de' Medici in 1668, when he says that they found a very ruined population called Alcarràs, belonging to Marquis "di Lafuente" (the successors of the Fernández de Heredia were counts of Fuentes), where the remains of a small castle were barely visible. By inheritance from the aforementioned Heredia, the domain of the place passed to the dukes of Solferino at the beginning of the 18th century, who maintained it until the abolition of the lordships.

Alcarràs also suffered the War of Succession, but in 1721 it had partially recovered and constituted a town hall (since 1500 a small municipal council had been run with three jurats or paers). In the 18th century, coinciding with a notable demographic increase, the great church was built and the nucleus extended along the Madrid road (1777), the current Raval de Lleida.

In the Peninsular War, the residents of Alcarràs became sometent and fought under the orders of Colonel Baget in the Sierra de Alcubierre and the Bruc. The French army occupied the town in 1810, facing the capture of Lleida. The town hosted liberal detachments in the first and third Carlist wars.

Madoz, in the middle of the 19th century, still speaks of some towers of the old castle, which was demolished at the end of the same century. In 1840, with the constitutional town hall, schools were created and in the summer of 1896 the spa of Alcarràs appeared, with ferruginous sodium chloride waters, good for skin diseases until the doors closed in 1920. New industries also appeared (flour, sulfides, brandy, etc.).[6]

Historically irrigated with the Pinyana Canal, at the beginning of the 20th century, the waters of the Aragon and Catalonia Canal also arrived.

Referendum of 1 October 2017

During the Catalan Referendum for the Independence on 1 October 2017, Alcarràs was one of the populations where the Spanish police beat the citizens in order to impede the voting.[7] However, the citizens voted with a total of 2,799 votes (53,4% of the registered population), from which 2,578 voted for yes (92.6%) and 171 voted for no (6.1%).[8] A total of 80 anti-riot agents from the Spanish Civil Guard showed up at the voting center at 8:45 am and found 500 people who were peacefully blocking their way. They attacked the people without warning nor previous mediation thus hurting 20 people.[7][9] The mayor of Alcarràs, Miquel Serra, was judged and sentenced to 3 months of political disqualification and a fine because he "did allow" the referendum.[10]

In September 2022, a few hours after the announcement that the film "Alcarràs" was elected by the spanish Academy of Cinema to go to the Oscars, a Wikipedia user with an IP from the Ministry of Defense of the Spanish Government modified the entry in Wikipedia in order to eliminate the data about the violence of the police and to add the quality of "illegal" to the Referendum for the Independence.[11]

Movie Alcarràs

In 2022, the town became famous due to the film Alcarràs, of Carla Simón, which won the Golden Bear at the seventy-second edition of Berlinale and became the first film in Catalan to receive this award. The film was filmed in the town with its ponentins inhabitants as non-professional actors.[12][13]

Symbols

The official coat of arms of the municipality was approved in 2007 with the description "caironet coat of arms: argent, a vert holm oak. The timbre, a town crown",[14] which is why it belongs to the category of canting shields, even if it is also considered to represent the centenary oak located within the town. During the 19th and 20th centuries, oval shields alternated with a tree or a castle.[15]

The flag reproduces the old oval shield with a tree on a maroon background.

Geography

The town is connected via the A-2 highway (exit 451: L-800 Vallmanya/Alcarràs) and the AP-2 highway (exit 5: Alcarràs).

The distances from Alcarràs to other cities are: to Lleida 8 km, to Barcelona 150 km, to Zaragoza 140 km, to Huesca 100 km, to Tarragona 100 km, to Madrid 450 km, to France 270 km, and to Valencia 325 km.

Population


1900–2020

Year 1900 1930 1950 1970 1986 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
Population 2342 3053 3394 3969 n/a 4903 5027 5241 5970 6510 7281 7776 8029 8350 8755 9026 9252 9372 9297 9363 9422 9514 9707

Places of interest

  • The Centenary Oak is the image of the symbol and municipal shield of the town.
  • The Old House of Canonges and Ermita de Santa Anna, a scattered house of the 18th century.
  • Montagut Castle, of Saracen origin and of which only a few vestiges remain.
  • The Circuit d'Alcarràs, is a motorsport race track inaugurated in May 2007.
  • The Church of Mare de Déu de l'Assumpció, built between 1760 and 1765, with a baroque-style facade.
  • Joaquim Montoy Library, inaugurated in 2006, has a surface area of 493 m2 and a collection of 18.000 documents.[16]
  • Cal Macià, 17th-century farmhouse, the manor house of Eugènia Lamarca, wife of President Francesc Macià.

Culture and holidays

The Municipal Institute of Culture of Alcarràs (IMCA) hosts all the cultural and festive entities and associations of the town. It meets a couple of times a year in order to program and coordinate all the events and activities that will be developed by all these entities and groups.[17]

Holidays specific to the town:

  • The major winter holiday, in honor of Saint Sebastian: January 20 (although it lasts four days before or after this date, as appropriate).
  • The major summer holiday: the last weekend in August.

References

  1. "Ajuntament d'Alcarràs". Generalitat of Catalonia. Retrieved 13 November 2015.
  2. "El municipi en xifres: Alcarràs". Statistical Institute of Catalonia. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
  3. Municipal Register of Spain 2018. National Statistics Institute.
  4. Moran, Josep; Batlle, Mar; Rabella, Joan Anton (2002). Topònims catalans. Etimologia i pronúncia. Publicacions de l'Abadia de Montserrat. ISBN 84-8415-431-9.
  5. "Alcarràs". enciclopèdia.cat. Retrieved 17 February 2022.
  6. "Web de l'Ajuntament d'Alcarràs". alcaras.ddl.net (in Catalan). Archived from the original on 5 June 2013.
  7. Marin, David (1 November 2017). "Alcarràs resisted (Catalan edition)". El Punt Avui (Catalan Journal). Retrieved 15 September 2022.
  8. "Referèndum 2017; Resultats Alcarràs (Referendum 2017, Results from Alcarràs)". Ara.cat (Catalan Journal). 25 November 2017. Retrieved 15 September 2022.
  9. "Pons and Alcarràs remember the police charge on October 1st with sixty injured (This is source is in Catalan)". CCMA (Catalan Audiovisual Media Corporation after its name in Catalan). 25 September 2017. Retrieved 15 September 2022.
  10. "The former mayor of Alcarràs is sentenced to three months of disqualification for the 1-O referendum (This source is in Catalan)". CCMA (Catalan Audiovisual Media Corporation after the Catalan name). 28 October 2021. Retrieved 15 September 2022.
  11. "The 1-O uploads to Alcarràs are deleted from Wikipedia from an IP from the Ministry of Defense (This source is in Catalan)". CCMA (Catalan Audiovisual Media Corporation, after its Catalan name). 14 September 2022. Retrieved 15 September 2022.
  12. "Carla Simón makes history at the Berlinale with the first Catalan Os d'Or for "Alcarràs"". CCMA (Catalan Audiovisual Media Corporation, after its Catalan name). 17 February 2022. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
  13. "'Alcarràs' by Carla Simón, wins the Golden Bear at the 2022 Berlinale". CatalunyaPress.cat. 16 February 2022. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
  14. "Resolution GAP/1637/2007, of 3 May, by which conformity is given to the adoption of the heraldic shield of the municipality of Alcarràs". Diari Oficial de la Generalitat de Catalunya. 3 March 2007. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
  15. "Shield and flag". Ajuntament d'Alcarràs. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
  16. "What do we offer you?". Biblioteca d'Alcarràs. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
  17. Web de l'Ajuntament d'Alcarràs Archived 2010-04-30 at the Wayback Machine, llista d'entitats que integren l'IMCA


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