Ayuntamiento de Granada
The Ayuntamiento de Granada is the institution charged with the government and administration of the Spanish municipality of Granada.
Type | Ayuntamiento |
---|---|
Headquarters | Plaza del Carmen 5, Granada, Spain |
Region | Granada |
Mayor | Francisco Cuenca |
History
- Early modern period
Following the conquest of Granada in 1492, the offices of corregidor and regidor(es) were established in Granada.[1] While the Constitutive Charter granted by the Catholic Monarchs on 20 September 1500 has been traditionally framed by most authors as the point of origin of the city's municipal regime, the document has been more recently argued to rather be a reform or restructuration of preexisting political realities.[2] The latter royal stipulations established a municipal institutional structure consisting of 1 corregidor, 24 regidores and 2 ordinary alcaldes, remaining a corregimiento from then on for most of the Early Modern period.[1] Throughout this period, the number of regidores ranged from 44 (1587) to 15 (1787),[3] while a military background (capa y espada) prevailed vis-à-vis the extraction of the monarch-appointed corregidor, the highest ranking official.[4] Most often, the two alcaldes were experts in law covering the shortcomings of the corregidor on that field.[5] While originally the regidores were appointed at the discretion of the monarch, eventually the trade of the condition of regidor thrived.[6]
Structure
It is formed by the Plenary (Pleno), the Mayor (alcalde) and the Local Government Board (Junta de Gobierno Local).
The Plenary of the Ayuntamiento is the body of political representation of the citizens in the municipal government. Its members (as of 2019, 27),[7] known as concejales ("municipal councillors"), are elected for a 4-year mandate following the schedule of the country-wide municipal elections. They are organised in municipal groups.
The mayor (alcalde), the supreme representative of the city, presides over the ayuntamiento. The mayor is invested by the municipal councillors from among themselves following each municipal election.
The Local Government Board consists of the mayor, the deputy mayor(s) and a number of delegates assuming the portfolios for the different government areas, delegated by the mayor. All those positions are held by municipal councillors.
Following the May 2019 municipal election, Luis Salvador (Citizens), was invested as Mayor of Granada on 15 June 2019.[7][8]
Headquarters
The city hall is located at a building in the plaza del Carmen, the undemolished part of a convent of female Discalced Carmelites where the municipal premises were moved to from the old Madrasah of Granada in 1858 following the ecclesial desamortización.[9]
References
- Citations
- Prados García 2015, p. 25.
- Peinado Santaella 2001, pp. 357–358.
- Prados García 2015, p. 26.
- Prados García 2015, p. 43.
- Prados García 2015, p. 55.
- Prados García 2015, p. 62.
- "Luis Salvador (Cs), alcalde de Granada con apoyo de PP y Vox". La Vanguardia. 15 June 2020.
- Rama, Leo (15 June 2019). "Luis Salvador, de Ciudadanos, nuevo alcalde de Granada en minoría absoluta". ABC.
- Patrimonio artístico y monumental de las universidades andaluzas. Seville: Consejería de Educación y Ciencia. Junta de Andalucía. 1992. p. 14. ISBN 84-8051-051-X.
- Bibliography
- Peinado Santaella, Rafael G. (2001). "La Granada mudéjar y la génesis del régimen municipal castellano" (PDF). Chronica Nova. Granada: Universidad de Granada. 28: 357–399. ISSN 0210-9611.
- Prados García, Celia (2015). El gobierno municipal de Granada (1808-1814) (PDF). Granada: Universidad de Granada.