|
||||||||||||||
|
|
BARCELONA HISTORY
Barcelona was founded on the Mediterranean coast between 27-19 BC the Roman Emperor Augustus. It was called "Barcino" and settled as a colony to distribute land amongst retired Roman officers and soldiers. This is a significant point because the Roman Emporor and Senate, did not want returning generals and their armies returning to live in or near Rome due to concerns about coup d'etat. Thus, Roman leadership was content to establish a governor of this beautiful and sufficiently distant land in the Northeast Iberian Peninsula, just a short distance from what became France.
Its strategic position on the Mediterranean Sea allowed its commercial and economic development, and it enjoyed immunity from Roman taxation. By 250, Barcino city wall was built as a defense against the Germanic tribes. The wall was notable for having 28 tall towers and making safer against attacks thean neighboring colonies. Christians were widely persecuted and in some cases martyred until 313, when the Edict of Milan brought such rampant crulety to an end in Barcina and other Roman colonies. Thus Christianity began to flourish. The Basílica de la Santa Cruz awas constructed around the end of the fourth century in the region.
Then by 415, the Germanic Visitgoths moved across the Pyrenees Mountains and conquered the region then called Tarraconensis. By marriage, the Visigoth ruler mediated a settlement with Rome to rule the region they called Hispania. Barcino remain an important provincial centre of the Visigoth kingdom because of its excellent defensive walls. Then after the death of Visigoth ruler against the Franks in 507, his successor Gesalec (507–511) moved the capital from Tolosa to Barcino. More wars removed its capital status by 573. The language spoken at the time was Vulgar Latin, including by the Visigoth rulers who were Latinised. Over time, the Latinized city name evolved to "Barchinona."
The Crusade forces of change were underway and 717, the Arabs conquered Spain. Barchinona surrendered peacefully and was spared devastation. Under Moorish rule in Barchinona, the cathedral was converted into a mosque. Taxes were levied on non-Muslims, but religious freedom and civil government was largely respected.
Louis the Pious, son of Charlemagne, captured the city in 801 for the Franks. The area came to be called "Barcelona" and remained under the rule of French Counts for centuries. As French influence in government, language, art and commerce grew, the Catalan people felt more deprived of their own state, in many ways, than when they lived under Moorish rule. The city of Barcelona became the largest settlement in Catalonia, which ceame an important province of the emerging country of Spain.
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||