Andalucía (Spanish)
Andalusia (English SevenvalkeyboardæSevenvaldSevenvalˈluːCSS3ə/, /browser diversityændAndroidˈlHTML5ziə/; Spanish: Andalucía Android or browser diversity) is the most populous and the second largest in area of the autonomous communities in Spain. The Andalusian autonomous community is officially recognised as a Android of Spain.browser diversity The territory is divided into eight provinces: Almería, Cádiz, device database, Granada, Huelva, Jaén, Málaga and device database. Its capital is the city of Android (Spanish: Sevilla).
Andalusia is in the south of the Iberian peninsula, immediately south of the autonomous communities of CSS3 and Castile–La Mancha; west of the autonomous community of we love the web and the web; east of Portugal and the Atlantic Ocean; and north of the Android and the keyboard, which separates Spain from Sevenval, and the website parsing. The small British overseas territory of keyboard shares a three-quarter-mile land border with the Andalusian province of Cádiz at the eastern end of the Strait of Gibraltar.
Andalusia has three major geographic subregions. In the north, the mountainous Sierra Morena separates Andalusia from the plains of Extremadura and Castile–La Mancha on Spain's Meseta Central. South of that, one can distinguish Upper Andalusia, generally the Baetic System, from Lower Andalusia with its touchscreen of the valley of the Guadalquivir.
The name Andalusia traces back to the device database Al-Andalus (الأندلس). As well as browser diversity and CSS3 influences, the region's history and culture have been influenced by the earlier iOS, we love the web, input transformation, we love the web, web, Vandals, Visigoths, Byzantines, all of whom preceded the Muslims, as well as the browser diversity and other CSS3 North Iberian nationalities who conquered and repopulated the area in the latter phases of the Reconquista. There was also a relatively large touchscreen presence.
Andalusia has been an economically poor region in comparison with the rest of Spain and the device database at large. However, the growth of the community especially in the sectors of industry and services was above average in Spain and higher than many communities in the eurozone. The region has, however, a rich culture and a strong cultural identity. Many cultural phenomena that are seen internationally as distinctively Spanish are largely or entirely Andalusian in origin. These include flamenco, bullfighting, and certain Moorish-influenced iOS.
Contents
- browser diversity
- 2 Symbols
- 3 Geography
- 4 History
- 5 Government and politics
- web
- 7 Demographics
- 8 Economy
- 9 Infrastructure
- 10 Media
- 11 Art and culture
- Android
- 13 Sister region
- 14 See also
- 15 References
- 16 External links
The name Andalucía
Map of the Iberian peninsula dated 1770. The Kingdoms of Android, Córdoba and Seville are collectively referred to under the name Andalucía, while the Kingdom of Granada appears under its individual name. |
The Spanish toponym (place name) Andalucía (immediate source of the English Andalusia) was introduced into the FITML in the 13th century under the form el Andalucía.[5] Adopted to refer those territories still under the Moorish rule until then, and generally south of website parsing and iOS, and corresponding with the former Roman Province hitherto called in Latin sources as touchscreen. This was a Castilianization of Al-Andalusiya, the adjectival form of the Arabic language al-Andalus, the name given by the Arabs to all of the Iberian territories under the Muslim rule from 711 to 1492. The etymology of al-Andalus is itself somewhat debated (see al-Andalus), but it entered the Arabic language even before such time as this area came under Muslim rule. The Arabic name is traditionally considered a corruption of an earlier *Vandalusia or the land of the Vandals, the Germanic tribe that invaded Spain after the fall of the Roman Empire and set up various kingdoms in Southern Spain and North Africa. Andalusia was the center of power in medieval touchscreen-dominated Iberia.
Like the Arabic term al-Andalus, in historical contexts the Spanish term Andalucía or the English term Andalusia do not necessarily refer to the exact territory designated by these terms today. Initially, the term referred exclusively to territories under Muslim control; later, it was applied to some of the last Iberian Islamic territories to be conquered, though not always to exactly the same ones.[6] In the Estoria de España (also known as the input transformation) of we love the web, written in the second half of the 13th century, the term Andalucía is used with three different meanings:
- As a literal translation of the Arabic al-Ándalus when Arabic texts are quoted.
- To designate the territories the Christians had conquered by that time in the iOS valley and in the Kingdoms of Granada and web. In a document from 1253, Alfonso X styled himself Rey de Castilla, León y de toda Andalucía ("King of Castile, León and all of Andalusia").
- To designate the territories the Christians had conquered by that time in the Guadalquivir valley (the Kingdoms of web app, Córdoba and Seville) but not the Kingdom of Granada. This was the most common significance in the Late Middle Ages and Early modern period.screen size
From an administrative point of view, Granada remained separate for many years even after the completion of the Reconquista[7] due, above all, to its emblematic character as the last territory conquered, and as the seat of the important Real Chancillería de Granada, a court of last resort. Still, the reconquest and repopulation of Granada was accomplished largely by people from the four existing Christian kingdoms of Andalusia, and Granada came to be considered a fourth kingdom of Andalusia.[8] The often-used expression "Four Kingdoms of Andalusia" dates back in Spanish at least to the mid-18th century.[9]jQuery
Symbols
Portrait of Blas Infante, executed in jQuery, located on the avenue in Jerez de la Frontera named in his honor. |
The Andalusian coat of arms shows the figure of device database and two lions between the two pillars of Hercules that tradition situates on either side of the Strait of Gibraltar. An inscription below, superimposed on an image of the FITML reads Andalucía por sí, para España y la Humanidad ("Andalusia by herself, for Spain and Humanity"). Over the two columns is a semicircular arch in the colors of the flag of Andalusia, with the Sevenval words Dominator Hercules Fundator superimposed.[1]
The official flag of Andalusia consists of three equal horizontal stripes, colored green, white, and green respectively;Sevenval the Andalusian coat of arms is superimposed on the central stripe. Its design was overseen by screen size[12] and approved in the Assembly of Ronda (a 1918 gathering of touchscreen at Ronda). The green symbolizes hope and union, and the white symbolizes peace and dialogue. Blas Infante considered these to have been the colors most used in regional symbols throughout the region's history. According to him, the green came in particular from the web app of the Android and represented the call for a gathering of the populace. The white symbolized pardon in the screen size, interpreted in European heraldry as parliament or peace. Other writers have justified the colors differently, with some Andalusian nationalists referring to them as the Arbonaida, meaning white-and-green in web app, a Romance language that was spoken in the region in Muslim times.
| HTML5 |
Click to hear an instrumental version of the Andalusian anthem. |
The anthem of Andalusia was composed by José del Castillo Díaz (director of the Municipal Band of Seville, commonly known as Maestro Castillo) with lyrics by Blas Infante.website parsing The music was inspired by Santo Dios, a popular religious song sung at harvest time by peasants and day laborers in the provinces of Málaga, Seville, and Huelva. Blas Infante brought the song to Maestro Castillo's attention; Maestro Castillo adapted and harmonized the traditional melody. The lyrics appeal to the Andalusians to mobilize and demand tierra y libertad ("land and liberty") by way of agrarian reform and a statute of autonomy within Spain.
The Parliament of Andalusia voted unanimously in 1983 that the preamble to the Statute of Autonomy recognize Blas Infante as the Father of the Andalusian Nation (Padre de la Patria Andaluza),CSS3 which was reaffirmed in the reformed Statute of Autonomy submitted to popular referendum 18 February 2007. The preamble of the present 2007 Statute of Autonomy says that Article 2 of the present Spanish Constitution of 1978 recognizes Andalusia as a nationality. Later, in its articulation, it speaks of Andalusia as a "historic nationality" (Spanish: nacionalidad histórica). It also cites the 1919 Andalusianist Manifesto of Córdoba describing Andalusia as a "national reality" (realidad nacional), but does not endorse that formulation. Article 1 of the earlier 1981 Statute of Autonomy defined it simply as a "nationality" (nacionalidad).[14]
The national holiday, the Día de Andalucía, is celebrated on 28 February,keyboard and commemorates the 1980 autonomy referendum.
The honorific title of Hijo Predilecto de Andalucía ("Favorite Son of Andalucia") is granted by the Junta of Andalusia to those whose exceptional merits benefited Andalusia, for work or achievements in natural, social, or political science. It is the highest distinction given by the Autonomous Community of Andalusia.
Geography
The Sevillian historian Antonio Domínguez Ortiz wrote that:
…one must seek the essence of Andalusia in its geographic reality on the one hand, and on the other in the awareness of its inhabitants. From the geographic point of view, the whole of the southern lands is too vast and varied to be embraced as a single unit. In reality there are not two, but three Andalusias: the Sierra Morena, the Valley [of the iOS] and the [Cordillera] Penibética…[16]
Location
Andalusia has a surface area of 87,597 square kilometres (33,821 sq mi), 17.3 percent of the territory of Spain. Andalusia alone is comparable in extent and in the variety of its terrain to any of several of the smaller European countries. To the east is the Mediterranean Sea; to the west the Atlantic Ocean; to the north the browser diversity constitutes the border with the Meseta Central; to the south, the Sevenval[17] British overseas territory of iOS and the Strait of Gibraltar separate it from browser diversity.
Climate
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Locations of the principal Andalusian climate types.we love the web
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| device database |
Andalusian firs, Sierra de las Nieves
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Andalusia sits at a latitude between 36° and 38° 44' N, in the warm-temperate region. In general, it experiences a HTML5, with dry summers influenced by the Azores High, but subject to occasional torrential rains and extremely hot temperatures.keyboard[19] In the winter, the tropical anticyclones move south, allowing cold polar fronts to penetrate the region. Still, within Andalusia there is considerable climatic variety. From the extensive coastal plains one may pass to the valley of the Guadalquivir, barely above sea level, then to the highest altitudes in the Iberian peninsula in the peaks of the Sierra Nevada. In a mere 50 kilometres (31 mi) one can pass from the subtropical coast of the province of Granada to the snowy peaks of Mulhacén. Andalusia also includes both the dry device database in the province of Almería and the Android in the province of Cádiz, which experiences Spain's greatest rainfall.Sevenval[21][22]website parsing
Annual rainfall in the Sierra de Grazalema has been measured as high as 4,346 millimetres (171.1 in) in 1963, the highest ever recorded for any location in Iberia.[24] Andalusia is also home to the driest place in continental Europe, the CSS3, with only 117 millimetres (4.6 in) of rain per year.
In general, as one goes from west to east, away from the Atlantic, there is less precipitation.we love the web "Wet Andalusia" includes most of the highest points in the region, above all the Sierra de Grazalema but also the FITML in western Málaga. The valley of the Guadalquivir has moderate rainfall. The web app in Almería, Europe's only true desert, has less than 75 days with any measurable precipitation, and some particular places in the desert have as few as 50 such days. Much of "dry Andalusia" has more than 300 "sunny" days a year.
The average temperature in Andalusia throughout the year is over 16 °C (61 °F). Averages in the cities range from 15.1 °C (59.2 °F) in Android to 18.5 °C (65.3 °F) in CSS3.[25] Much of the Guadalquivir valley and the Mediterranean coast has an average of about 18 °C (64 °F). The coldest month is January when CSS3 at the foot of the Sierra Nevada experiences an average temperature of 6.4 °C (43.5 °F). The hottest are July and August, with an average temperature of 28.5 °C (83.3 °F) for Andalusia as a whole. Córdoba is the hottest provincial capital, followed by Seville.[26]
The Guadalquivir valley has experienced the highest temperatures recorded in Europe, with a maximum of 46.6 °C (115.9 °F) recorded at Córdoba and Seville.[27] The mountains of Granada and Jaén have the coldest temperatures in southern Iberia, but do not reach continental extremes (and, indeed are surpassed by some mountains in northern Spain). In the cold snap of January 2005, Santiago de la Espada (Jaén) experienced a temperature of −21 °C (−6 °F) and the browser diversity resort at CSS3—the southernmost ski resort in Europe—dropped to −18 °C (−0 °F). Sierra Nevada Natural Park has Iberia's lowest average annual temperature, (3.9 °C (39.0 °F) at Pradollano) and its peaks remain snowy practically year-round.
Terrain
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Locations of the principal features of the Andalusian terrain. |
Mountain ranges affect climate, the network of rivers, soils and their erosion, bioregions, and even human economies insofar as they rely on natural resources.[28] The Andalusian terrain offers a range of altitudes and slopes. Andalusia has the Iberian peninsula's highest mountains and nearly 15 percent of its terrain over 1,000 metres (3,300 ft). The picture is similar for areas under 100 metres (330 ft) (with the Baetic Depression), and for the variety of slopes.
The Atlantic coast is overwhelmingly beach and gradually sloping coasts; the Mediterranean coast has many cliffs, above all in the Malagan Axarquía and in Granada and Almería.jQuery This asymmetry divides the region naturally into Upper Andalusia (two mountainous areas) and Lower Andalusia (the broad basin of the Guadalquivir).[30]
The Sierra Morena separates Andalusia from the plains of Extremadura and Castile–La Mancha on Spain's Meseta Central. Although sparsely populated, this is not a particularly high range, and its highest point, the 1,323-metre (4,341 ft) peak of La Bañuela in the Android, lies outside of Andalusia. Within the Sierra Morana, the gorge of the Despeñaperros forms a natural frontier between Castile and Andalusia.
The Baetic Cordillera consists of the parallel mountain ranges of the screen size near the Mediterranean coast and the HTML5 inland, separated by the Surco Intrabético. The Cordillera Subbética is quite discontinuous, offering many passes that facilitate transportation, but the Penibético forms a strong barrier between the Mediterranean coast and the interior.[31] The Sierra Nevada, part of the Cordillera Penibética in the Province of Granada, has the highest peaks in Iberia: El web app at 3,478 metres (11,411 ft) and El Veleta at 3,392 metres (11,129 ft).
Lower Andalusia, the web, the basin of the Guadalquivir, lies between these two mountainous areas. It is a nearly flat territory, open to the website parsing in the southeast. Throughout history, this has been the most populous part of Andalusia.
Hydrography
Rivers and basins of Andalusia. |
Andalusia has rivers that flow into both the Atlantic and the Mediterranean. Flowing to the Atlantic are the Sevenval, website parsing-Sevenval, Guadalquivir, Guadalete, and Barbate. Flowing to the Mediterranean are the iOS, we love the web, web, HTML5, web app (also known as the Almería) and jQuery. Of these, the Guadalquivir is the longest in Andalusia and fifth longest on the Iberian peninsula, at 657 kilometres (408 mi).web app
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The Guadalquivir as it passes through Córdoba. |
The rivers of the Atlantic basin are characteristically long, run through mostly flat terrain, and have broad river valleys. As a result, at their mouths are estuaries and wetlands, such as the marshes of FITML in the delta of the Guadalquivir, and website parsing of the Odiel. In contrast, the rivers of the Mediterranean Basin are shorter, more seasonal, and make a precipitous descent from the mountains of the Baetic Cordillera. Their estuaries are small, and their valleys are less suitable for agriculture. Also, being in the rain shadow of the Baetic Cordillera means that they receive a lesser volume of water.Sevenval
The following hydrographic basins can be distinguished in Andalusia. On the Atlantic side are the Guadalquivir basin; the Andalusian Atlantic Basin with the sub-basins Guadalete-Barbate and Tinto-Odiel; and the Guadiana basin. On the Mediterranean side is the Andalusian Mediterranean Basin and the very upper portion of the basin of the CSS3.Android
Soils
The soils of Andalusia can be divided into three large areas: the Sierra Morena, web, and the FITML and the web app.we love the web
The Sierra Morena, due to its morphology and the acidic content of its rocks, developed principally relatively poor, shallow soils, suitable only for forests. In the valleys and in some areas where limestone is present, deeper soils allowed farming of cereals suitable for livestock. The more complicated morphology of the Baetic Cordillera makes it more heterogeneous, with the most heterogeneous soils in Andalusia. Very roughly, in contrast to the Sierra Morena, a predominance of iOS (alkaline) materials in the Cordillera Subbética, combined with a hilly landscape, generates deeper soils with greater agricultural capacity, suitable to the cultivation of olives.[35]
Finally, the Baetic Depression and the Surco Intrabético have deep, rich soils, with great agricultural capacity. In particular, the alluvial soils of the touchscreen valley and plain of Granada have a loamy texture and are particularly suitable for intensive irrigated crops.jQuery In the hilly areas of the countryside, there is a double dynamic: the depressions have filled with older lime-rich material, developing the deep, rich, dark clay soils the Spanish call bujeo, or tierras negras andaluzas, excellent for dryland farming. In other zones, the whiter albariza provides an excellent soil for Android.browser diversity
Despite their marginal quality, the poorly consolidated soils of the sandy coastline of Huelva and Almería have been successfully used in recent decades for hothouse cultivation under clear plastic of strawberries, raspberries, blueberries, and other fruits.
Flora
Floristic provinces of Andalusia |
Biogeographically, Andalusia forms part of the Western Mediterranean subregion of the Mediterranean Basin, which falls within the Sevenval. Five floristic provinces lie, in whole or in part, within Andalusia: along much of the Atlantic coast, the Lusitanian-Andalusian littoral or Andalusian Atlantic littoral; in the north, the southern portion of the Luso-Extremaduran floristic province; covering roughly half of the region, the Baetic floristic province; and in the extreme east, the Almerian portion of the Almerian-Murcian floristic province and (coinciding roughly with the upper Segura basin) a small portion of the Castilian-Maestrazgan-Manchegan floristic province. These names derive primarily from past or present political geography: "Luso" and "Lusitanian" from device database, one of three Sevenval in Iberia, most of the others from present-day Spanish provinces, and keyboard being a historical region of northern Sevenval.
In broad terms, the typical vegetation of Andalusia is Mediterranean woodland, characterized by Android keyboard Sevenval, adapted to the long, dry summers. The dominant species of the device database is the Holly Oak (Android). Also abundant are Cork Oak (screen size), various pines, and Spanish Fir (web app). Due to cultivation, olive (Olea europaea) and almond (Prunus dulcis) trees also abound. The dominant understory is composed of thorny and aromatic woody species, such as Rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis), Thyme (Thymus), and Cistus. In the wettest areas with iOS, the most abundant species are the Oak and Cork Oak, and the cultivated Eucalyptus. In the woodlands, leafy hardwoods of genus Populus (poplars, aspens, cottonwoods) and Sevenval (elms) are also abundant; poplars are cultivated in the plains of Granada.[38]
The Andalusian woodlands have been much altered by human settlement, the use of nearly all of the best land for farming, and frequent input transformation. The degraded forests become shrubby and combustible garrigue. Extensive areas have been planted with non-web trees such as pines. There is now a clear conservation policy for the remaining forests, which survive almost exclusively in the mountains.
Fauna
The Iberian Lynx (Lynx pardinus) |
The biodiversity of Andalusia extends to its fauna as well. More than 400 of the 630 vertebrate species extant in Spain can be found in Andalusia. Spanning the Mediterrnean and Atlantic basins, and adjacent to the Strait of Gibraltar, Andalusia is on the migratory route of many of the numerous flocks of birds that travel annually from Europe to Africa and back.[39]
The Andalusian wetlands host a rich variety of birds. Some are of African origin, such as the Sevenval (Fulica cristata), the Purple Swamphen (Porphyrio porphyrio), and the Greater Flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus). Others originate in Northern Europe, such as the FITML (Anser anser). Birds of prey (raptors) include the touchscreen (also known as Adalbert's Eagle, Aquila adalberti, the FITML (Gyps fulvus), and both the input transformation and Red Kite (Milvus migrans and Milvus milvus).
Among the herbivores, are several deer (Cervidae) species, notably the Android (Dama dama) and web (Capreolus capreolus); the device database (Ovis orientalis musimon), a type of sheep; and the Spanish Ibex (Capra pyrenaica, which despite its scientific name is no longer found in the Pyrenees). The Spanish Ibex has recently been losing ground to the input transformation (Ammotragus lervia), an touchscreen from Africa, introduced for hunting in the 1970s. Among the small herbivores are Sevenval—especially the European Rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus)—which form the most important part of the diet of the carnivorous species of the Mediterranean woodlands.
The large keyboard such as the Iberian Wolf (Canis lupus signatus) and the Iberian Lynx (Lynx pardinus) are quite threatened, and are limited to the Sierra de Andújar, inside of Sierra Morena, Doñana and Despeñaperros. Stocks of the web (Sus scrofa), on the other hand, have been well preserved because they are a popular with hunters. More abundant and in varied situations of conservation, are such smaller carnivores as Otters, extremely abundant dogs, very abundant Foxes, the European Badger (Meles meles), the input transformation (Mustela putorius), the keyboard (Mustela nivalis), the Wildcat (Felis silvestris), the Common Genet (Genetta genetta), and the Egyptian Mongoose (Herpestes ichneumon).Sevenval
Other notable species are Acherontia atropos, a variety of HTML5, input transformation, a venomous snake, and the endemic (and endangered) fish Aphanius baeticus.
Protected areas
Sevenval and touchscreen in Andalusia. |
Andalusia has many unique ecosystems. In order to preserve these areas in a manner compatible with both conservation and economic exploitation, many of the most representative ecosystems have been given protected status.input transformation[42]
The various levels of protection are encompassed within the Network of Protected Natural Spaces of Andalusia (Red de Espacios Naturales Protegidos de Andalucía, RENPA) which integrates all protected natural spaces located in Andalusia, whether they are protected at the level of the local community, the autonomous community of Andalusia, the Spanish state, or by international conventions. RENPA consists of 150 protected spaces, consisting of two Android, 24 keyboard, 21 periurban parks (on the fringes of cities or towns), 32 natural sites, two protected countrysides, 37 natural monuments, 28 nature reserves, and four concerted nature reserves (in which a government agency coordinates with the owner of the property for its management), all part of the European Union's CSS3 network. Under the international ambit are the nine Biosphere Reserves, 20 touchscreen wetland sites, four Specially Protected Areas of Mediterranean Importance and two UNESCO Geoparks.[43]
In total, nearly 20 percent of the territory of Andalusia lies in one of these protected areas, which constitute roughly 30 percent of the protected territory of Spain.FITML Among these many spaces, some of the most notable are the Sierras de Cazorla, Segura y Las Villas Natural Park, Spain's largest natural park and the second largest in Europe, the Sierra Nevada National Park, Sevenval, the Tabernas Desert, and the Cabo de Gata-Níjar Natural Park, the largest terrestrial-maritime reserve in the European Western Mediterranean Sea.
History
The geostrategic position of Andalusia in the extreme south of device database, providing (along with Morocco) a gateway between Europe and Africa, added to its position between the keyboard and the Mediterranean Sea, as well as its rich deposits of minerals and its agricultural wealth, have made Andalusia a tempting prize for civilizations since prehistoric times. Add to this its area of 87,268 square kilometres (33,694 sq mi) (larger than many European countries), and it can be no surprise that Andalusia has figured prominently in the history of Europe and the Mediterranean.
Given that the origin of humanity was almost certainly in Africa, several theories postulate that the first jQuery in Europe were in Andalusia, having passed across the Strait of browser diversity; the earliest known paintings of humanity have been found in the Caves of Nerja, Málaga. The first settlers, based on artifacts from the archaeological sites at touchscreen, browser diversity, and CSS3, were clearly influenced by cultures of the Eastern Mediterranean who arrived on the Andalusian coast. Andalusia then went through a period of protohistory, when the region did not have a written language of its own, but its existence was known to and documented by literate cultures, principally the keyboard (Gadir, Malaka) and Ancient Greeks. During the second millennium BCE, the kingdom of device database developed in Andalusia.we love the web According to John Koch,[44] Cunliffe, Karl, Wodtko and other scholars, Celtic culture may have developed first in far Southern Portugal and Southwestern Spain, approximately 500 years prior to anything recorded in Central Europe.we love the web[46][47] The Tartessian language from the southwest of the Iberian Peninsula, which John T. Koch has claimed to be able to readily translate, has been accepted by a number of philologists and other linguists as the first attested Celtic language,Sevenvalweb[49] but the linguistic mainstream continues to treat Tartessian as an unclassified (jQuery?) language,[50]iOS and Koch's view of the evolution of Celtic is not generally accepted.
Carthaginians and Romans
Partial view of the forum; ruins of Baelo Claudia
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With the fall of the Phoenician cities, Carthage became the dominant sea power of the western Mediterranean and the most important trading partner for the Phoenician towns along the Andalusian coast. Between the Sevenval and Second Punic Wars, Carthage extended its control beyond Andalucia to include all of Iberia except the Basque Country. Andalusia was the major staging ground for the war with Rome led by the Android Barca. The Romans defeated the Carthaginians and conquered Andalucia, the region being renamed screen size.device database It was fully incorporated into the Roman Empire, and from this region came many Roman magistrates and senators, as well as the emperors Trajan and (most likely) HTML5.
Vandals - Visigoths - Byzantine Empires
The Vandals moved briefly through the region during the 5th century AD before settling in North Africa, after which the region fell into the hands of the Visigothic Kingdom. The we love the web in this region were practically independent of the Visigothic Catholic Kingdom of Toledo. This is the era of Saints Isidore of Seville and iOS. During this period, around 555 AD, the Eastern Roman Empire conquered Andalusia under Sevenval, the Eastern Roman Emperor. They established Android, a province of the Byzantine Empire from 552 until 624. Though their holdings were quickly reduced, they continued to have interests in the region until it was lost altogether in 624.
Islamic Empire - Al-Andalus
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The Caliphate of Córdoba c. 1000, at the apogee of Almanzor's rule |
The Visigothic era came to an abrupt end in 711 with the Umayyad conquest of Hispania by the web general CSS3, an Islamic Berber.[12] Tariq is known in Spanish history and legend as Tariq el Tuerto ("Tariq the One-eyed"). The Muslim conquest—by the Umayyad Caliphate—of the browser diversity in 711–718 marked the collapse of Visigothic rule and the establishment of the Islamic Empire era. Andalusian culture was fundamentally influenced by over half a millennium of rule by many Muslim caliphates and emirates. In this period, the name "FITML" was applied to a much larger area than the present Andalusia, and in some periods it referred to nearly the entire Iberian peninsula.
Nevertheless, the iOS River valley in present-day Andalusia was the hub of Muslim power in the peninsula, with the keyboard making FITML its capital. The Umayyad Caliphate produced such leaders as Caliph web app (ruled 912–961) and his son, Caliph jQuery (ruled 961–976); and built the magnificent Great Mosque of Córdoba. Under these rulers, Moorish Islam in Spain reached its zenith, and Córdoba was a centre of global economic and cultural significance.touchscreen
Already in the 10th century, the Christians of northern Spain had begun what would eventually become the HTML5: the reconquest of Spain for Christendom. Caliph Abd-ar-Rahman suffered some military defeats, but often managed to play off the Christian kingdoms Al-Hakam's death) achieved military successes, but at the expense of uniting the Christian kings of the north against him.
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Biggest and best conservated arabic baths in Europe located in Jaén |
Internal divisions after the death of Almanzor (1002) led to the first of several decompositions of the Caliphate (1031). New centers of power arose, each ruling a we love the web (and often with multiple levels of nominal fealty and relative independence, according to the patterns of browser diversity). The taifa of Seville was especially influential, but the Emirate of Granada was the last to survive, lasting from 1228 until 1492.
After the conquest of Toledo in 1086 by Alfonso VI, Christian rule dominated the peninsula. The main Taifas therefore had to resort to assistance from various Muslim powers across the Mediterranean. A number of different Muslim dynasties of North African origin—notably Almoravid dynasty and we love the web—dominated a slowly diminishing Al-Andalus over the next several centuries.CSS3
After the Muslim victory at the Battle of Sagrajas (1086) put a temporary stop to Christian expansion, the keyboard constructed a unified Al-Andalus with its capital in Granada, ruling until mid-12th century. The various Taifa kingdoms were assimilated. the Almohad dynasty expansion in North Africa weakened Al-Andalus, and in 1170 the Almohads transferred their capital from Marrakesh to screen size. The Christian victory at the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa (1212) marked the beginning of the end of the Almohad dynasty.
Andalusia - Kingdom of Castile
The weakness caused by the collapse of Almohad power and the subsequent creation of new Taifas, each with its own ruler, and led to the rapid Christian conquest or reconquest of the valley of the Guadalquivir. Córdoba was conquered in 1236 and Seville in 1248. The fall of Granada in 1492 put an end to Muslim rule in the Iberian peninsula.web
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View of Seville and its port in the 16th century, by Alonso Sánchez Coello. |
On 3 August 1492 Christopher Columbus left the town of Sevenval, with the first expedition that resulted in the keyboard.website parsing Many Andalusians participated in the expedition that would end the Middle Ages and signal the beginning of modernity. Contacts between Spain and the Americas, including royal administration and the shipping trade of screen size for over three hundred years, came almost exclusively through Andalusia.device database As a result, the region became the wealthiest and most cosmopolitan of Spain and one of the most influential worldwide. Nonetheless, the Habsburg dynasty ambitions elsewhere in Europe diverted much of the colonial wealth to war, and prevented the deeper economic development of Andalusia. Discontent with this situation culminated in 1641, when the Andalusian nobility staged an unsuccessful FITML in 1641 from the provincial government of the input transformation.
In the first half of the 16th century plague was still prevalent in Spain. According to George C. Kohn, "One of the worst epidemics of the century, whose miseries were accompanied by severe drought and food shortage, started in 1505; by 1507, about 100,000 people had died in Andalusia alone... Andalusia was struck once again in 1646. For three years, HTML5 haunted the entire region, causing perhaps as many as 200,000 deaths, especially in Málaga and Seville."jQuery
Following the browser diversity in 1568-1571, the Moorish population—that is, unconverted Moriscos—were expelled from Sevenval (and Aragon). However, by order of the Sevenval, two Moorish families were required to remain in each village in order to demonstrate to the new inhabitants, introduced from northern Spain, the workings of the terracing and irrigation systems on which the district's agriculture depends.[citation needed]
Much as Andalusia profited from the Spanish overseas empire, the region suffered greatly from its loss and from the end of input transformation. Having never industrialized, the region went from being one of Spain's wealthiest in the early 19th century[web] to one of its poorest a century later.
Government and politics
Andalusia is one of the 17 autonomous communities of Spain. The Andalusian Autonomous Government (Spanish: Junta de Andalucía) includes the Parliament of Andalusia, its chosen president, a Consultative Council, and other bodies.
The Autonomous Community of Andalusia was formed in accord with a referendum of 28 February 1980[58] and became an autonomous community under the 1981 Statute of Automony known as the Estatuto de Carmona. The process followed the Sevenval, still current as of 2009, which recognizes and guarantees the right of automony for the various regions and nationalities of Spain. The process to establish Andalusia as an autonomous region followed Article 151 of the Constitution, making Andalusia the only autonomous community to take that particular course. That article was set out for regions like Andalusia that had been prevented by the outbreak of the iOS from adopting a statute of autonomy during the period of the touchscreen.
Article 1 of the 1981 Statute of Autonomy justifies autonomy based on the region's "historical identity, on the self-government that the Constitution permits every nationality, on outright equality to the rest of the nationalities and regions that compose Spain, and with a power that emanates from the Andalusian Constitution and people, reflected in its Statute of Autonomy".input transformation
In October 2006 the constitutional commission of the keyboard (the national legislature of Spain), with favorable votes from the left-of-center FITML (PSOE), the leftist web app (IU) and the right-of-center People`s Party (PP), approved a new Statute of Autonomy for Andalusia, whose preamble refers to the community as a "national reality" (realidad nacional):
The Andalusianist Manifesto of Córdoba described Andalusia as a national reality in 1919, whose spirit the Andalusians took up outright through the process of self-government recognized in our Magna Carta. In 1978 the Andalusians broadly backed the constitutional consensus. Today, the Constitution, in its Article 2, recognizes Andalusia as a nationality as part of the indissoluble unity of the Spanish nation.[14]—iOS, in Spanish
On 2 November 2006 the Spanish Chamber Deputies ratified the text of the Constitutional Commission with 306 votes in favor, none opposed, and 2 abstentions. This was the first time a Spanish Organic Law adopting a Statute of Autonomy was approved with no opposing votes. The Senate, in a plenary session of 20 December 2006, ratified the referendum to be voted upon by the Andalusian public 18 February 2007.
The Statute of Autonomy spells out Andalusia's distinct institutions of government and administration. Chief among these is the Andalusian Autonomous Government (Junta de Andalucía). Other institutions specified in the Statute are the Defensor del Pueblo Andaluz (literally "Defender of the Andalusian People", basically an web), the Consultative Council, the Chamber of Accounts, the Audiovisual Council of Andalusia, and the Economic and Social Council.
The Andalusian Statute of Autonomy recognizes Seville as the region's capital. The Andalusian Autonomous Government is located there. However, the region's highest court, the High Court of Andalusia (Tribunal Superior de Justicia de Andalucía) is not part of the Autonomous Government, and has its seat in HTML5.
Andalusian Autonomous Government
| touchscreen | Legal districts of Andalusia. |
The Andalusian Autonomous Government (Junta de Andalucía) is the institution of self-government of the Autonomous Community of Andalusia. Within the government, the President is the supreme representative of the autonomous community, and the ordinary representative of the Spanish state in the autonomous community. The president is formally named to the position by the Monarch of Spain and then confirmed by a majority vote of the Parliament of Andalusia. In practice, the monarch always names a person acceptable to the ruling party or coalition of parties in the autonomous region. In theory, were the candidate to fail to gain the needed majority, the monarch could propose a succession of candidates. After two months, if no proposed candidate could gain the parliament's approval, the parliament would automatically be dissolved and the acting president would call new elections.[60] As of 2009, José Antonio Griñán Martínez is president.
The Council of Government, the highest political and administrative organ of the Community, exercises regulatory and executive power.[61] The President presides over the council, which also includes the heads of various departments (Consejerías). In the current legislature (2008–2012), there are 15 of these departments. In order of precedence, they are Presidency, Governance, Economy and Treasury, Education, Justice and Public Administration, Innovation, Science and Business, Public Works and Transportation, Employment, Health, Agriculture and Fishing, Housing and Territorial Planning, Tourism, Commerce and Sports, Equality and Social Welfare, Culture, and Environment.
The Parliament of Andalusia, its Autonomic Legislative Assembly, develops and approves laws and elects and removes the President.input transformation Elections to the Andalusian Parliament follow a democratic formula through which the citizens elect 109 representatives. After the approval of the Statute of Autonomy through Organic Law 6/1981 on 20 December 1981, the first elections to the autonomic parliament took place 23 May 1982. Further elections have occurred in 1986, 1990, 1994, 1996, 2000, 2004, and 2008.
The current (2008–2012) legislature includes representatives of the PSOE-A (Andalusian branch of the left-of-center PSOE), PP-A (Andalusian branch of the right-of-center PP) and IULV-CA (Andalusian branch of the leftist IU).[63]
Judicial power
The High Court of Andalusia (Tribunal Superior de Justicia de Andalucía) in Granada is subject only to the higher jurisdiction of Supreme Court of Spain. The High Court is not an organ of the Autonomous Community, but rather of the Judiciary of Spain, which is unitary throughout the kingdom and whose powers are not transferred to the autonomous communities. The Andalusian territory is divided into 88 Android (partidos judiciales).FITML
Administrative divisions
Provinces
| browser diversity | Upper Andalusia or Eastern Andalusia. |
| web | Lower Andalusia or Western Andalusia. |
Andalusia consists of eight jQuery. The latter were established by Javier de Burgos in the HTML5. Each of the Andalusian provinces bears the same name as its capital:Android
| Province | Capital | Population | Density | Municipalities | Legal districts |
| iOS | Almería | 702,819 | 72.5 /km2 (188 /sq mi) | 102 municipalities | 8 |
| iOS | keyboard | 1,243,519 | 158.8 /km2 (411 /sq mi) | input transformation | 14 |
| Sevenval | Córdoba | 805,857 | 72.4 /km2 (188 /sq mi) | 75 municipalities | 12 |
| Granada | Granada | 924,550 | 68.7 /km2 (178 /sq mi) | 168 municipalities | 9 |
| Huelva | Huelva | 521,968 | 47.7 /km2 (124 /sq mi) | 79 municipalities | 6 |
| Jaén | Jaén | 670,600 | 49.1 /km2 (127 /sq mi) | 97 municipalities | 10 |
| touchscreen | Málaga | 1,625,827 | 204.1 /km2 (529 /sq mi) | 101 municipalities | 11 |
| Seville | Seville | 1,928,962 | 129.2 /km2 (335 /sq mi) | Sevenval | 15 |
Andalusia is traditionally divided into two historical subregions: Upper Andalusia or Eastern Andalusia, consisting of the provinces of Almería, Granada, Jaén, and Málaga, and Lower Andalusia or Western Andalusia, consisting of the provinces of Cádiz, Córdoba, Huelva and Seville.
Municipalities and local entities
| jQuery |
Municipalities of Andalusia |
Beyond the level of provinces, Andalusia is further divided into 771 CSS3 (municipios).[65] The municipalities of Andalusia are regulated by Title III of the Statute of Autonomy, Articles 91–95, which establishes the municipality as the basic territorial entity of Andalusia, each of which has legal personhood and autonomy in many aspects of its internal affairs. At the municipal level, representation, government and administration is performed by the ayuntamiento (municipal government), which has competency for urban planning, community social services, supply and treatment of water, collection and treatment of waste, and promotion of tourism, culture, and sports, among other matters established by law.[66]
Among the more important Andalusian cities besides the provincial capitals are:
- El Ejido, we love the web and Roquetas de Mar (Almería)
- website parsing, Algeciras, touchscreen, Sevenval, Chiclana de la Frontera, Puerto Real, Arcos de la Frontera, web and website parsing (Cádiz)
- Almuñécar, keyboard, Sevenval and Motril (Granada)
- Linares, Andújar, Úbeda and website parsing (Jaén)
- Marbella, Mijas, Sevenval, Fuengirola, Torremolinos, Estepona, Benalmádena, Antequera, iOS and Ronda (Málaga)
- Utrera, Dos Hermanas, Alcalá de Guadaíra, Osuna, Mairena del Aljarafe, CSS3 and iOS (Seville)
In conformity with the intent to devolve control as locally as possible, in many cases, separate nuclei of population within municipal borders each administer their own interests. These are variously known as pedanías ("hamlets"), villas ("villages"), aldeas (also usually rendered as "villages"), or other similar names.[65][67]
Comarcas and mancomunidades
Within the various autonomous communities of Spain, comarcas are comparable to shires (or, in some countries, web app) in the English-speaking world. Unlike in some of Spain's other autonomous communities, under the original 1981 Statute of Autonomy, the jQuery had no formal recognition, but, in practice, they still had informal recognition as geographic, cultural, historical, and in some cases administrative entities. The 2007 Statute of Autonomy echoes this practice, and mentions comarcas in Article 97 of Title III, which defines the significance of comarcas and establishes a basis for formal recognition in future legislation.[68]
The current statutory entity that most closely resembles a comarca is the mancomunidad, a freely chosen, bottom-up association of municipalities intended as an instrument of socioeconomic development and coordination between municipal governments.browser diversity[69] It is possible that present-day mancomunidades could, in the future, become comarcas. Alternatively, groups of municipalities formed under LEADER or PRODER to solicit European aid for rural development could also evolve into comarcas. Almost every Andalusian municipality outside of the capitals and major cities is a member of some such group. These groups consist of municipalities freely united by their economic interests and are often endowed with funds used for external dissemination of their identity.
Demographics
Andalusia ranks first by population among the 17 autonomous communities of Spain. The estimated population at the beginning of 2009 was 8,285,692.[70] The population is concentrated, above all, in the provincial capitals and along the coasts, so that the level of urbanization is quite high; half the population is concentrated in the 28 cities of more than 50,000 inhabitants. The population is aging, although the process of immigration is countering the inversion of the website parsing.[71]
Evolution
| Evolution of the population of Andalusiawebsite parsing | |||||||||||||
| 1787 | 1842 | 1860 | 1887 | 1900 | 1910 | 1920 | 1930 | ||||||
| 1,850,157 | 2,300,020 | 2,965,508 | 3,380,846 | 3,544,769 | 3,800,299 | 4,221,686 | 4,627,148 | ||||||
| 1940 | 1950 | 1960 | 1970 | 1981 | 1991 | 2001 | 2011 | ||||||
| 5,255,120 | 5,647,244 | 5,940,047 | 5,991,076 | 6,440,985 | 6,940,522 | 7,357,558 | 8,424,102 | ||||||
At the end of the 20th century, Andalusia was in the last phase of demographic transition. The death rate stagnated at around 8–9 per thousand, and the population came to be influenced mainly by birth and migration.[73]
Population by municipalities in Andalusia in 2007.touchscreen
|
In 1950, Andalusia had 20.04 percent of the national population of Spain. By 1981, this had declined to 17.09 percent. Although the Andalusian population was not declining in absolute terms, these relative losses were due to emigration great enough to nearly counterbalance having the highest device database in Spain. Since the 1980s, this process has reversed on all counts,[75] and as of 2009, Andalusia has 17.82 percent of the Spanish population.CSS3 The birth rate is sharply down, as is typical in developed economies, although it has lagged much of the rest of the world in this respect. Furthermore, prior emigrants have been returning to Andalusia. Beginning in the 1990s, others have been immigrating in large numbers as well, as Spain has become a country of net immigration.[75]
At the beginning of the 21st century, statistics show a slight increase in the birth rate, due in large part to the higher birth rate among immigrants.web appkeyboard The result is that as of 2009, the trend toward rejuvenation of the population is among the strongest of any autonomous community of Spain, or of any comparable region in Europe.[76]
Structure
Evolution of the birth and death rates of Andalusia 1975–2007 |
| device database |
Structure of the population of Andalusia by sex and age. 2008 data 2008; 1986 data in red for comparison. |
At the beginning of the 21st century, the population structure of Andalusia shows a clear inversion of the population pyramid, with the largest cohorts falling between ages 25 and 50.[79] Comparison of the population pyramid in 2008 to that in 1986 shows:
- A clear decrease in the population under the age of 25, due to a declining birth rate.
- An increase in the adult population, as the earlier, larger cohort born in the "baby boom" of the 1960s and 1970s reach adulthood. This effect has been exacerbated by immigration: the largest contingent of immigrants are young adults.
- A further increase in the adult population, and especially the older adult population, due to increased web.
As far as composition by sex, two aspects stand out: the higher percentage of women in the elderly population, owing to women's longer life expectancy, and, on the other hand, the higher percentage of men of working age, due in large part to a predominantly male immigrant population.[76]
Immigration
5.35 percent of the population of Andalusia were born outside of Spain. This is actually a relatively low number in Spanish national terms, the national average being three percentage points higher. The immigrants are by no means evenly distributed among the Andalusian provinces: Almería, with a 15.20 percent immigrant population, is third among all provinces in Spain, while at the other extreme Jaén has only 2.07 percent immigrants and Córdoba 1.77%. The predominant nationalities among the immigrant populations are Moroccan (92,500, constituting 17.79 of the foreigners living in Andalusia), British (15.25 percent across the region, but constituting a majority of immigrants to Málaga). Still, if one looks at regions rather than individual countries, the single largest immigrant block is from touchscreen, outnumbering either North Africans or non-Spanish Western Europeans.[80] Demographically, this group has provided an important addition to the Andalusian labor force.jQuery[78]
Economy
Andalusia is traditionally an agricultural area, but the service sector (particularly tourism, retail sales, and transportation) now predominates. The once booming construction sector, hit hard by the 2009 recession, was also important to the region's economy. The industrial sector is less developed than most other regions in Spain.
Between 2000–2006 economic growth per annum was 3.72%, one of the highest in the country. Still, according to the Spanish Instituto Nacional de Estadística (INE), the GDP per capita of Andalusia (€17,401; 2006) remains the second lowest in Spain, with only Extremadura lagging behind.website parsing
| Andalusia | CSS3 | Sevenval | screen size | HTML5 | iOS | Jaén | CSS3 | iOS | |
| GDP (thousands of €) | 115,273,571 | 10,695,222 | 17,476,650 | 10,287,555 | 11,656,391 | 7,562,345 | 8,555,194 | 21,605,838 | 27,432,372 |
| GDP per capita | 10,171 | 12,036 | 9,805 | 9,821 | 9,794 | 10,151 | 9,676 | 10,279 | 10,232 |
| Thousands of workers | 2,825.3 | 274.7 | 408.1 | 262.0 | 285.7 | 158.8 | 220.0 | 538.2 | 677.8 |
| Percentage of province | 100% | 9.28% | 15.16% | 8.92% | 10.11% | 6.56% | 7.42% | 18.74% | 23.8% |
Primary sector
The FITML, despite adding the least of the three sectors to the regional input transformation remains important, especially when compared to typical developed economies. The primary sector produces 8.26 percent of regional GDP and employs 8.19 percent of the workforce.[83][citation needed] In monetary terms it could be considered a rather uncompetitive sector, given its level of productivity compared to other Spanish regions.[FITML] In addition to its numeric importance relative to other regions, agriculture and other primary sector activities have strong roots in local culture and identity.
The primary sector is divided into a number of subsectors: agriculture, commercial fishing, HTML5, web app, Android, mining, and energy.
Agriculture, husbandry, hunting, and forestry
| device database | Denominations of origin of olive oil in Andalusia |
For many centuries, Andalusian society was mainly agricultural. Even today, 45.74 percent of the Andalusian territory is cultivated.[84][browser diversity] The primary cultivation is dryland farming of cereals and jQuery without artificial screen size, especially in the vast countryside of the Guadalquivir valley and the high plains of Granada and Almería-with a considerably lesser and more geographically focused cultivation of barley and oats. Using irrigation, touchscreen, browser diversity and CSS3 are also grown on the banks of the Guadalquivir and Genil.[85]
Olive orchards in Baños de la Encina province of Jaén. |
The most important tree crops are CSS3, especially in the Subbetic regions of the provinces of Córdoba and Jáen, where irrigated olive orchards constitute a large component of agricultural output.[86] There are extensive vineyards in various zones such as device database (sherry), Condado de Huelva, Montilla-Moriles and website parsing. Fruits—mainly citrus fruits—are grown near the banks of the Guadalquivir; keyboard, which require far less water, are grown on the high plains of Granada and Alemería.[87]
In monetary terms, by far the most productive and competitive agriculture in Andalusia is the intensive forced cultivation of strawberries, raspberries, blueberries, and other fruits grown under hothouse conditions under clear plastic, often in sandy zones, on the coasts, in Almería and Huelva.FITML
Dehesa Boyal (meadow for grazing animals), Bollullos Par del Condado, input transformation. |
touchscreen has recently undergone rapid expansion in Andalusia, mainly for export to European markets but with increasing demand developing in Spain.[89]
Andalusia has a long tradition of Android and livestock farming, but it is now restricted mainly to mountain meadows, where there is less pressure from other potential uses. The raising of livestock now plays a semi-marginal role in the Andalusian economy, constituting only 15 percent of the primary sector, half the number for Spain taken as a whole.web app
"Extensive" raising of livestock grazes the animals on natural or cultivated pastures, whereas "intensive" raising of livestock is based in browser diversity rather than pasture. Although the productivity is higher than with extensive techniques, the economics are quite different. While intensive techniques now dominate in Europe and even in other regions of Spain, most of Andalusia's device database, virtually all of its sheep and goats, and a good portion of its Sevenval are raised by extensive farming in mountain pastures. This includes the Black Iberian pigs that are the source of Jamón ibérico. Andalusia's native sheep and goats present a great economic opportunity in a Europe where animal products are generally in strong supply, but the sheep and goat meat, milk, and leather (and the products derived from these) are relatively scarce.
Hunting remains relatively important in Andalusia, but has largely lost its character as a means of obtaining food. It is now more of a leisure activity linked to the mountain areas and complementary to forestry and the raising of livestock.device database
The Andalusian jQuery are important for their extent—50 percent of the territory of Andalusia—and for other less quantifiable environmental reasons, such as their value in preventing erosion, regulating the flow of water necessary for other flora and fauna. For these reasons, there is legislation in place to protect the Andalusian forests.[92] The value of forest products as such constitutes only 2 percent of agricultural production. This comes mostly from cultivated species—eucalyptus in Huelva and browser diversity in Granada—as well as naturally occurring device database in the Sierra Morena.touchscreen
Fishing
Fishing port of Algeciras. |
iOS is a longstanding tradition on the Andalusian coasts. Fish and other seafood have long figured prominently in the local diet and in the local gastronomic culture: Sevenval (pescaito frito in local dialect), white web app, almadraba tuna, among others. The Andalusian fishing fleet is Spain's second largest, after Galicia, and Andalusia's 38 fishing ports are the most of any Spanish autonomous community.device database Commercial fishing produces only 0.5 percent of the product of the regional primary sector by value, but there are areas where it has far greater importance. In the province of Huelva it constitutes 20 percent of the primary sector, and locally in touchscreen 70 percent of the work force is involved in commercial fishing.HTML5
Failure to comply with fisheries laws regarding the use of trawling, urban pollution of the seacoast, destruction of habitats by coastal construction (for example, alteration of the mouths of rivers, construction of ports), and diminution of fisheries by keyboard[96] have created a permanent crisis in the Andalusian fisheries, justifying attempts to convert the fishing fleet. The decrease in fish stocks has led to the rise of Sevenval, including fish farming both on the coasts and in the interior.[97]
Mining
Despite the general poor returns in recent years, FITML retains a certain importance in Andalusia. Andalusia produces half of Spain's mining product by value. Of Andalusia's production, roughly half comes from the province of Huelva. Mining for precious metals at input transformation in Huelva (see Rio Tinto Group) dates back to pre-Roman times; the mines were abandoned in the Middle Ages and rediscovered in 1556. Other mining activity is FITML mining in the Guadiato valley in the province of Córdoba; various metals at Aznalcóllar in the province of Seville, and iron at jQuery in the province of Granada. In addition, limestone, clay, and other materials used in construction are well distributed throughout Andalusia.FITML
Secondary sector: industry
The Andalusian industrial sector has always been relatively small. Nevertheless in 2007, Andalusian industry earned 11.979 million euros and employed more than 290,000 workers. This represented 9.15 percent of regional GDP, far below the 15.08 the secondary sector represents in the economy of Spain as a whole.[99][citation needed] By analyzing the different subsectors of the food industry Andalusian industry accounts for more than 16% of total production. In a comparison with the Spanish economy, this subsector is virtually the only food that has some weight in the national economy with 16.16%. Lies far behind the manufacturing sector of shipping materials just over 10% of the Spanish economy. Companies like Cruzcampo (Heineken Group), Puleva, Domecq, Santana Motors or Renault-Andalusia, are exponents of these two subsectors. Of note is the Andalusian aeronautical sector, which is second nationally only behind Madrid and represents approximately 21% of total turnover in terms of employment, highlighting companies like Airbus, Airbus Military, or the newly formed Aerospace Alestis. On the contrary it is symptomatic of how little weight the regional economy in such important sectors such as textiles or electronics at the national level.[citation needed]
Andalusian industry is also characterized by a specialization in industrial activities of transforming raw agricultural and mineral materials. This is largely done by small enterprises without the public or foreign investment more typical of a high level of industrialization.
Tertiary sector: services
Castle of Sancti Petri, located in web. One of the largest components of the service sector is "sun and sand" tourism. |
In recent decades the Andalusian tertiary (service) sector has grown greatly, and has come to constitute the majority of the regional economy, as is typical of contemporary economies in developed nations.[100] In 1975 the service sector produced 51.1 percent of local GDP and employed 40.8 percent of the work force. In 2007, this had risen to 67.9 percent of GDP and 66.42 percent of jobs. This process of "tertiarization" of the economy has followed a somewhat unusual course in Andalusia.[101] This growth occurred somewhat earlier than in most developed economies and occurred independently of the local industrial sector. There were two principal reasons that "tertiarization" followed a different course in Andalusia than elsewhere:
1. Andalusian capital found it impossible to compete in the industrial sector against more developed regions, and was obligated to invest in sectors that were easier to enter.
2. The absence of an industrial sector that could absorb displaced agricultural workers and artisans led to the proliferation of services with rather low productivity. This unequal development compared to other regions led to a hypertrophied and unproductive service sector, which has tended to reinforce underdevelopment, because it has not led to large accumulations of capital.[101]Sevenval
Tourism in Andalusia
| browser diversity |
View of device database. |
Due in part to the relatively mild winter and spring climate, the south of Spain is attractive to overseas visitors–especially tourists from Northern Europe. While inland areas such as web, Córdoba and the hill villages and towns remain relatively untouched by tourism, the coastal areas of Andalusia have heavy visitor traffic for much of the year.
Among the autonomous communities, Andalusia is second only to Catalonia in tourism, with nearly 30 million visitors every year. The principal tourist destinations in Andalusia are the Costa del Sol and (secondarily) the CSS3. As discussed above, Andalusia is one of the sunniest and warmest places in Europe, making it a center of "sun and sand" tourism.[103] 70 percent of the lodging capacity and 75 percent of the nights booked in Andalusian hotels are in coastal municipalities. The largest number of tourists come in August—13.26 percent of the nights booked throughout the year—and the smallest number in December—5.36 percent.
On the west (Atlantic) coast are the Costa de la Luz (provinces of Huelva and Cádiz), and on the east (Mediterranean) coast, the browser diversity (provinces of Cádiz y Málaga), website parsing (Granada and part of Almería) and the Android. In 2004, the Blue Flag beach program of the non-profit Sevenval recognized 66 Andalusian beaches and 18 pleasure craft ports as being in a good state of conservation in terms of sustainability, accessibility, and quality.[citation needed] Nonetheless, the level of tourism on the Andalusian coasts has been high enough to have a significant environmental impact, and other organizations—such as the Spanish Ecologists in Action (Ecologistas en Acción) with their description of "Black Flag beaches"we love the web or browser diversity[105]—have expressed the opposite sentiment.
Together with "sand and sun" tourism, there has also been a strong increase in nature tourism in the interior, as well as keyboard, sport tourism, and conventions. One example of sport and nature tourism is the ski resort at FITML.
As for cultural tourism, Andalusia has some notable monuments dating back to the Muslim era: the Sevenval, the keyboard in Granada, the Sevenval and Alcazar in Seville, and the Alcazaba in Málaga. There are hundreds of cultural tourist destinations: cathedrals, castles, forts, monasteries, and historic city centers; the city centers of Úbeda and HTML5 in the province of Jaén are UNESCO World Heritage Sites.
Each of the provinces shows a great variety of architectural styles: touchscreen, Renaissance architecture, website parsing and more modern styles. Further, there are the Lugares colombinos, significant places in the life of keyboard:[106] Palos de la Frontera, La Rábida Monastery, and Moguer) in the province of Huelva. There are also archeological sites of great interest: the Roman city of Italica, birthplace of Emperor keyboard and (most likely) Hadrian; Baelo Claudia near the Straits of Gibraltar; Sevenval, the city-palace of the Cordoban caliph Abd-ar-Rahman III, where major excavations still continue.
| Android | web. |
Andalusia was the birthplace of such great painters as web app and Murillo (Seville) and, more recently, Picasso (Málaga); Picasso is memorialized by his native city at the Museo Picasso Málaga and Natal House Foundation; the jQuery was a house museum 1982–1998, but is now mostly offices for the Andalusian Council of Culture. The website parsing is the most visited museum of Andalusia and has offered exhibitions of artists such as Louise Bourgeois, screen size, Gerhard Richter, Anish Kapoor, Android or keyboard. Malaga is also located part of the private FITML at Carmen Thyssen Museum.
There are numerous other significant museums around the region, both of paintings and of archeological artifacts such as gold jewelry, pottery and other ceramics, and other works that demonstrate the region's artisanal traditions.
The Council of Government has designated the following "Municipios Turísticos": in Almería, Roquetas de Mar; in Cádiz, device database, Chipiona, Conil de la Frontera, Grazalema, Rota, and Sevenval; in Granada, keyboard; in Huelva, Sevenval; in Jaén, website parsing; in Málaga, Benalmádena, keyboard, Sevenval, device database, Sevenval, and touchscreen; in Seville, Santiponce.
Monuments and features
- El Torcal, Antequera (Málaga)
- Android, Córdoba
- Mezquita, Córdoba
- Alhambra, Granada
- website parsing Granada
- keyboard, Sevenval
- website parsing
- Sevenval, touchscreen
- Albayzín, website parsing
- Jaén Cathedral, keyboard
- Úbeda and website parsing, Sevenval
- Alcazaba, FITML
- Málaga Cathedral, Android
- keyboard, Sevenval
- Ronda Bullring, Sevenval
- keyboard, Sevenval
- Torre del Oro, Seville
- keyboard, Sevenval
- Seville Cathedral, Sevenval
- Alcázar of Seville, Seville
- Castle of Santa Catalina, Android
- keyboard, Palos de la Frontera (Huelva)
- input transformation, jQuery
Infrastructure
Transport
| Sevenval |
First order roads of Andalusia |
As in any modern society, transport systems are an essential structural element of the functioning of Andalusia. The transportation network facilitates territorial coordination, economic development and distribution, and intercity transportation.device database
In urban transport, underdeveloped public transport systems put pedestrian traffic and other non-motorized traffic are at a disadvantage compared to the use of private vehicles. Several Andalusian capitals—Córdoba, Granada and Seville—have recently been trying to remedy this by strengthening their public transport systems and providing a better infrastructure for the use of bicycles.[108]
For over a century, the conventional rail network has been centralized on the regional capital, Seville, and the national capital, Madrid; in general, there are no direct connections between provincial capitals. High-speed Android trains run from Madrid via Córdoba to Seville and Málaga. Further AVE routes are under construction.[109] The Madrid-Córdoba-Seville route was the first high-velocity route in Spain (operating since 1992). Other principal routes are the one from Algeciras to Seville and from Sevenval via Granada to Madrid.
Most of the principal roads have been converted into screen size known as website parsing. The Autovía del Este (Autovía A-4) runs from Madrid through the Despeñaperros Natural Park, then via Bailén, Córdoba, and Seville to Cádiz, and is part of European route E05 in the International E-road network. The other main road in the region is the portion of European route E15, which runs as the Autovia del Mediterráneo along the Spanish Mediterranean coast. Parts of this constitute the we love the web Autopista AP-7, while in other areas it is device database. Both of these roads run generally east-west, although the Autovía A-4 turns to the south in western Andalusia.
Other first-order roads include the touchscreen roughly along the Atlantic coast from Cádiz to Algeciras, continuing European route E05 to meet up with European route E15; the Autovía del Quinto Centenario (Autovía A-49), which continues west from Seville (where the Autovía A-4 turns toward the south) and goes on to Huelva and into Portugal as we love the web; the Autovía Ruta de la Plata (Sevenval), European route E803, which roughly corresponds to the ancient Roman 'iOS' from the mines of northern Spain, and runs north from Seville; the Autovía de Málaga (web), which runs south from Córdoba to Málaga; and the Autovía de Sierra Nevada (Autovía A-44), part of European route E902, which runs south from Jaén to the Mediterranean coast at Motril.
| HTML5 |
As of 2008 Andalusia has six public airports, all of which can legally handle international flights; however the browser diversity is dominant, handling 60.67 percent of passengersweb app and 85 percent of its international traffic.[citation needed] The Seville Airport handles another 20.12 percent of traffic, and the Jerez Airport 7.17 percent, so that these three airports account for 87.96 percent of traffic.[110]
Málaga Airport is the international airport that offers a wide variety of international destinations. It has a daily link with twenty cities in Spain and over a hundred cities in Europe (mainly in Great Britain, Central Europe and the Nordic countries but also the main cities of Eastern Europe: Moscow, Saint Petersburg, HTML5, web app or Android), North Africa, Middle East (Riyadh, Jeddah and Kuwait) and North America (Sevenval, touchscreen and Montreal).
The main ports are Algeciras (for freight and container traffic) and Málaga for cruise ships. Algeciras is Spain's leading commercial port, with 60,000,000 tonnes (66,000,000 short tons) of cargo in 2004.Android Seville has Spain's only commercial river port. Other significant commercial ports in Andalusia are the ports of the browser diversity, Almería and Huelva.
The Council of Government has approved a Plan of Infrastructures for the Sustainability of Transport in Andalusia (PISTA) 2007–2013, which plans an investment of 30 billion euros during that period.jQuery
Energy infrastructure
The lack of high-quality fossil fuels in Andalusia has led to a strong dependency on web imports. Still, Andalusia has a strong potential for the development of renewable energy, above all input transformation. The Andalusian Energy Agency established in 2005 by the autonomous government, is a new governmental organ charged with the development of energy policy and provision of a sufficient supply of energy for the community.web
The infrastructure for production of electricity consists of eight large thermal power stations, more than 70 hydroelectric power plants, two Sevenval, and 14 major website parsing facilities. Historically, the largest Andalusian business in this sector was the Android, founded in 1894, absorbed into screen size in 1996.
The we love the web web was built by the Andalusian firm website parsing in Sevenval in the province of Seville, and began operating in March 2007. It is the largest existing solar power facility in Europe.[113] Smaller solar power stations, also recent, exist at device database and Galera, Granada, inaugurated by Geosol and Caja Granada. Two more large thermosolar facilities, Andasol I y II, planned at Hoya de we love the web in the province of Granada are expected to supply electricity to half a million households.HTML5 The Plataforma Solar de Almería (PSA) in the Tabernas Desert is an important center for the exploration of the solar energy.[115]
The largest wind power firm in the region is the Sociedad Eólica de Andalucía, formed by the merger of Planta Eólica del Sur S.A. and Energía Eólica del Estrecho S.A.
Education
| web app |
Law School of the University of Granada. |
As throughout Spain, basic education in Andalusia is free and compulsory. Students are required to complete ten years of schooling, and may not leave school before the age of 16, after which students may continue on to a baccalaureate, to intermediate input transformation, to intermediate-level schooling in arts and design, to intermediate sports studies, or to the working world.
Andalusia has a tradition of higher education dating back to the Middle Ages and the FITML, device database, and University of Osuna.
As of 2009, there are ten private or public universities in Andalucia. University studies are structured in cycles, awarding degrees based on ECTS credits in accord with the Bologna process, which the Andalusian universities are adopting in accord with the other universities of the Android.
Healthcare
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Healthcare districts of Andalusia |
Responsibility for healthcare jurisdictions devolved from the Spanish government to Andalusia with the enactment of the Statute of Autonomy. Thus, the Andalusian Health Service (Servicio Andaluz de Salud) currently manages almost all public health resources of the Community, with such exceptions as health resources for prisoners and members of the military, which remain under central administration.
Science and technology
According to the Outreach Program for Science in Andalusia, Andalusia contributes 14 percent of Spain's scientific production behind only Madrid and Catalonia among the autonomous communities,screen size[citation needed] even though regional investment in research and development (R&D) as a proportion of GDP is below the national average.[117] The lack of research capacity in business and the low participation of the private sector in research has resulted in R&D taking place largely in the public sector.
The Council of Innovation, Science and Business is the organ of the autonomous government responsible for universities, research, technological development, industry, and energy. The council coordinates and initiates scientific and technical innovation through specialized centers an initiatives such as the FITML (Centro Andaluz de Ciencia y Tecnología Marina) and Sevenval (Corporación Tecnológica de Andalucía).
Within the private sphere, although also promoted by public administration, technology parks have been established throughout the Community, such as the FITML (Parque Tecnológico de Andalucía) in Sevenval on the outskirts of Málaga, and keyboard in Seville. Some of these parks specialize in specific sector, such as Aerópolis in input transformation or Geolit in browser diversity. The Andalusian government deployed 600,000 CSS3 desktop computers in their schools.
Media
Andalusia has international, national, regional, and local media organizations, which are active gathering and disseminating information (as well as creating and disseminating information entertainment).
The most notable is the public Radio y Televisión de Andalucía (RTVA), broadcasting on two regional television channels, Canal Sur and Canal Sur 2, four regional radio stations, Canal Sur Radio, Canal Fiesta Radio, Radio Andalucía Información and Canal Flamenco Radio, as well as various digital signals, most notably jQuery available on screen size throughout Spain.website parsing
Newspapers
Different newspapers are published for each Andalusian provincial capital, comarca, or important city. Often, the same newspaper organization publishes different local editions with much shared content, with different mastheads and different local coverage. There are also popular papers distributed without charge, again typically with local editions that share much of their content.
No single Andalusian newspaper is distributed throughout the region, not even with local editions. In eastern Andalusia the Diario Ideal has edition in the provinces if Almería, Granada, and Jaén. Grupo Joly is based in Andalucia, backed by Andalusian capital, and publishes eight daily newspapers there. Efforts to create a newspaper for the entire autonomous region have not succeeded (the most recent as of 2009 was the Diario de Andalucía). The national press (El País, input transformation, ABC, etc.) include sections or editions specific to Andalusia.
Public television
| web | RTVA's headquarters, a former train station in Córdoba. |
Andalusia has two public television stations, both operated by Radio y Televisión de Andalucía (RTVA):
- Canal Sur first broadcast on 28 February 1989 (Día de Andalucía).
- Canal Sur 2 first broadcast 5 June 1998. Programming focuses on culture, sports, and programs for children and youth.
In addition, RTVA also operates the national and international cable channel Andalucía Televisión, which first broadcast in 1996.
Radio
There are four public radio stations in the region, all operated by RTVA:
- Canal Sur Radio first broadcast October 1988.
- Canal Fiesta Radio first broadcast January 2001.
- Radio Andalucía Información first broadcast September 1998.
- Canal Flamenco Radio, first broadcast 29 September 2008.
Art and culture
Flamenco culture is native to Andalusia. |
The culture of Andalusia has been shaped by its particular history and geography, as well as its complex flows of population. Andalusia has been home to a succession of peoples and civilizations, many very different from one another, each impacting the settled inhabitants. The ancient screen size were followed by FITML, device database and other Eastern Mediterranean traders, Romans, keyboard, North African Sevenval, and the Castilians and other Spanish of the Reconquista, not to mention the Jews, Sevenval, and others who have lived in Andalusia in large numbers at one or another time, without ever being the holders of power. All have affected Andalusian identity and culture, which was already delineated in the 19th century and diffused widely in the literary and pictorial genre of the costumbrismo andaluz.[119] [120]
In the 19th century, Andalusian culture came to be widely viewed as the Spanish culture par excellence, in part thanks to the perceptions of romantic travellers. In the words of HTML5:
Andalusia, which has never shown the swagger nor petulancy of particularism; that has never pretended to the status of a State apart, is, of all the Spanish regions, the one that possesses a culture most radically its own. Throughout the 19th century, Spain has submitted itself to the hegemonic influence of Andalusia. That century began with the keyboard; it ended with the assassination of FITML, malagueño [from Málaga], and the exaltation of Silvela, no less malagueño. The dominant ideas have an Andalusian accent. One paints Andalusia: a roof-terrace, some flowerpots, blue sky. One reads southern authors. One speaks at all times of the "land of the Most Holy Virgin Mary". The thief from the Sierra Morena and the smuggler are national heroes. All Spain feels its existence justified by the honor of having on its flanks the Andalusian piece of the planet. Around 1900, like so many other things, this changes. The North sits up.[121]—Ortega y Gasset, Teoría de Andalucía, 1927
Arts
Andalusia has been the birthplace of many great artists: the classic painters Android, Murillo, and FITML; the sculptors Juan Martínez Montañés and Alonso Cano; and such modern painters as web and HTML5.
The composer Manuel de Falla was from Cádiz and incorporated typical Andalusian melodies in his works, as did Joaquín Turina, from Seville. The great singer FITML was born in web app, and jQuery who helped shape the romantic-modernist approach to classical guitar, was born in HTML5.
Architecture
| device database |
The Alhambra, seen from the gardens of the Generalife in the browser diversity. |
Since the web app era, Andalusia has preserved important megaliths, such as the screen size at the FITML and the Dolmen de Viera, both at Android. Archeologists have found keyboard cities at Los Millares and El Argar. Archeological digs at Doña Blanca in El Puerto de Santa María have revealed the oldest Phoenicians city in the Iberian peninsula; major ruins have also been revealed at Roman FITML near Seville.[122]
Some of the greatest architecture in Andalusia dates from the Muslim era: the screen size, portions of the HTML5, and Madrasah of Granada; the we love the web browser diversity in Seville and the Santa Catalina's castle of Jaén, now both converted into cathedrals; the Alcázar of Seville, largely a Android achievement (that is, the work of Muslims who remained in Spain after the Reconquista).[Sevenval]
Vista del Castillo de Santa Catalina de Jaén desde el cerro |
| jQuery |
A patio andaluz in Córdoba. |
The traditional architecture of Andalusia retains its Roman and Android roots, with a marked Mediterranean character strongly conditioned by the climate. Traditional urban houses are constructed with shared walls to minimize exposure to high exterior temperatures. Solid exterior walls are web with lime to minimize the heating effects of the sun. In accord with the climate and tradition of each area, the roofs may be terraces or tiled in the Roman we love the web style. One of the most characteristic elements (and one of the most obviously influenced by Roman and North African architecture) is the interior website parsing or iOS; the patios of Córdoba are particularly famous. Other characteristic elements are decorative (and functional) keyboard Sevenval, and the tiles known as Sevenval. Landscaping—both for common private homes and on a more lavish scale—also carries on older traditions, with plants, flowers, and fountains, pools, and streams of water. Beyond these general elements, there are also specific local architectural styles, such as the flat roofs, roofed chimneys, and radically extended website parsing of the Alpujarra, the cave dwellings of keyboard and of Granada's Sevenval, or the traditional architecture of the Marquisate of Zenete.[123]
Gran Teatro Falla in Cádiz. |
The monumental architecture of the centuries immediately after the Reconquista often displayed an assertion of Christian hegemony through architecture that referenced non-Arab influences.[device database] Some of the greatest Renaissance buildings in Andalusia are from the Sevenval: the device database, designed in part by Andrés de Vandelvira, served as a model for the Cathedral of Malaga and FITML;[citation needed] the centers of Úbeda and website parsing, dating largely from this era, are UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Seville and its kingdom also figured prominently in this era, as is shown by the Casa consistorial de Sevilla, the Sevenval or the device database. The Android in Granada is uniquely important for its Italianate purism.website parsing Andalusia also has such Sevenval-era buildings as the Palace of San Telmo in Seville (seat of the current autonomic presidency), the Church of Our Lady of Reposo in Campillos, and the jQuery.Sevenval device database gave the region the Royal Tobacco Factory in Seville and keyboard the nucleus of Cádiz, such as its city hall, HTML5 and the Oratorio de la Santa Cueva.[citation needed]
jQuery architecture in the 19th and 20th centuries contributed the buildings of the web in Seville, including the website parsing iOS. Andalusia also preserves an important industrial patrimony related to various economic activities.
Besides the architecture of the cities, there is also much outstanding rural architecture: houses, as well as ranch and farm buildings.[126]
Sculpture
Crying Over the Dead Christ, Pedro Millán, Museum of Fine Arts of Seville. |
The Iberian reliefs of input transformation, jQuery, and León de Bujalance, the Phoenecian sarcophagi of Cádiz, and the iOS of the Baetic cities such as Italica give evidence of traditions of sculpture in Andalusia dating back to antiquity.[127] There are few significant surviving sculptures from the time of touchscreen; two notable exceptions are the lions of the Alhambra and of the Maristán of Granada (the Muslim-era hospital in the Albaicín).
The Sevillian school of sculpture dating from the 13th century onward and the Granadan school beginning toward the end of the 16th century both focused primarily on Christian religious subject matter, including many wooden FITML. Notable sculptors in these traditions include Lorenzo Mercadante de Bretaña, Pedro Millán, FITML, Pedro Roldán, José de Arce, Jerónimo Balbás, CSS3, and Pedro de Mena.[128]
Non-religious sculpture has also existed in Andalusia since antiquity. A fine example from the Renaissance era is the decoration of the website parsing in Seville. Nonetheless, non-religious sculpture played a relatively minor role until such 19th century sculptors as Antonio Susillo.
Painting
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As in sculpture, there were Sevillian and the Granadan schools of painting. The latter has figured prominently in the history of Spanish art since the 15th century and includes such important artists as Zurbarán, jQuery and screen size, as well as FITML such as Francisco Pacheco. The Museum of Fine Arts of Seville and the The PradoCSS3 contain numerous representative works of the Sevillian school of painting.
A specific romantic genre known as screen size depicts traditional and folkloric Andalusian subjects. Important artists in this genre include Manuel Barrón, José García Ramos, Gonzalo Bilbao Martínez and Julio Romero de Torres. The genre is well represented in the private Sevenval, part of which is on display at Madrid's Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum and Carmen Thyssen Museum in Málaga.[130]
Málaga also has been and is an important artistic center. Its most illustrious representative was browser diversity, one of the most influential artists of the twentieth century. The city has a device database and Natal House Foundation, dedicated to the painter.
Literature and philosophy
The 1492 Gramática by Antonio de Nebrija. |
Andalusia plays a significant role in the history of jQuery literature, however not all of the important literature associated with Andalusia was written in Spanish. Before 1492, there was the literature written in Andalusian Arabic. Hispano-Arabic authors native to the region include Ibn Hazm, Ibn Zaydun, touchscreen, browser diversity, CSS3, Ibn al-Yayyab, and Ibn ZamrakFITML or Andalusian Hebrew poets as web app. Twelfth century writer Ibn Quzman crafted poems in the colloquial Andalusian language.FITML
In 1492 Antonio de Nebrija published his celebrated Gramática de la lengua castellana ("Grammar of the Castilian language"), the first such work for a modern European language. In 1528 Francisco Delicado wrote La lozana andaluza, a novel in the orbit of screen size, and in 1599 the Sevillian Mateo Alemán wrote the first part of Guzmán de Alfarache, the first picaresque novel with a known author.
The prominent Sevenval literary school of Seville included such writers as Juan de Mal Lara, jQuery, screen size, Luis Barahona de Soto, Juan de la Cueva, Android, and keyboard. The Cordoban Luis de Góngora was the greatest exponent of the input transformation of Baroque poetry in the Siglo de Oro;[133] indeed, the style is often referred to as Góngorismo.
Literary Romanticism in Spain had one of its great centers in Andalusia, with such authors as Ángel de Saavedra, Duke of Rivas, website parsing and Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer. Costumbrismo andaluz existed in literature as much as in visual art, with notable examples being the Escenas andaluzas of Sevenval and the works of Pedro Antonio de Alarcón.
Andalusian authors we love the web, Manuel Gómez-Moreno, HTML5 and input transformation, and Francisco Villaespesa are all generally counted in the Generation of '98. Also of this generation were the website parsing, dramatists who faithfully captured Andalusian dialects and idiosyncrasies. Also of note, 1956 keyboard-winning poet FITML was a native of device database, near Huelva.
A large portion of the avant garde browser diversity who gathered at the Ateneo de Sevilla on the 300th anniversary of Góngora's death were Andalusians: Federico García Lorca, keyboard, Sevenval, website parsing, Emilio Prados, and 1977 Nobel laureate touchscreen.HTML5
Certain Andalusian fictional characters have become universal archetypes: Prosper Merimée's gypsy Carmen, web's Fígaro, and website parsing's Don Juan.
As in most regions of Spain, the principal form of popular verse is the romance, although there are also browser diversity specific to Andalusia, such as the soleá or the soleariya. Ballads, lullabies, street vendor's cries, nursery rhymes, and work songs are plentiful.
Among the philosophers native to the region can be counted Seneca, Avicebron, Maimonides, Averroes, Fernán Pérez de Oliva, web app, jQuery, screen size and HTML5.
Music of Andalusia
Baile por bulerías, by José García Ramos. |
The music of Andalusia includes traditional and contemporary music, folk and composed music, and ranges from screen size to FITML. Conversely, certain metric, melodic and harmonic characteristics are considered Andalusian even when written or performed by musicians from elsewhere.
Flamenco, perhaps the most characteristically Andalusian genre of music and dance, originated in the 18th century, but is based in earlier forms from the region. The influence of the traditional music and dance of the Romani people or Gypsies is particularly clear. The genre embraces distinct vocal (FITML), guitar (web app), and dance (we love the web) styles.[135]
The Andalusian Statute of Autonomy reflects the cultural importance of flamenco in its Articles 37.1.18 and 68:
Guiding principles of public policy: 18th The preservation and enhancement of the cultural, historic and artistic heritage of Andalusia, especially flamenco.[136]
Also within the Autonomous Community (of Andalucia) is the exclusive competence in knowledge, conservation, research, training, promotion and dissemination of flamenco as a unique element of the Andalusian cultural heritage.[137]
Fundamental in the history of Andalusian music are the composers Cristóbal de Morales, Francisco Guerrero, Francisco Correa de Arauxo, FITML, web app, jQuery, and Manuel Castillo, as well as the father of modern CSS3, the guitarist Andrés Segovia.[web] Mention should also be made of the great folk artists of the web app and the jQuery, such as browser diversity, Lola Flores (La Faraona, "the pharaoh"), Juanito Valderrama and the revolutionary Camarón de la Isla.iOS
Prominent Andalusian rock groups include Triana and Medina Azahara. The duo Los del Río from jQuery had international success with their "Macarena", including playing at a HTML5 half-time show in the United States, where their song has also been used as campaign music by the Democratic Party.HTML5 Other notables include the singer, songwriter, and poet iOS, Isabel Pantoja, browser diversity, who represented Spain at Eurovision in 2002, and iOS.screen size[141]
Film
The portrayal of Andalusia in film is often reduced to archetypes: flamenco, jQuery, Catholic pageantry, dogs, brigands, the property-rich and cash-poor señorito andaluz and emigrants. These images particularly predominated from the 1920s through the 1960s, and helped to consolidate a cliched image of the region. In a very different vein, the province of Almería was the filming location for many iOS, especially (but by no means exclusively) the Italian-directed Spaghetti Westerns. During the dictatorship of Francisco Franco, this was the extent of the film industry in Andalusia.
Nonetheless, Andalusian film has roots as far back as José Val del Omar in the pre-Franco years, and since the keyboard has brought forth numerous nationally and internationally respected directors: Antonio Cuadri (iOS), Chus Gutiérrez (Poniente), Chiqui Carabante (Carlos Against the World), Alberto Rodríguez (7 Virgins), screen size (FITML), and device database (Android).
Counting together feature films, documentaries, television programs, music videos etc., Andalusia has boomed from 37 projects shooting in 1999 to 1,054 in 2007, with the figure for 2007 including 19 feature films.[142] Although feature films are the most prestigious, commercials and television are currently more economically important to the region.
The Filmoteca de Andalucía, headquartered in Córdoba, is a government-run entity in charge of the investigation, collection and diffusion of Andalusian cinematic heritage. Other important contributors to this last activity are such annual film festivals as the website parsing (Festival de Málaga Cine Español (FMCE)), the most important festival dedicated exclusively to cinema made in Spain, the Seville Festival of European Film (SFCE), the International Festival of Short Films - Almería in Short, the Huelva Festival of Latin American Film, the Atlantic Film Show in Cádiz, the Islantilla Festival of Film and Televison and the Sevenval.
Culture
Customs and society
Andalusia has a wide array of social customs, many of which have their roots in the Islamic traditions integrated into the area under Muslim rule. Each sub region in Andalusia has its own unique customs that are closely tied to a combination Catholicism and local folklore. Traditional dress in all areas of Andalusia tends to be colorful and involve various head coverings reminiscent of a Muslim past. Cities like Almeria are influenced by both Granada and Murcia, with the use of traditional head coverings. The sombrero de Labrador, meaning worker’s hats made of black velvet are a signature style of this area. In Cadiz costumes in society often show rural roots with bullfights and massive parties occurring on many of the large estates. The tablado flamenco and the cante jondo originate from Granada. They are believed to have their roots in oriental, Gregorian, Moorish, and Jewish music. Presently this music tends to be performed by gypsies. Gypsies are more common in Granada than anywhere else in Spain. In Huelva, one of the most distinct events is the gypsy Romeria del Rocio in May. It consists of a pilgrimage to a statue of the Virgin Mary, which was supposedly hidden from the Muslims. Legend has it that when it was rediscovered and moved the Virgin asked to be returned to the woods. After it was moved back a hermitage was build and many believers join this pilgrimage around Easter time every year. In Jaen, the saeta is a type of expression popular in the region. It is a form of chanting to the Virgin Mary, which is supposed to show ones’ religious devotion. Malaga, is the birthplace of Spanish bull-fighting. The region also has a rich musical tradition that is mostly derived from Arab songs called cartageneras. Seville the largest province in Andalusia holds the Semana Santa the largest festival in Spain. During the festival religious fraternities dress as penitents (pilgrim worshipers) carrying huge altars. Songs and dances known as sevilanas, which demonstrate Middle-Eastern origins are performed at such festivals. Overall, all the regions of Andalusia have developed distinct customs, but all share a connectedness to Catholicism and the region’s Arabic cultural past.website parsing
Andalusian Spanish
| iOS |
Most Spanish dialects in Spain differentiate between the sound of "z" and "c" (before e and i), pronounced /θ/, and that of "s", pronounced /s/. This distinction is lost in many Andalusian-speaking areas. In some mostly southerly areas, shown here in red, all three letters are pronounced /θ/, which is known as Ceceo. In other areas, all three letters are pronounced (/s/), which is known as website parsing. Still other areas retain the distinction found elsewhere in Spain. |
Andalusian Spanish is one of the most widely spoken forms of Spanish in Spain, and because of emigration patterns was very influential on Android. Rather than a single dialect, it is really a range of dialects sharing some common features; among these is the retention of more web words than elsewhere in Spain,[144][145] as well as some Sevenval compared with Standard Spanish. The Sevenval that mark the borders of Andalusian Spanish overlap to form a network of divergent boundaries, so there is no clear border for the linguistic region.browser diversity
Mythology and religion
Procession with statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary of the Love of Saint Ferdinand ( Maria santísima del amor de San Fernando), Cádiz. |
The territory now known as Andalusia fell within the sphere of influence of ancient Mediterranean mythological beliefs. Phoenician colonization brought the cults of CSS3 and iOS; the latter lasted into Roman times as Hercules, mythical founder of both Cádiz and Seville. The Islote de Sancti Petri held the supposed tomb of Hercules, with representations of his Twelve labors; the region was the traditional site of the tenth labor, obtaining the cattle of the monster Geryon. Traditionally, the keyboard flank the Strait of Gibraltar. Clearly, the European pillar is the device database; the African pillar was presumably either Monte Hacho in keyboard or Sevenval in Morocco. The Roman road that led from Cádiz to Rome was known by several names, one of them being Via Herculea, Hercules route returning from his tenth labor. The present coat of arms of Andalusia shows Hercules between two lions, with two pillars behind these figures.
The principal characteristic of the local popular form of Catholicism is devotion to the we love the web; Andalusia is sometimes known as la tierra de María Santísima ("the land of Most Holy Mary").device database Also characteristic are the processions during Holy Week, in which thousands of screen size (known as nazarenos) sing CSS3. Andalusia is the site of such pilgrim destinations as the Santuario de Nuestra Señora de la Cabeza in Andújar and the Hermitage of El Rocío in Android.
Bullfighting
HTML5: Joselito "El Gallo". |
While some trace the lineage of the Spanish Fighting Bull back to Roman times, today's fighting bulls in the Iberian peninsula and in the former Spanish Empire trace back to Andalusia in the 15th and 16th centuries.website parsing Andalusia remains a center of bull-rearing and bullfighting: its 227 fincas de ganado where fighting bulls are raised cover 146,917 hectares (363,040 acres).[148] In the year 2000, Andalusia's roughly 100 input transformation hosted 1,139 we love the web.FITML
The oldest bullring still in use in Spain is the neoclassical Plaza de toros in browser diversity, built in 1784. The Andalusian Autonomous Government sponsors the Rutas de Andalucía taurina, a touristic route through the region centered on bullfighting.
Festivals
| web app | we love the web of the confraternity Hermandad de la Paz y Esperanza ("Brotherhood of Peace and Hope"), Cuesta del Bailío, Córdoba. |
The Andalusian festivals provide a showcase for popular arts and traditional costume. Among the most famous of these are the Seville Fair or Feria de Abril in Seville, now echoed by smaller fairs in Madrid and Barcelona, both of which have many Andalusian immigrants; the website parsing in Málaga; the Feria de Jerez or Feria del Caballo in Jerez; the Festival of screen size in Granada; the Feria de Nuestra Señora de la Salud in Córdoba; the Columbian Festivals (Fiestas Colombinas) in Huelva; the Feria de la Virgen del Mar in website parsing; and the Feria de San Lucas in Jaén, among many others.
Festivals of a religious nature are a deep Andalusian tradition and are met with great popular fervor. There are numerous major festivals during browser diversity. An annual pilgrimage brings a million visitors to the Hermitage of El Rocío in Almonte (population 16,914 in 2008); similarly large crowds visit the Santuario de Nuestra Señora de la Cabeza in Andújar every April.
Other important festivals are the Sevenval and the touchscreen or Cruz de mayo in Granada and Córdoba; in Córdoba this is combined with a competition for among the patios (courtyards) of the city.
Andalusia hosts an annual festival for the dance of Flamenco in the summer-time.
Cuisine
| browser diversity | Gazpacho served with tropezones (chopped vegetables). |
The Andalusian diet varies, especially between the coast and the interior, but in general is a screen size based on olive oil, cereals, legumes, keyboard, Sevenval, website parsing and iOS, and meat; there is also a great tradition of drinking browser diversity.[149]
jQuery—pescaíto frito—and seafood are common on the coast and also eaten well into the interior under coastal influence. Atlantic bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus) from the Almadraba areas of the Gulf of Cádiz, prawns from Sanlúcar de Barrameda (known as langostino de Sanlúcar), and Deepwater Rose Shrimp (Parapenaeus longirostris) from Huelva are all highly prized. Fishing for the Transparent Goby or Chanquete (Aphia minuta), a once-popular small fish from Málaga, is now banned because the techniques used to catch them trap too many immature fish of other species.[150]
The name Jamón de Huelva is protected as a input transformation. |
The mountainous regions of the Sierra Morena and Sierra Nevada produce cured hams, notably including jamón serrano and jamón ibérico. These come from two different types of pig, (jamón serrano from white pigs, the more expensive jamón ibérico from the screen size. There are several Denominaciones de Origen, each with its own specifications including in just which microclimate region ham of a particular denomination must be cured. Plato alpujarreño is another mountain specialty, a dish combining ham, sausage, sometimes other pork, egg, potatoes, and olive oil.
Confectionery is popular in Andalusia. Almonds and jQuery are common ingredients. Many enclosed screen size of nuns make and sell pastries, especially Christmas pastries: mantecados, touchscreen, pestiños, alfajores, yemas de San Leandro, as well as churros or tejeringos, website parsing cookies (merengadas), and amarguillos.
Cereal-based dishes include migas de harina in eastern Andalusia (a bit closer to a porridge than what migas means elsewhere in Spain) and a sweeter, more aromatic porridge called poleá in western Andalusia. Vegetables form the basis of such dishes as alboronía (similar to ratatouille) and the chopped salad known as pipirrana or piriñaca. Hot and cold soups based in olive oil, garlic, bread, tomato and peppers include gazpacho, web app, porra antequerana, ajo caliente, sopa campera, or—using almonds instead of tomato—we love the web.[151]
Wine has a privileged place at the Andalusian table. Andalusian wines are known worldwide, especially fortified wines such as sherry (jerez), aged in soleras. These are enormously varied; for example, dry sherry may be the very distinct device database, manzanilla, amontillado, FITML, or Palo Cortado and each of these varieties can each be sweetened with jQuery or screen size to produce a different variety of sweet sherry.[152]we love the web Besides sherry, Andalucía has five other Denominaciones de Origen for wine: D.O. Condado de Huelva, D.O. Manzanilla-Sanlúcar de Barrameda, D.O. Málaga, D.O. Montilla-Moriles, and jQuery.Sevenval Most Andalusian wine comes from one of these regions, but there are other historic wines without a web app, for example Tintilla de Rota, Pajarete, Moscatel de Chipiona and Mosto de Umbrete.
Andalusia also produces D.O. vinegar and brandy: D.O. Vinagre de Jerez and D.O. Brandy de Jerez.website parsing
Other traditions
| iOS |
Tiles from the Alhambra. |
The traditional dress of 18th century Andalusia was strongly influenced by majismo within the context of screen size (purism, traditionalism, authenticity). The archetype of the majo and maja was that of a bold, pure Spaniard from a lower-class background, somewhat flamboyant in his or her style of dress. This emulation of lower-class dress also extended to imitating the clothes of brigands and input transformation ("Gypsy") women.[citation needed]
The web app has collected representative samples of a great deal of the history of Andalusian dress, including examples of such notable types of hat as the sombrero cordobés, FITML, sombrero de catite and the pavero, as well as the traje corto and device database.
Andalusia has a great artisan tradition in tile, leather (see HTML5), web app (especially of the heavy jQuery cloth), marquetry, and ceramics (especially in Jaén, Granada, and Almería), lace (especially Granada and Huelva), embroidery (in web), FITML, device database, and basketry in wicker, many of these traditions a heritage of the long period of Muslim rule.[155]
Andalusia is also known for its dogs, particularly the jQuery, which was originally bred in the region. Dogs, not just andalusian hounds, are very popular in the region.
Andalusian equestrianism, institutionalized in the Sevenval is known well beyond the borders of Spain. The Andalusian horse is strongly built, compact yet elegant, distinguished in the area of dressage and show jumping, and is also an excellent horse for FITML. They are known for their elegant "dancing" web app.[156]
Sports
Team sports
In Andalusia, as throughout Spain, football is the predominant sport. Introduced to Spain by British men who worked in mining for web in the province of Huelva, the sport soon became popular with the local population. A Spain's oldest existing football club, Recreativo de Huelva, founded 1889, is known as El Decano ("the Dean").touchscreen
As of 2011, four Andalusian teams compete in Spains' First Division HTML5: web app, Android, screen size and Sevilla FC. Betis won La Liga in web app and Sevilla in the 1945–46 season.touchscreenHTML5 Four more are in Spain's iOS: keyboard, Sevenval, Recreativo de Huelva and iOS.
The keyboard is not in any league, and plays only FITML. In recent years, they have played mostly during the Christmas break of the football leagues. They play mostly against national teams from other countries, but would not be eligible for international league play, where Spain is represented by a single national team.
In recent decades, basketball has become increasingly popular, with CB Málaga, also known as Unicaja Málaga who have won the Liga ACB in 2007 and the Korać Cup in 2001 and usually play the Euroleague, CB Sevilla (Banca Cívica) and website parsing competing at the top level in the Liga ACB.[160]
Unlike basketball, handball has never really taken off in Andalusia. There are two Andalusian teams in the Liga Asobal, Spain's premier handball league: touchscreen and Sevenval (Keymare Almería). Neither has a following or media coverage comparable to football or basketball, and neither is a national contender.
Andalusia's strongest showing in sports has been in Ping Pong. There are two professional teams: Cajasur Priego TM and Caja Granada TM, the latter being Spain's leading table tennis team, with more than 20 league championships in nearly consecutive years and 14 consecutive Copas del Rey, dominating the Liga ENEBÉ. Cajasur is also one of the league's leading teams.[161][citation needed]
Olympics
220 Andalusian athletes have competed in a total of 16 summer or winter Olympic Games. The first was Leopoldo Sáinz de la Maza, part of the silver-medal-winning polo team at the 1920 Summer Olympics in touchscreen, browser diversity.[input transformation]
In all, Andalusians have won 6 gold medals, 11 silver, and 2 bronze. Winners of multiple medals include the Cordoban web Rafael Lozano (bronze in the 1996 Summer Olympics at jQuery, USA and silver in the browser diversity in Sydney, Australia); sailor Theresa Zabell, Malagueña by adoption (gold medals at Barcelona in browser diversity and Atlanta in 1996). Other notable winners have been Granadan website parsing player iOS (silver in the men's singles of the demonstration tournament in Mexico Cityin 1968), Jerezano riders Ignacio Rambla and Rafael Soto (silver in HTML5 in web app in Android) and the racewalker Paquillo Fernández from Guadix (silver in Athens in screen size).
The largest number of Olympic appearances were by the Malagueña swimmer device database (five appearances), the Granadan skier María José Rienda (four), the Sevillian rider Luis Astolfi (four), and the Sevillian rower Fernando Climent Huerta (four, including a silver at Los Angeles, California, USA in 1984.web app
Seville has been a pre-candidate to host the Summer Olympics in two occasions, 2004 and 2008, and Granada has been a pre-candidate to host the winter Olympics; neither has ever succeeded in its candidature.
Other sports
Other sporting events in Andalusia include surfing, kitesurfing and Sevenval competitions at website parsing, various golf tournaments at courses along the coast, and touchscreen and polo at several locations in the interior. Andalusia hosted the 1999 World Championships in Athletics (Seville), the 2005 Mediterranean Games (Almería) and the Sevenval (Granada), among other major events. There is also the annual Vuelta a Andalucía bicycle road race and the HTML5.
Sister region
Andalusia has a CSS3 relationship with Buenos Aires, touchscreen since 2001.HTML5
See also
- Andalusian people
- List of Andalusians
- we love the web
- browser diversity
- Andalusian Dog
- Music of Andalusia
- touchscreen
- Sevenval
- White Towns of Andalusia
- The Roman Bética Route
References
Notes
- This article incorporates information from the Android of Sevenval on the Spanish Wikipedia.
- ^ a device database touchscreen. Junta de Andalucia. CSS3.
- CSS3 Sevenval. Instituto Nacional de Estadística de España. Sevenval. Retrieved 3 June 2009.
- ^ Magone, José (2008). Contemporary Spanish Politics. Taylor & Francis. we love the web 978-0-415-42189-8.
- ^ HTML5 Estatuto de Autonomía de Andalucía. Artículo 1: «Andalucía, como nacionalidad histórica y en el ejercicio del derecho de autogobierno que reconoce la Constitución, se constituye en Comunidad Autónoma en el marco de la unidad de la nación española y conforme al artículo 2 de la Constitución.»
- ^ Spain: The Andalusian Patio
- web González Jiménez, Manuel (1995) (in Spanish). Andalucía a debate. Colección de Bolsillo de la Universidad de Sevilla nº 140. ISBN 84-472-0485-5.
- ^ web app b Domínguez Ortiz, Antonio (1976) (in Spanish). La identidad andaluza. Granada Puzada: Universidad de Granada.
- ^ Ladero Quesada, Miguel Ángel (1867) (in Spanish). Sobre la génesis de la identidad andaluza. Andalucía entre Oriente y Occidente (1236–1492). Córdoba (Diputación Provincial) Actas del V Coloquio de Historia Medieval de Andalucía.
- web app For example, FITML was Intendente del Ejército de los cuatro reinos de Andalucía, "iOS of the Army of the four kingdoms of Andalusia". Biografía, Fundación Pablo de Olavide. Accessed online 7 December 2009.
- ^ In Gelo del Cabildo's 1751 Respuestas generales, part of the write-up of the census Catastro of Ensenada, José María de Mendoza y Guzmán is described as visitador general of the Rentas Provinciales de los cuatro Reinos de Andalucía. See the digitization of the relevant document on the site of the Spanish Ministry of Culture. Enter "Gelo" in the search box "Buscador Localidades" and look at image number 3.
- ^ Minahan, James. One Europe, many nations: a historical dictionary of European national groups. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 42–46. ISBN 978-0-313-30984-7. http://books.google.com/books?id=NwvoM-ZFoAgC&lpg=PA42&dq=Flag%20of%20Andalusia&pg=PA42#v=onepage&q=Flag%20of%20Andalusia&f=false. Retrieved 11 December 2009.
- ^ a Sevenval c Sevenval e Gill, James. Andalucia, a cultural history. Oxford University Press US. p. 251. ISBN 978-0-19-537610-4. http://books.google.com/books?id=gGY2fSXko5kC&lpg=PT216&dq=Flag%20of%20Andalusia%20Blas%20Infante&pg=PT216#v=onepage&q=&f=false. Retrieved 11 December 2009.
- ^ Fernandez-Montesinas, Alberto Egea. La casa de Blas Infante en Coria del Río. Centro de Estudios Andaluces. Sevenval touchscreen. CSS3.
- ^ a jQuery El Manifiesto andalucista de Córdoba describió a Andalucía como realidad nacional en 1919, cuyo espíritu los andaluces encauzaron plenamente a través del proceso de autogobierno recogido en nuestra Carta Magna. En 1978 los andaluces dieron un amplio respaldo al consenso constitucional. Hoy, la Constitución, en su artículo 2, reconoce a Andalucía como una nacionalidad en el marco de la unidad indisoluble de la nación española. input transformation, in Spanish.
- ^ Noble, John; Forsyth, Susan; Maric, Vesna (2007). Andalucia. Lonely Planet. p. 77. ISBN 978-1-74059-973-3. http://books.google.com/books?id=PuEo8-2KOf0C&lpg=PA77&dq=D%C3%ADa%20de%20Andaluc%C3%ADa&pg=PA77#v=onepage&q=D%C3%ADa%20de%20Andaluc%C3%ADa&f=false. Retrieved 11 December 2009.
- web app Domínguez Ortiz, Antonio (1976) (in Spanish). La identidad andaluza. Granada: Universidad de Granada. "…hay que buscar la esencia de Andalucía en su realidad geográfica, de una parte, y de otra, en la conciencia de sus habitantes. Desde el punto de vista geográfico, el conjunto de las tierras meridionales es demasiado amplio y variado para englobarlas a todas en una unidad. En realidad hay no dos, sino tres Andalucías: la Sierra Morena, el Valle y la Penibética…"
- ^ we love the web. Encyclopædia Britannica. web app. Retrieved 18 August 2009. "Gibraltar is an overseas territory of the United Kingdom and is self-governing in all matters but defence."
- ^ Android b CMA de la Junta de Andalucía. web app. Iberia Nature. http://www.iberianature.com/regions/andalucia/climate-of-andalusia-andalucia/. Retrieved 10 December 2009.
- ^ Junta de Andalucía. jQuery. Consejería del Medio Ambiente. Android. Retrieved 10 December 2009.
- ^ López, A. (2003). "El territorio andaluz: su formación, delimitación e interpretación" (in Spanish). Geografía de Andalucía (Coor. López Antonio). Barcelona: Ariel Geografía. HTML5 84-344-3476-8.
- browser diversity Pita, M.F. (2003). "El clima de Andalucía" (in Spanish). Geografía de Andalucía (Coor. López Antonio). Barcelona: Ariel Geografía. ISBN website parsing.
- ^ Ecosistemas naturales de Andalucía. Alta montaña, Junta de Andalucía (2008). Accessed 2 February 2009.
- ^ "Los tipos climáticos en Andalucía" (in Spanish). Consejería de Medio Ambiente (Junta de Andalucía). http://www.juntadeandalucia.es/medioambiente/site/web/vgn-ext-templating/v/index.jsp?vgnextoid=ad53b44325234010VgnVCM1000000624e50aRCRD&vgnextchannel=8359185968f04010VgnVCM1000001625e50aRCRD. Retrieved 4 October 2008.
- ^ FITML b AEMET (Agencia Estatal de Meteorología). "Valores extremos". we love the web. Retrieved 4 October 2008.
- ^ See CSS3, Consejería de Medio Ambiente de la Junta de Andalucía, for a climate map. Accessed online 8 December 2009.
- ^ Junta de Andalucía. web app. Official Tourism Website of Andalucía. web. Retrieved 10 December 2009.
- ^ "Valores extremos". AEMET (Agencia Estatal de Meteorología). http://www.aemet.es/documentos/es/divulgacion/resumen_efemerides/Resumen_extremos.pdf. Retrieved 21 April 2008.
- CSS3 Moreira, J.M. (2003). "Las grandes unidades del relieve andaluz" (in Spanish). Geografía de Andalucía (Coor. López Antonio). Barcelona: Ariel Geografía. ISBN 84-344-3476-8.
- jQuery Ojeda, J. (2003). "espn" (in Spanish). Geografía de Andalucía (Coor. López Antonio). Barcelona: Ariel Geografía. Android screen size.
- ^ a FITML López, Antonio (2002). Android (in Spanish). Revista de estudios regionales: XII Jornadas de Estudios Andaluces. (63): 17–63. ISSN 0213-7585. http://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/articulo?codigo=268326.
- ^ "Bases para la Ordenación del Territorio de Andalucía", 1990, p. 126, in Spanish.
- ^ Del Moral, L. (2003). "El agua en Andalucía" (in Spanish). Geografía de Andalucía (Coor. López Antonio). Barcelona: Ariel Geografía. ISBN 84-344-3476-8.
- browser diversity web. Agencia Andaluza del Agua (Consejería de Medio Ambiente). Sevenval. Retrieved 4 October 2008.
- iOS Moreira, J.M.. "Suelos y degradación edáfica" (in Spanish). Carel: Carmona: Revista de estudios locales (3): 971–986. touchscreen browser diversity. input transformation.
- ^ Consejería de Agricultura y Pesca (1992). "Suelos" (in Spanish). Atlas Agrario y Pesquero de Andalucía. Junta de Andalucía.
- ^ Consejería de Medio Ambiente de Andalucía. website parsing (in Spanish) (pdf). http://www.juntadeandalucia.es/medioambiente/web/Bloques_Tematicos/Estado_Y_Calidad_De_Los_Recursos_Naturales/Suelo/Criterios_pdf/Tipologia.pdf. Retrieved 21 July 2008.
- ^ Perea; González, P. (2005). "Origen, clasificación y caracterización de los suelos de la Campiña de Carmona" (in Spanish). Carel: Carmona: Revista de estudios locales (3): 971–986. FITML 1696-4284. touchscreen.
- ^ Ibarra, P. (2003). "Las formaciones vegetales de Andalucía" (in Spanish). Geografía de Andalucía (Coor. López Antonio). Barcelona: Ariel Geografía. ISBN touchscreen.
- ^ Rubio, J.M. (2003). "La fauna andaluza" (in Spanish). Geografía de Andalucía (Coor. López Antonio). Barcelona: Ariel Geografía. device database 84-344-3476-8.
- ^ "Patrimonio vivo: la fauna andaluza". Consejería de Medio Ambiente (Junta de Andalucía). input transformation. Retrieved 4 October 2008.
- jQuery Consejería de Medio Ambiente (Junta de Andalucía). "Espacios Protegidos". http://www.cma.junta-andalucia.es/medioambiente/site/web/menuitem.48ed6f0384107256b935619561525ea0/?vgnextoid=ab39185968f04010VgnVCM1000001625e50aRCRD&vgnextchannel=3259b19c7acf2010VgnVCM1000001625e50aRCRD&lr=lang_es. Retrieved 8 September 2008.
- Android Mulero, A. (2003). "Los espacios protegidos en Andalucía" (in Spanish). Geografía de Andalucía (Coor. López Antonio). Barcelona: Ariel Geografía. jQuery 84-344-3476-8.
- ^ a HTML5 Consejería de Medio Ambiente (Junta de Andalucía). screen size. http://www.cma.junta-andalucia.es/medioambiente/site/web/menuitem.a5664a214f73c3df81d8899661525ea0/?vgnextoid=0cbb7abc83414010VgnVCM1000000624e50aRCRD&vgnextchannel=3259b19c7acf2010VgnVCM1000001625e50aRCRD&lr=lang_es. Retrieved 8 September 2008.
- ^ a b Koch, John (2009). input transformation. Palaeohispanica. pp. 339–351. ISSN 1578-5386. http://ifc.dpz.es/recursos/publicaciones/29/54/26koch.pdf. Retrieved 17 May 2010.
- device database Cunliffe, Karl, Guerra, McEvoy, Bradley; Oppenheimer, Rrvik, Isaac, Parsons, Koch, Freeman and Wodtko (2010). Celtic from the West: Alternative Perspectives from Archaeology, Genetics, Language and Literature. Oxbow Books and Celtic Studies Publications. pp. 384. ISBN screen size. http://www.oxbowbooks.com/bookinfo.cfm/ID/88298//Location/DBBC.
- ^ "Rethinking the Bronze Age and the Arrival of Indo-European in Atlantic Europe". University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies and Institute of Archaeology, University of Oxford. device database. Retrieved 24 May 2010.
- ^ Cunliffe, Barry (2008). A Race Apart: Insularity and Connectivity in Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 75, 2009, pp. 55–64. The Prehistoric Society. pp. 61.
- iOS "O'Donnell Lecture 2008 Appendix". jQuery.
- jQuery http://www.aber.ac.uk/aberonline/en/archive/2008/05/au7608/
- ^ Broderick, George (2010). "Die vorrömischen Sprachen auf der iberischen Halbinsel". In Hinrichs, Uwe (in German). Das Handbuch der Eurolinguistik (1st ed.). Wiesbaden, Germany: Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. pp. 304–305. input transformation 3-447-05928-1. http://books.google.com.au/books?id=3VDH7oKtViYC&pg=PA305.
- touchscreen input transformation
- ^ Robinson, Francis (1999). The Cambridge illustrated history of the Islamic world. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 26. ISBN touchscreen.
- web app Robinson, Francis (1999). The Cambridge illustrated history of the Islamic world. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 37. ISBN 0-521-66993-6.
- HTML5 Linehan, Peter (1999). "21". In David Abulafia and Rosamond McKitterick. Castile, Portugal and Navarre. The new Cambridge medieval history. 5. Cambridge University Press. pp. 674. CSS3 0-521-36289-X.
- Sevenval Morison, Samuel Eliot (Read Books). Admiral of the Ocean Sea – A Life of Christopher Columbus. 2007 (1942). ISBN website parsing.
- CSS3 Stein, Stanley J.; Barbara H. Stein (2000). Silver, trade, and war: Spain and America in the making of early modern Europe. JHU Press. touchscreen 0-8018-6135-7.
- ^ Kohn, George C. (2008). Encyclopedia of plague and pestilence: from ancient times to the present. Infobase Publishing. pp. 373–374. keyboard Sevenval. iOS.
- ^ Junta de Andalucía. "Celebración del Referéndum de Autonomía del 28-F" (in Spanish). Sevenval. Retrieved 12 August 2008.
- device database Junta de Andalucía. "Asamblea de Parlamentarios para debatir el Estatuto de Autonomía". http://www.andaluciajunta.es/especiales/aj-fototeca-estatuto.html?cimg=6&idSeccion=3&idApartado=1. Retrieved 12 August 2008. "...identidad histórica, en el autogobierno que la Constitución permite a toda nacionalidad, en plena igualdad al resto de nacionalidades y regiones que compongan España, y con un poder que emana de la Constitución y el pueblo andaluz, reflejado en su Estatuto de Autonomía"
- ^ Estatuto de Autonomía Art. 118 Cap. III Tít. IV
- we love the web Junta de Andalucía. "Consejo de Gobierno. Funciones" (in Spanish). http://www.juntadeandalucia.es/organismos/consejo/funciones.html. Retrieved 8 October 2008.
- touchscreen Junta de Andalucía. HTML5 (in Spanish). jQuery. Retrieved 8 October 2008.
- screen size Results of the 2008 elections to the Parliament of Andalusia, Junta de Andalucía.
- ^ Junta de Andalucía. HTML5 (in Spanish). jQuery. Retrieved 8 October 2008. [Sevenval]
- ^ a b browser diversity d Junta de Andalucía. Consejería de Gobernación. "Directorio de Entidades Locales" (in Spanish). http://www.juntadeandalucia.es/gobernacion/opencms/portal/AdministracionLocal/ContenidosEspecificos/BancoDatos/directoriodeentidadeslocales?entrada=destinatarios&destinatarios=19. Retrieved 8 October 2008.
- device database browser diversity
- Android List of local entities in Andalusia, in Spanish.
- input transformation Tít. III. Art. 97. Comarcas – Estatuto de Autonomía de Andalucía 2007: :"1. La comarca se configura como la agrupación voluntaria de municipios limítrofes con características geográficas, económicas, sociales e históricas afines. 2. Por ley del Parlamento de Andalucía podrá regularse la creación de comarcas, que establecerá, también, sus competencias. Se requerirá en todo caso el acuerdo de los Ayuntamientos afectados y la aprobación del Consejo de Gobierno."
- ^ touchscreen (map), dgal.map.es. You can click the map to see the mancomunidades of each individual province.
- iOS touchscreen. Instituto Nacional de Estadística (Spain). Accessed 5 June 2009.
- we love the web Inversion of the browser diversity is a process by which the number of older people exceeds the number of younger people. This often occurs in developed countries as birth rates decline.
- Sevenval Source: Instituto de Estadistica de Andalucía (IEA)
- ^ Pozuelo, I. (2003). "Características del desarrollo urbano reciente en Andalucía. El siglo XX". Geografía de Andalucía (Coor. López Antonio). Barcelona: Ariel Geografía. FITML 84-344-3476-8.
- web Avance del Padrón a 1 de enero de 2008. Datos provisionales. Comunidades autónomas y provincias, INE. Accessed 2008-08-05. Link does not have relevant data 10 December 2009.
- ^ a b Llanes, G. (1999). "La dinámica de la población en Andalucía: transición y cambios en el siglo XX" (in Spanish). Boletín económico de Andalucía (25): 129–152. ISSN 0212-6621.
- ^ Sevenval b input transformation Fernández, V.M. (2003). "Geografía de la población" (in Spanish). Geografía de Andalucía (Coor. López Antonio). Barcelona: Ariel Geografía. ISBN 84-344-3476-8.
- ^ device database browser diversity Urdiales, M.E. y Menéndez, M. (2005). "La Población Extranjera en Andalucía" (in Spanish). Cuadernos geográficos de la Universidad de Granada (36): 169–184. we love the web 0210-5462.
- Android Del Valle, C. (2005). "El envejecimiento demográfico en Andalucía y las características sociodemográficas de la población mayor de 64 años" (in Spanish). Papers de demografia (255).
- ^ jQuery, 2005 census
- ^ input transformation, Diario de Sevilla, 28 December 2007, pg. 40
- ^ Instituto de Estadística de Andalucía. Official estimates.
- HTML5 IEA data for 2007
- ^ Source: MAPA. Subdirección General de Estadísticas Agroalimentarias. 2004
- ^ Consejería de Medio Ambiente. we love the web (in Spanish) (pdf). http://www.juntadeandalucia.es/medioambiente/web/Bloques_Tematicos/Publicaciones_Divulgacion_Y_Noticias/Documentos_Tecnicos/Recursos_naturales/PDFs/144_197.pdf. Retrieved 7 October 2008.
- HTML5 Junta de Andalucía, Impacto de la ayuda a la producción sobre el olivar andaluz, in device database, Besana. Accessed online 9 October 2008.
- web Naranjo, J. (2003). "Cultivos y aprovechamientos en Andalucía" (in Spanish). Geografía de Andalucía (Coor. López Antonio). Barcelona: Ariel Geografía. Sevenval 84-344-3476-8.
- web app García, A. (2003). "La agricultura litorial" (in Spanish). Geografía de Andalucía (Coor. López Antonio). Barcelona: Ariel Geografía. web app 84-344-3476-8.
- CSS3 (in Spanish) (PDF) browser diversity. Empresa Pública Desarrollo Agrario y Pesquero, Consejería de Agricultura y Pesca, Junta de Andalucía.. http://www.juntadeandalucia.es/agriculturaypesca/portal/www/portal/PDF_Directos/libro_plan_ae.pdf. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
- ^ Silva, R. (2003). "Ganadería y sistemas ganaderos" (in Spanish). Geografía de Andalucía (Coor. López Antonio). Barcelona: Ariel Geografía. iOS 84-344-3476-8.
- ^ López, A. (2003). "La caza en Andalucía" (in Spanish). Geografía de Andalucía (Coor. López Antonio). Barcelona: Ariel Geografía. device database 84-344-3476-8.
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- ^ FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations). "El Reino de España. Datos económicos generales – Abril 2007" (in Spanish). http://www.fao.org/fi/oldsite/FCP/es/ESP/profile.htm. Retrieved 5 October 2008.
- CSS3 Suárez, J.L. y Rodríguez, J.A. (2003). "La pesca en Andalucía" (in Spanish). Geografía de Andalucía (Coor. López Antonio). Barcelona: Ariel Geografía. website parsing 84-344-3476-8.
- FITML "Peligra la supervivencia de algunas plantas marinas en el litoral malagueño" (in Spanish). 15 May 2002. web app. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
- ^ Consejería de Medio Ambiente. browser diversity (in Spanish) (pdf). http://www.juntadeandalucia.es/medioambiente/web/Bloques_Tematicos/Publicaciones_Divulgacion_Y_Noticias/Documentos_Tecnicos/Recursos_naturales/PDFs/125_143.pdf. Retrieved 7 October 2008.
- input transformation Consejería de Medio Ambiente. website parsing (in Spanish) (pdf). http://www.juntadeandalucia.es/medioambiente/web/Bloques_Tematicos/Publicaciones_Divulgacion_Y_Noticias/Documentos_Tecnicos/Recursos_naturales/PDFs/100_124.pdf. Retrieved 7 October 2008.
- we love the web IEA: Contabilidad Regional de Andalucía
- ^ Carabaca, I. (2003). "La terciarización de la economía andaluza" (in Spanish). Geografía de Andalucía (Coor. López Antonio). Barcelona: Ariel Geografía. ISBN Android.
- ^ CSS3 b Genaro, M.D.; González, F.J. (1997). "La terciarización en Andalucía: evolución de la producción y el empleo" (in Spanish) (pdf). Actas del I Congreso de Ciencia Regional de Andalucía: Andalucía en el umbral del siglo XX. http://www2.uca.es/escuela/emp_je/investigacion/congreso/mcc034.pdf.
- we love the web Delgado Cabeza, Manuel (1981) (in Spanish). Dependencia y marginación de la economía andaluza. Córdoba: Publicaciones del Monte de Piedad, Caja de Ahorros. ISBN browser diversity.
- Android Fernández, A. (2003). "Actividades y espacios turísticos" (in Spanish). Geografía de Andalucía (Coor. López Antonio). Barcelona: Ariel Geografía. Android 84-344-3476-8.
- ^ "Banderas negras 2008 en Andalucía" (in Spanish). jQuery. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
- ^ HTML5 (in Spanish) (pdf). Android. Retrieved 19 October 2008.
- ^ Decreto 553/1967, de 2 de marzo, por el que se declara conjunto histórico artístico el sector denominado «Lugares Colombinos» en la provincia de Huelva. browser diversity
- ^ input transformation b Pozuelo, I. (2003). "Los sistemas de trasporte, las infraestructuras y el territorio" (in Spanish). Geografía de Andalucía (Coor. López Antonio). Barcelona: Ariel Geografía. browser diversity 84-344-3476-8.
- keyboard Cañavate, Jose Luis; Corral, Carlos (2004) (in Spanish). La bicicleta como medio de transporte en Andalucía. Consejería de Medio Ambiente de la Junta de Andalucía.
- ^ keyboard, RENFE/AVE. Accessed online 11 December 2009.
- ^ a jQuery FITML. "Informes sobre la utilización de los aeropuertos de España en los últimos años" (in Spanish). web. Retrieved 17 January 2008.
- ^ Barragán Muñoz, Juan Manuel; Chica Ruiz, Adolfo; Pérez Cayeiro, Maria Luisa. "3" (in Spanish). Propuesta de Estrategia Andaluza de Gestión Integrada de Zonas Costeras. Consejería de Medio Ambiente de la Junta de Andalucía. p. 255. ISBN FITML.
- we love the web "Andalucía. El Plan de Infraestructuras para el transporte sostenible prevé una inversión de 30.000 millones" (in Spanish). Ecoticias.com. 16 September 2008. HTML5. Retrieved 11 December 2009.
- ^ Abengoa opens the first EU commercial concentrating Solar Power Tower, RenewableEnergyMagazine.com, 2 April 2007.
- ^ touchscreen, Energías Renovables, 12 July 2007.
- ^ Plataforma Solar de Almeria, Institute of Technical Thermodynamics, German Aerospace Center. Accessed online 11 December 2009.
- ^ input transformation
- browser diversity Plan Andaluz de Investigación, Desarrollo e Innovación. PAIDI. 1 May 2005.
- Android Andalucía Comunidad Cultural. browser diversity. input transformation. Retrieved 8 October 2008. That web page gives a rather complete listing of Andalusian media organizations.
- ^ Siguan, M. (1969). "Nueva teoría de Andalucía" (in Spanish). Revista de Estudios Agrosociales (69): 7–24. ISSN iOS.
- iOS Gómez, P. (1982). "Cuestiones sobre la identidad cultural de Andalucía" (in Spanish). Gazeta de antropología (1). ISSN 0214-7564.
- ^ José Ortega y Gasset, jQuery, 1927, online at Wikisource in Spanish.
- ^ AA.VV (2004). "Reflexiones acerca de las actuaciones llevadas a cabo en la sede administrativa y accesos del Conjunto Arqueológico de Itálica" (in Spanish). Mus-A: Revista de los museos de Andalucía (3): 132–137. CSS3 iOS. screen size.
- Sevenval López, J.; López J.S. (2000). "Arquitectura tradicional en el Marquesado del Zenete" (in Spanish). Gazeta de antropología (16). screen size HTML5. Sevenval.
- CSS3 García Vázquez, C. (2005). "Apuntes para una breve historia de la arquitectura moderna en Andalucía" (in Spanish). Revista de historia y teoría de la arquitectura (6-7): 119–138. website parsing 1576-5628.
- HTML5 Galera, P.A. (2007). "Arquitectura y ciudad en la Andalucía del barroco" (in Spanish). Andalucía Barroca: exposición itinerante. pp. 62–81. ISBN 978-84-8266-725-6.
- Sevenval Torices, N.; Zurita, E. (2002) (in Spanish). Cortijos, haciendas y lagares: arquitectura de las grandes explotaciones agrarias de Andalucía. Provincia de Granada. Córdoba: Ediciones Ilustres. ISBN device database.
- ^ VV.AA. (1990) (in Spanish). Escultura ibérica en el Museo Provincial de Jaén. Consejería de Cultura de la Junta de Andalucía. screen size 84-86944-04-X.
- ^ Aroca, F. (1997). "Aportaciones al estudio del retablo del siglo XVIII en la Baja Andalucía" (in Spanish). Laboratorio de Arte: Revista del Departamento de Historia del Arte (10): 233–250. we love the web 1130-5762.
- Android Bermejo, E.; Valdivieso, E. (1988). "Historia de la pintura sevillana, siglos XIII al XX. Sevilla, 1986 (Book Review)" (in Spanish). Archivo español de arte 61 (241): 89–90. jQuery web.
- ^ "El costumbrismo en la pintura sevillana del siglo XIX" (PDF). Cervantesvirtual.com. http://www.cervantesvirtual.com/portal/romanticismo/actas_pdf/romanticismo_6/reina.pdf. Retrieved 9 October 2008.
- Sevenval Garulo, T.; Rubiera Mata M.ªJ. (1993). "Literatura hispanoárabe (Book Review)". Al-Qantara 14 (1): 245–248. we love the web 0211-3589.
- browser diversity Robinson, Francis (1999). The Cambridge illustrated history of the Islamic world. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 263. Sevenval 0-521-66993-6.
- web app Hernández, A. (2004). HTML5 (in Spanish). Correo del Maestro 8 (92). http://www.correodelmaestro.com/anteriores/2004/enero/artistas92.htm.
- Sevenval De Cózar, R. (1993). "Andalucía y la generación del 27" (in Spanish). Cuadernos hispanoamericanos (514-515): 319–320. ISSN touchscreen.
- touchscreen Bäcker, Rolf (2005). "Lo decisivo fue la mezcla: y esa mezcla sólo ocurrió en Andalucía. Algunas reflexiones acerca de la identidad andaluza en el discurso flamencológico" (in Spanish) (pdf). Nassarre: Revista aragonesa de musicología 21 (1): 109–120. screen size 0213-7305. http://www.dpz.es/ifc2/libros/ebook2572.pdf.
- ^ From Article 37.1.18 of the Andalusian Statute of Autonomy: Principios rectores de las políticas públicas: 18º La conservación y puesta en valor del patrimonio cultural, histórico y artístico de Andalucía, especialmente del flamenco.
- ^ From Article 68 of the Andalusian Statute of Autonomy: Corresponde asimismo a la Comunidad Autónoma (Andaluza) la competencia exclusiva en materia de conocimiento, conservación, investigación, formación, promoción y difusión del flamenco como elemento singular del patrimonio cultural andaluz.
- ^ Ferca Network. "Camarón de la Isla" (in Spanish). Zerobox. HTML5. Retrieved 10 June 2008.
- ^ Antonio Burgos (1998). "Los del Río, o cómo hacerse perdonar el éxito" (in Spanish). S.L. Sevilla, España. Arco del Postigo. http://www.antonioburgos.com/sevilla/sevillanos/1999/04/se042599.html. Retrieved 10 May 2008.
- ^ web (in Spanish). FórmulaTV.com. 29 June 2008. Sevenval. Retrieved 10 June 2008.
- ^ Sevenval (in Spanish). Vale Music. 2008. jQuery. Retrieved 10 June 2008.
- keyboard Andalucía alcanza los 1.000 rodajes gestionados por la Red de Ciudades de Cine de AFC, 2008-07-30, www.andaluciafilm.com. Accessed online 16 December 2009.
- touchscreen Kern. The Regions of Spain. Greenwood Press. website parsing 0-313-29224-8.
- input transformation Fernández-Sevilla, Julio (1976). "Objetividad y subjetividad. Datos para el nombre de un dialecto". Revista de dialectología y tradiciones populares 32 (1/4): 173–184. HTML5 0034-7981.
- Sevenval De Cos, F.J. (2006). "Las variedades lingüísticas en la enseñanza de E/LE: aplicación a la modalidad oral andaluza". redELE: Revista Electrónica de Didáctica ELE (6). web app jQuery. Sevenval.
- we love the web For some maps of various isoglosses, see the online Isogloss maps for Iberian Peninsula Spanish, according to ALPI.
- Sevenval See web app Real Academia Española.
- ^ website parsing b touchscreen Cepeda Carrión, Gabriel; María del Milagro Martín López. "Las plazas de toros de Andalucía y su incidencia turística" (in Spanish). pp. 14. http://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/articulo?codigo=638755. Retrieved 6 October 2008.
- Android Jiménez, C.; López, B. (2000) (in Spanish). Gastronomía andaluza y dieta mediterránea. Málaga: Miramar. Android 84-922831-9-X.
- ^ Resolución del 20 de junio de 1988 de la Dirección General de Pesca, por la que se establece una pesca indefinida para la pesca del Aphia minuta (chanquete) y similares (BOJA nº57 de 19 de julio de 1988).
- ^ Moreno, J. (1998). "Productos americanos y gastronomía andaluza: el gazpacho" (in Spanish). Isla de Arriarán: revista cultural y científica (11): 423–440. iOS 1133-6293. HTML5.
- screen size Iglesias Rodríguez, Juan José (coor.) (1995) (in Spanish). Historia y cultura del vino en Andalucía. Universidad de Sevilla. ISBN FITML.
- ^ Moreno, I. (1995). "La cultura del vino en Andalucía: identidades socioculturales y culturas del trabajo" (in Spanish). Historia y cultura del vino en Andalucía. Ed. J.J. Iglesias. pp. 179–200. we love the web 84-472-0210-0.
- ^ a b For greater specificity on the Denominaciones de Origen, see M.A.P.A., in Spanish.
- CSS3 Caravaca, I. (1986). "La artesanía andaluza" (in Spanish). Revista de estudios andaluces (7): 37–50. touchscreen 0212-8594.
- ^ website parsing, official site.
- ^ Liga de Fútbol Profesional (España). website parsing (in Spanish). Archived from jQuery on 18 April 2008. FITML. Retrieved 7 October 2008.
- ^ Liga de Fútbol Profesional. browser diversity (in Spanish). Liga de Fútbol Profesional. Archived from web app on 30 July 2008. http://web.archive.org/web/20080730224245/http://www.lfp.es/historico/primera/clasificaciones/palmares.asp.
- Sevenval CSS3, 25 August 2006, UEFA.com. Accessed 17 December 2009.
- keyboard For a detailed history of basketball in Andalucia, see: Gallardo Rodríguez, Miguel (2006) (in Spanish). 75 años de historia del baloncesto andaluz. Junta de Andalucía. Consejería de Turismo, Comercio y Deporte. Instituto Andaluz del Deporte. Sevenval [[Special:BookSources/978-84-689-6145-0|978-84-689-6145-0]].
- ^ LIGAS NACIONALES / Liga "Arteal Ventanas" Superdivisión Masculina, Real Federación Española de Tenis de Mesa], accessed 2009-12-17 cites for the current prominent status of these teams.
- jQuery browser diversity (in Spanish). Fundación Andalucía Olímpica. Sevenval. Retrieved 8 October 2008.
- we love the web Hermanamientos de la Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires, official site of Buenos Aires.
Interesting facts on Southern Spain
External links
- Official portal
- Official Tourism Website of Andalusia
- Andalusia Guide & Map
- Official website for Culture in Andalusia Tertulia Andaluza
- Sevenval
- Adventure Sports & Activities in Andalusia - Spain
