
Present-day division of Catalonia in ''comarques''
This is a list of the '''comarques''' (singular ''"comarca"'') of '
Catalonia' (
Spain). A
comarca is roughly equivalent to a
US "
county" or a
UK "
district". However, in the context of Catalonia, the term "county" can be a bit misleading, because in
medieval Catalonia, the most important rulers were
counts, notably the
Counts of Barcelona (many of whom also held the
Crown of Aragon) and
of Urgell. Comarques have no particular relation to the "
counties" that were ruled by counts.
The current division of Catalonia into comarques originates in an order of the semi-autonomous Catalan government under the Spanish Republic in
1936. It was superseded after the
1939 victory of
Francisco Franco's forces in the
Spanish Civil War, but restored in
1987 by the re-established Generalitat de Catalunya, with minor revisions in
1988 (adding
Pla de l'Estany,
Pla d'Urgell and
Alta Ribagorça) and
1990, when some borders were adjusted.
As of 2004 there is discussion of possibly further subdividing some of the comarques.
[1]
See also lists of
municipalities for the
Catalan provinces of
Barcelona,
Girona,
Lleida,
Tarragona.
The articles in naming
Because the
Catalan language has a relatively complex set of rules for the form of the definite article, and because (in Catalan) the names of comarques (except for
Osona) typically take the definite article in any position except as the subject of a sentence, the following list indicates the appropriate form of the definite article for each comarca. Because
Val d'Aran is an
Aranese-speaking area, it is often written as "era Val d'Aran", using the Aranese definite article.
List of comarques
| Comarca | Capital | Population | Area (km²) |
|---|
| l'Alt Camp | Valls | 35,635 | 544.7 |
| l'Alt Empordà | Figueres | 99,321 | 74 |
| l'Alt Penedès | Vilafranca del Penedès | 80,976 | 592.4 |
| l'Alt Urgell | La Seu d'Urgell | 19,105 | 1,446.9 |
| l'Alta Ribagorça | Pont de Suert | 3,477 | 426,8 |
| l'Anoia | Igualada | 93,529 | 866.6 |
| el Bages | Manresa | 155,112 | 1,295.2 |
| el Baix Camp | Reus | 145,675 | 695.3 |
| el Baix Ebre | Tortosa | 66,369 | 987.9 |
| el Baix Empordà | La Bisbal d'Empordà | 102,566 | 700.5 |
| el Baix Llobregat | Sant Feliu de Llobregat | 692,892 | 486.5 |
| el Baix Penedès | El Vendrell | 61,256 | 295.5 |
| el Barcelonès | Barcelona | 2,093,670 | 143.1 |
| el Berguedà | Berga | 37,995 | 1,182.5 |
| la Cerdanya | Puigcerdà | 14,158 | 546.4 |
| la Conca de Barberà | Montblanc | 18,766 | 648.9 |
| el Garraf | Vilanova i la Geltrú | 108,194 | 184.1 |
| les Garrigues | Les Borges Blanques | 18,999 | 799.7 |
| la Garrotxa | Olot | 47,747 | 734.2 |
| el Gironès | Girona | 136,543 | 575.5 |
| el Maresme | Mataró | 356,545 | 396.9 |
| el Montsià | Amposta | 57,550 | 708.7 |
| la Noguera | Balaguer | 34,744 | 1,733.0 |
| Osona | Vic | 129,543 | 1,263.8 |
| el Pallars Jussà | Tremp | 12,057 | 1,290.0 |
| el Pallars Sobirà | Sort | 6,174 | 1,355.2 |
| el Pla de l'Estany | Banyoles | 24.347 | 262.7 |
| el Pla d'Urgell | Mollerussa | 29,723 | 304.5 |
| el Priorat | Falset | 9,196 | 496.2 |
| la Ribera d'Ebre | Móra d'Ebre | 21,656 | 825.3 |
| el Ripollès | Ripoll | 25,744 | 958.7 |
| la Segarra | Cervera | 18,497 | 721.2 |
| el Segrià | Lleida | 166,090 | 1,393.7 |
| la Selva | Santa Coloma de Farners | 117,393 | 995.5 |
| el Solsonès | Solsona | 11,466 | 998.6 |
| el Tarragonès | Tarragona | 181,374 | 317.1 |
| la Terra Alta | Gandesa | 12,196 | 740.0 |
| l'Urgell | Tàrrega | 31,026 | 586.2 |
| era Val d'Aran | Vielha | 7,691 | 620.5 |
| el Vallès Occidental | Sabadell, Terrassa | 736,682 | 580.7 |
| el Vallès Oriental | Granollers | 321,431 | 851.9 |
Comarcal revisions
The following municipalities changed ''comarca'' in 1990, mostly following local
referendums:
Historical comarques
There are some other comarques which are often referred as ''historical comarques of Catalonia'', because their present territory was part of the former
Principality of Catalonia, but they are not currently within the
Autonomous Community of Catalonia.
Administration and government
In the
Autonomous Community of Catalonia and
Aragon, but not in
Northern Catalonia, the comarca exists as a local government area, and has a representative
consell comarcal (comarcal council).
See also
★
Cerdanya
★
Urgell
★
Comarques of the Valencian Community
★
List of Aragonese comarcas
★
Comarcas of Spain
External links
★
The Institut d'Estadística de Catalunya is an excellent source of statistical information for Catalonia, down to the level of individual municipalities. It is also our source for which municipalities are in which comarca. Parts of the site are in English and Spanish, although most of it is in Catalan.
★
Comarcàlia - Information about the various comarques in a variety of languages, including English. Includes good maps down to the level of individual municipalities (or, as they choose to translate, "boroughs").
★ History of present comarcal division.
Catalonia,
La Franja and
Northern Catalonia.