(Redirected from Tarraco)
'Tarragona' ( in
Catalan) is a city located in the south of
Catalonia and east of
Spain, by the
Mediterranean Sea. It is the capital of the catalan comarca
Tarragonès. Its map coordinates are . As of the
2005 census, the city had a population of 128,152, and the population of the entire urban area (including
Reus, etc) was estimated to be 348,921.
History
In
Roman times, the city was named 'Tarraco' ( in
Ptolemy, ii. 6. § 17) and was capital of the province of
Hispania Tarraconensis (after being capital of
Hispania Citerior in the Republican era). The Roman colony founded at Tarraco had the full name of 'Colonia Iulia Urbs Triumphalis Tarraco'.
Some experts suggest that the city was an Iberic town called ''Kesse'' or ''Kosse'', derived of the iberic tribe of those region: the ''cosetians''.
Smith suggests that the city was probably founded by the
Phoenicians, who called it 'Tarchon'', which, according to
Samuel Bochart, means a citadel. This name was probably derived from its situation on a high rock, between 700 and 800
feet above the sea; whence we find it characterised as ''arce potens Tarraco''. (Auson. ''Class. Urb.'' 9; ''cf.'' ''Mart.'' x. 104.) It was seated on the river Sulcis or Tulcis (modern
Francolí), on a bay of the Mare Internum (
Mediterranean Sea), between the Pyrenees and the river Iberus (modern
Ebro). (
Mela, ii. 6;
Plin. iii. 3. s. 4.)
Livy (xxii. 22) mentions a ''portus Tarraconis''; and according to
Eratosthenes (''ap.''
Strabo iii. p. 159) it had a naval station or roads (); but
Artemidorus (''ap.'' Strab. ''l. c.'';
Polyb. iii. 76) says with more probability that it had none, and scarcely even an anchoring place; and Strabo himself calls it . This answers better to its present condition; for though a mole was constructed in the
15th century with the materials of the ancient
amphitheatre, and another subsequently by an Englishman named John Smith, it still affords but little protection for shipping. (Ford's Handbook of Spain, p. 222.) Tarraco lies on the main road along the south-eastern coast of the
Iberian Peninsula. (
Itin. Ant. pp. 391, 396, 399, 448, 452.) It was fortified and much enlarged by the brothers
Publius and
Gnaeus Scipio, who converted it into a fortress and arsenal against the
Carthagenians. Subsequently it became the capital of the province named after it, a Roman colony, and
conventus juridicus. (Plin. ''l. c.'';
Tac. ''Ann.'' i. 78; Solin. 23, 26; Polyb. x. 34; Liv. xxi. 61;
Steph. B. p. 637.)
Augustus wintered at Tarraco after his Cantabrian campaign, and bestowed many marks of honor on the city, among which were its honorary titles of 'Colonia Victrix Togata' and 'Colonia Julia Victrix Tarraconensis'. The city also minted coins. (Grut. ''Inscr.'' p. 382; Orelli, no. 3127; coins in Eckhel, i. p. 27;
Florez, ''Med.'' ii. p. 579; Mionnet, i. p. 51, Suppl. i. p. 104; Sestini, p. 202.) According to Mela (''l. c.'') it was the richest town on that coast, and Strabo (''l. c.'') represents its population as equal to that of Carthago Nova (modern
Cartagena). Its fertile plain and sunny shores are celebrated by
Martial and other poets; and its neighborhood is described as producing good wine and flax. (Mart. x. 104, xiii. 118; Sil. Ital. iii. 369, xv. 177; Plin. xiv. 6. s. 8, xix. 1. s. 2.)
Ancient remains
There are still many important ancient remains at Tarragona. Part of the bases of large
Cyclopean walls near the Quartel de Pilatos are thought to be anterior to the Romans. The building just mentioned, a prison in the
19th century, is said to have been the palace of Augustus. But Tarraco, like most other ancient towns which have continued to be inhabited, has been pulled to pieces by its own citizens for the purpose of obtaining building materials. The amphitheatre near the sea-shore has been used as a quarry, and but few vestiges of it now remain. A circus, 1500 feet long, is now built over it, though portions of it are still to be traced. Throughout the town
Latin, and even apparently
Phoenician, inscriptions on the stones of the houses proclaim the desecration that has been perpetrated. Two ancient monuments, at some little distance from the town, have, however, fared rather better. The first of these is a magnificent aqueduct, which spans a valley about a mile from the gates. It is 700 feet in length, and the loftiest arches, of which there are two tiers, are 96 feet high. The monument on the northwest of the city, and also about a mile distant, is a Roman sepulchre, commonly called the "Tower of the Scipios"; but there is no authority for assuming that they were buried here. (''Cf.'' Ford, ''Handbook'', p. 219, ''seq.''; Florez, ''Esp. Sagr.'' xxix. p. 68, ''seq.''; Miñano, ''Diccion.'' viii. p. 398.)
Modern Tarragona
Tarragona is home to a large
port and the
Universitat Rovira i Virgili. Much of its economic activity comes from a large amount of chemical industries located in the city or in surrounding areas.
Tarragona tourist attractions include the Museum of Archaeology and the Roman ruins of Tarraco, which has been designated a
World Heritage Site by
UNESCO. Tarragona is located near the
holiday resort of
Salou and the
Universal Studios theme park Port Aventura, one of the largest in
Europe. Tarragona has a wall surrounding the old city. There are two gates through the wall of Tarragona: the ''Portal del Roser'' and the ''
Portal de Sant Antoni''.
Major Events
★
Carnivals in Tarragona.
One of the most important and interesting carnivals in Catalonia, with one of the most complete ritual sequences of the Catalan carnivals, so local and so universal that this is the synthesis that makes it special.
Official website
★ 'Tarraco Viva'
One of the most important roman recreations of the world. A lot of groups around Europe recreate the roman world: from the roman legions, to the daily live. It's celebrated between 10 and 20 of May.
★ '
Tarragona International Dixieland Festival'.
The unique dixieland festival in Spain and one of the most important in Europe: 25 bands and 100 concerts and activities the week before Holy Week.
Official website
★ '
Tarragona International Fireworks Displays Competition'.
The most important
fireworks contest in the Mediterranean area is held every first week of July in Tarragona, in a wonderful bay -Punta del Miracle-, a place praised by the famous architect
Antoni Gaudí. The competition selects six international pyrotechnic companies every year.
Official website1
Official website 2
★ '
Santa Tecla Festival in Tarragona'
One of the most important mediterranean traditional festivals, between 15th and 24 September. It has been celebrated since 1321 and it has been considered of national touristic interest by the state are some of the main activities.
Official website
★ 'Sant Magí Festival in Tarragona'
The second traditional festival of Tarragona, between 17th and 20 August.
Official website
★ ' U2 Vertigo Music Video'
The Music Video for the hit single of U2's "How To Dismantle An Atomic Bomb" was filmed here in September of 2005
Town twinning
★
'
Avignon',
France (
1968)
★
'
Alghero',
Sardinia (
Italy) (
1972)
★
'
Orleans',
France (
1978)
★
'
Stafford',
England (
1992)
★
'
Klagenfurt',
Austria (
1996)
★
'
Pompei',
Italy (
2006)
References
★
See also
★
Archdiocese of Tarragona.
External links
★
Official Website of Tarragona
★
Virtual visit to Tarragona
★
More images of Tarragona
★
Pictures of Tarragona
★
Activities of interest in Tarragona
★
Bloc Tarragona 2016, about the city
★
★
Connexions-From Tarragona,the Tondo Rotondo's blog
★
xagatarragona.cat culture and history of Tarragona
★
Club Gimnastic
★ http://www.innovatecno.com/Tarraco3DCas.php