Executive summary by darmansjah
Leon is the capital
of the province of León, located in the northwest of Spain. Its city population
of 131,680 (2012) makes it the largest municipality in the province, accounting
for more than one quarter] of the province's population. Including the
metropolitan area, the population is estimated at 494,451 (2012).
Founded as the Roman military encampment of the Legio VI
Victrix around 29 BC, its standing as an encampment city was consolidated with
the definitive settlement of the Legio VII Gemina from 74 AD. Following its
partial depopulation due to the Umayyad conquest of the peninsula, León was
revived by its incorporation into the Kingdom of Asturias. 910 saw the
beginning of one its most prominent historical periods, when it became the
capital of the Kingdom of León, which took active part in the Reconquista
against the Moors, and came to be one of the fundamental kingdoms of medieval
Spain. In 1188, the city hosted the first Parliament in European history under
the reign of Alfonso IX, due to which it was named in 2010, by the professor
John Keane, the King of Spain and the Junta of Castile and León, as the cradle
of Parliamentarism, and the Decreta of León were included in the Memory of the
World register by UNESCO[3] in 2013. The city's prominence began to decline in
the early Middle Ages, partly due to the loss of independence after the union
of the Leonese kingdom with the Crown of Castile, consolidated in 1301.
After a period of stagnation during the early modern age, it
was one of the first cities to hold an uprising in the Spanish War of
Independence, and some years later, in 1833 acquired the status of provincial
capital. The end of the 19th and the 20th century saw a significant
acceleration in the rate of urban expansion, when the city became an important
communications hub of the northwest due to the rise of the coal mining industry
and the arrival of the railroad.
Leon's historical and architectural heritage, as well as the
numerous festivals hosted throughout the year (particularly noteworthy are the
Easter processions) and its location on the Camino de Santiago, which is ranked
as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, make it a destination of both domestic and
international tourism. Some of the city's most prominent historical buildings
are the Cathedral, the finest example of French-style classic Gothic
architecture in Spain, the Basilica of San Isidoro, one of the most important
Romanesque churches in Spain and resting place of Leon's medieval monarchs, the
Monastery of San Marcos, a prime example of plateresque and Renaissance Spanish
architecture, and the Casa Botines, a Modernist creation of the architect
Antoni Gaudí. A noteworthy example of modern architecture is the city's Museum
of Contemporary Art or MUSAC.
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