Extremadura ( ; ; ; ; Fala: Extremaúra) is a landlocked autonomous community of Spain. Its capital city is Mérida, and its largest city is Badajoz. Located in the central-western part of the Iberian Peninsula, it is crossed from east to west by the Tagus and Guadiana rivers. The autonomous community is formed by the two largest provinces of Spain: Cáceres and Badajoz. Extremadura is bordered by Portugal to the west and by the autonomous communities of Castile and León to the north, Castilla–La Mancha to the east, and Andalusia to the south.

It is an important area for wildlife, particularly with the major reserve at Monfragüe, which was designated a National Park in 2007, and the International Tagus River Natural Park (Parque Natural Tajo Internacional). The regional government is led by the president of the Regional Government of Extremadura, a post currently held by María Guardiola of the People's Party.

The Day of Extremadura is celebrated on 8 September. It coincides with the Catholic festivity of Our Lady of Guadalupe. is located in the Sistema Central, in the northeastern end of the region, bordering with Castile and León. The main subranges of the Sistema Central in Extremadura are the Sierra de Gata and Sierra de Béjar.

The modest heights of Sierra de las Villuercas (topping at on the Pico de las Villuercas) rise in the Mesopotamia extremeña. Other notable ranges include the Sierra de Montánchez and the Sierra de San Pedro, part of the larger Montes de Toledo system.

The Sierra Morena—the limit between Extremadura and Andalusia—and the Sierra de Tentudía (topping at on the Pico Tentudía) rise in the south.

There are four different hydrographic basins:

  • The basin of the Tagus (), with two principal tributaries: on the right, the Tiétar and the Alagón; and on the left, the Almonte, Ibor, Salor and the Sever. The tributaries on the right edge carry a large quantity of water, which feed the gorges of the Sistema Central where the rainfall is abundant and the winter brings a great quantity of snow.
  • The basin of the Guadiana, which has principal tributaries:
  • The basin of the Guadalquivir with only in Extremadura (2.45% of total).
  • The basin of the Douro () with only in Extremadura (0.04% of its basin).

Climate

The climate of Extremadura is predominantly hot-summer Mediterranean (Csa in the Köppen climate classification), with some regions being cold semi-arid (BSk in the Köppen climate classification). Extremadura generally presents average annual temperatures somewhat warmer than most of the hinterland of the Iberian Peninsula, featuring nonetheless a north–south gradient. Annual thermal amplitude generally ranges from 16 to 19 °C. Average annual temperature is around , while the average annual precipitation stands at around 588 mm. Parts of the Sistema Central presents more than 1,500 mm while it barely rains 400 mm in parts of the province of Badajoz. Summers are very hot and dry, with the rain concentrated in the cold months instead, leading to a high degree of water stress during the summer months.

History

thumb|upright=1.2|[[Mérida, Spain|Archaeological Roman Ensemble in Mérida (Emerita Augusta), capital of the Roman province of Hispania Lusitana.]]

During the time of the Roman Empire, the area that is known today as Autonomous Community of Extremadura was part of Lusitania, a Roman province that included most of current day Portugal (except for the northern area today known as Norte Region) and the central western portion of the current day Spain. Mérida (now capital of Extremadura) became the capital of the Roman province of Lusitania, and one of the most important cities in the Roman Empire.

Like the bulk of the Iberian Peninsula, the territory was conquered by the Umayyads in the early 8th century. As part of the Emirate and later Caliphate of Córdoba, it largely constituted a territorial subdivision (kūra) of the former polities centered on Mérida. Following the collapse of the Caliphate in the early 11th century during the so-called Fitna of al-Andalus and its ensuing fragmentation into ephemeral statelets (taifas), the bulk of the territory of current day Extremadura became part of the (First) Taifa of Badajoz (Baṭalyaws), centered around the namesake city and founded by Sapur, a saqaliba previously freed by Al-Hakam II.

thumb|right|upright=1.2|The bull of Plasencia in the [[Cantigas de Santa Maria.]]

Conversely, the kingdoms of León, Castile and Portugal (most notably the first one) made advances in the 11th and 12th centuries across the territory (with for example the successive Leonese conquests of Coria in 1079 and 1142, the Portuguese attempts at expanding across the Guadiana basin in the second half of the 12th century, or the Castilian founding of Plasencia in 1186) not free from setbacks either caused by the Almoravid and Almohad impetus, which also entailed the demise of the first and second taifa of Badajoz in 1094 and 1150, respectively. In the Almohad case, their 1174 offensive removed Leonese control from every fortress south of the Tagus (including Cáceres). After the Almohad disaster at the 1212 Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa, the remaining part of current-day Extremadura under Muslim control fell to the troops led by Alfonso IX of León—Alcántara (1214), Cáceres (1227–1229), Mérida (1230), Badajoz (1230)—and later to the military orders of Santiago and Alcántara—Trujillo (1232), Medellín (1234)—on behalf of Ferdinand III of Castile. The last fortresses in the Lower Extremadura were conquered by Christians by 1248.

By the late Middle Ages, the territory of the current-day region consisted of mayorazgos of the military orders of Santiago and Alcántara (about half the territory), nobiliary lordships (about a quarter of the territory) and royal demesne towns (the other quarter of the territory).

In between the 15th and 16th centuries, the concept of the Leonese and Castilian extremaduras diluted and the name eventually came to refer to the territory of the current-day region. The territory lacked nonetheless shared government and administration institutions.

In between 1570 and 1572, the Crown forcibly relocated about 11,000 moriscos into the territory as part of the deportation of Granadans that followed the defeat of the Alpujarras revolt. The distribution was somewhat chaotic although some places with an already "threatening" population of old moriscos (such as Hornachos, Magacela and Benquerencia) were avoided as resettlement locations for the Granadan moriscos.

Two generations later, the expulsion of the moriscos from the region began in 1609, starting with the moriscos of Hornachos, the first expulsion in the Crown of Castile. By September 1610 about two thirds of the moriscos of Extremadura had been already expelled and by 1611 the number amounted to 12,776. Those who avoided the early orders of expulsion abided to reports of being 'good Christians' or claimed a status as 'old moriscos'. At the height of 1612, there were reports of remaining moriscos in Trujillo, Mérida and Plasencia.

thumb|right|upright=1.2|17th century panorama of the city of [[Badajoz.]]

Located in the most convenient path from the Meseta Central to Portugal, the territory suffered greatly due to warfare from the 1640–1668 Portuguese Restoration War, characterised not by the movement of large armies but by pillage, skirmishes, raids, and destruction of economic resources and settlements across both sides of the Raya. The growing role of the fortified place of Badajoz (halfway between Lisbon and Madrid), in the wake of the installment of the Captaincy General of Extremadura consolidated the clout of the military in the region.

By the late 18th century, the Extremaduran countryside languished, experiencing a deep crisis. There was a diminishing share of land dedicated to crops. The growing cattle sector induced the creation of yet more pastures, adding up to the structural problem stemmed from the extraordinary degree of concentration of land ownership. By the end of the Ancien Régime, the clergy, municipal councils and the royal army mattered more than the lesser role of the entitled nobility.

Railways were developed in the second half of the 19th century. In September 1863, a passenger train arrived to Badajoz from Elvas, Portugal. It was the first train in the region and the first international service in the Iberian Peninsula. In 1866, the was completed, enabling the link with Madrid. The Madrid–Valencia de Alcántara line, a new connection passing through the province of Cáceres, was fully completed in 1881.

During the 1936–1939 Spanish Civil War, the Nationalist faction Columna Madrid advanced quickly across the province of Badajoz in August 1936 and left merciless repression and mass casualties behind. Badajoz was the Spanish province where the Francoist repression comparatively took the highest relative toll of victims during the war and the immediate Post-War period; there were around 12,000 executions in the province (out of the 14,000 in the whole region), compared to around 1,600 victims of the Republican repression.

In the mid 20th century, the Francoist dictatorship pursued a policy of colonization and agrarian reform in the region to foster the economy, transforming thousands of hectares of dryland crops into irrigated lands, also favouring the erection of 63 new settlements by the Instituto Nacional de Colonización (INC). The second half of the 20th century saw a massive rural flight out of the region, both to the industrialised areas of Spain (already started in 1955) as well as to richer European countries (such as Germany, France and Switzerland), both of which notably intensified after 1961, in the wake of the 1959 Stabilization Plan (and in the second case also after bilateral agreements reached with destination countries). The region henceforth was handed a demographic blow in the ensuing years, with the effective expulsion of nearly a 40% of the population, particularly young people.

A pre-autonomous government entity in Extremadura (the "Junta Regional de Extremadura") with jurisdiction over the provinces of Badajoz and Cáceres was created by means of a 1978 law. The draft of the regional Statute of Autonomy began in 1980, the first step toward Extremadura becoming one of the Spanish autonomous communities. The text passed its final hurdle as it was enshrined as Organic Law in 1982. The first election to the Assembly of Extremadura took place in May 1983.

Government and administration

Autonomous

The Statute of Autonomy of Extremadura (enacted in 1983) is the fundamental organic law regulating the autonomous government, and it establishes the institutions through which the autonomous community exerts its powers:

thumb|right|The hemicycle of the Assembly of Extremadura

  • Assembly of Extremadura. The following are some of the functions conferred to the legislature: exerting legislative power in the autonomous community, the promotion and control of the Junta of Extremadura, the passing of the regional budget, the designation of senators correspondent to the autonomous community or the control of the media dependent on the regional government.

Export goods (mostly consisting of food and semimanufactures) are primarily sent to the European market, but there has been a growing share of non-EU export destinations throughout the 2010s.

Agriculture

thumb|right|Iberian pigs in Extremadura

thumb|Tobacco field in La Vera

Wild black Iberian pigs roam in the area and consume acorns from oak groves. These pigs are caught and used for the cured ham dish jamón ibérico. The higher the percentage of acorns eaten by the pigs, the more valuable the ham. For example, jamón ibérico from pigs whose diet consists of 90% acorns or more can be sold for more than twice as much as ham whose pigs ate on average less than 70% acorns. In the US, jamón ibérico directly from Extremadura, with bone, was illegal until around 2005. At that time, enough US restaurants were in demand for the delicacy that Spain decided to export it as boneless, which the US Department of Agriculture's health codes would approve (and continue to do).

85 Extremaduran municipalities constitute the jurisdiction of the "Dehesa de Extremadura" Protected Designation of Origin (PDO), which protects jamones and paletas (hind and front pig legs) originated from Iberian pigs and mixed Iberian/Duroc-Jersey pigs.

As of 2021, Extremadura produces about 98% of the tobacco produced in Spain, also being the leading European producing region. Tobacco production concentrates in La Vera and Campo Arañuelo.

A large part of the region falls within the scope of the Ribera del Guadiana PDO, which is further divided in the Ribera Alta, Tierra de Barros, Matanegra, Ribera Baja, Montánchez, and Cañamero wine subregions. The PDO protects the wines made of several varieties of black and white grapes.

As of 2021, Extremadura is the second largest rice producing region in Spain, after Andalusia. Due to drought and high water demands from rice fields, non-irrigated rice fields have been favoured since the late 2010s. Peppers are grown in the , consisting of the comarcas of La Vera, Campo Arañuelo, Valle del Ambroz and Valle del Alagón. This situation has led to the characterization of Extremadura as a potential "colony" of the private electricity companies, which are not taxed in the region and employ a relatively low share of the industrial workforce.

The region is at the forefront of Spain's plans for energy transition and a decarbonisation, thanks to the installation of large solar power plants and the granting of lithium mining licenses. Two of the largest photovoltaic power plants in Europe are located in the region: Francisco Pizarro (590 MW) in Torrecillas de la Tiesa and Núñez de Balboa (500 MW) in Usagre; both are operated by Iberdrola, which is developing another 6 photovoltaic plants collectively amounting to 1,300 MW.

A project to build a lithium-ion battery factory participated by Envision in Navalmoral de la Mata was announced in June 2022.

Transport

Air

Badajoz Airport is the only airport in the Extremadura region which provides direct routes to Madrid, Barcelona, Gran Canaria and Palma de Mallorca which are operated by Iberia. Generally, residents in the region would also use other nearby airports such as Madrid–Barajas Airport, Seville Airport, and Humberto Delgado Airport in the nearby border of Portugal.

Population

As of January 1, 2012, the population of Extremadura is 1,109,367 inhabitants, representing 2.36% of the Spanish population (46,745,807).

The population density is very low——compared to Spain as a whole.

The urban network is dominated by three municipalities between 50,000 and 200,000 inhabitants (Badajoz, Cáceres and Mérida), followed by Plasencia, the Don Benito-Villanueva de la Serena conurbation and Almendralejo. Other municipalities with a population above 10,000 inhabitants include Zafra, Montijo, Villafranca de los Barros, Navalmoral de la Mata and Coria.

| list_by_pop =

| kind = municipalities

| div_name =

| div_link = Provinces of SpainProvince

| city_1 = Badajoz

| div_1 = Province of BadajozBadajoz

| pop_1 = 150,984

| city_2 = Cáceres, SpainCáceres

| div_2 = Province of CáceresCáceres

| pop_2 = 96,255

| city_3 = Mérida, SpainMérida

| div_3 = Province of BadajozBadajoz

| pop_3 = 59,548

| city_4 = Plasencia

| div_4 = Province of CáceresCáceres

| pop_4 = 39,860

| city_5 = Don Benito

| div_5 = Province of BadajozBadajoz

| pop_5 = 37,284

| city_6 = Almendralejo

| div_6 = Province of BadajozBadajoz

| pop_6 = 33,855

| city_7 = Villanueva de la Serena

| div_7 = Province of BadajozBadajoz

| pop_7 = 25,752

| city_8 = Navalmoral de la Mata

| div_8 = Province of CáceresCáceres

| pop_8 = 17,163

| city_9 = Zafra

| div_9 = Province of BadajozBadajoz

| pop_9 = 16,810

| city_10 = Montijo, SpainMontijo

| div_10 = Province of BadajozBadajoz

| pop_10 = 15,504

| city_11 = Villafranca de los Barros

| div_11 = Province of BadajozBadajoz

| pop_11 = 12,673

| city_12 = Coria, CáceresCoria

| div_12 = Province of CáceresCáceres

| pop_12 = 12,366

| city_13 = Olivenza

| div_13 = Province of BadajozBadajoz

| pop_13 = 11,912

| city_14 = Miajadas

| div_14 = Province of CáceresCáceres

| pop_14 = 9,527

| city_15 = Jerez de los Caballeros

| div_15 = Province of BadajozBadajoz

| pop_15 = 9,196

| city_16 = Trujillo, SpainTrujillo

| div_16 = Province of CáceresCáceres

| pop_16 = 8,912

| city_17 = Los Santos de Maimona

| div_17 = Province of BadajozBadajoz

| pop_17 = 8,075

| city_18 = Azuaga

| div_18 = Province of BadajozBadajoz

| pop_18 = 7,747

| city_19 = Talayuela

| div_19 = Province of CáceresCáceres

| pop_19 = 7,395

| city_20 = Guareña

| div_20 = Province of BadajozBadajoz

| pop_20 = 6,888

Foreign

{|class="wikitable floatright" style="margin:1em auto;"

|+Foreign population by country of citizenship (2022)

! Nationality || Population

|-

| || align = right | 7,690

|-

| || align = right | 7,336

|-

| || align = right | 2,996

|-

| || align="right" | 1,774

|-

| || align="right" | 1,648

|-

| || align = right | 1,404

|-

| || align="right" | 1,177

|-

| || align="right" | 1,145

|-

| || align="right" | 939

|-

| || align="right" | 602

|-

| || align = right | 555

|-

| || align="right" | 507

|-

| || align="right" | 502

|-

| || align="right" | 408

|}

As of 2022, the largest immigrant community is Moroccan with 9,218 people, followed by Romanian with 4,324. There are 98 Icelanders and 6 Liechtensteiners. Brazilians account for 1,676 and Colombians make up 1,409. Among sub-Saharan African immigrants, the largest community is Senegalese with 88 people. Among Asian immigrants, the Chinese make up the largest group with 631 people. There are also 3,492 Portuguese citizens living within the region.

From this period, the population grew steadily until the 1960s (1,379,072 people in 1960). After 1960, emigration to more prosperous regions of Spain and Europe drained the population.

Languages

The only official language is Spanish (whose local dialects are collectively called Castúo), but other languages and dialects are also spoken. The Fala, a Galician-Portuguese language, is a specially protected language and is spoken in the valley of Jálama. The Extremaduran language, the collective name for a group of vernacular dialects related to Leonese is endangered. Local variants of Portuguese are native to Cedillo and Herrera de Alcántara. Portuguese has also been accounted to be spoken as well by some people (mainly those born before the 1940s) in Olivenza.

Reported phonological distinctive features of the Spanish dialectal variants spoken in the region include instances of (in some areas of the province of Badajoz), loss of intervocalic /d/, j and word-initial h aspiration, r → l substitution, and .

Sports

  • In football:
  • CD Extremadura
  • Extremadura UD, founded in 2007 but folded in 2022
  • Extremadura Femenino CF, also known as CF Puebla Extremadura, the women's team
  • CF Extremadura, founded in 1924 but folded in 2010
  • AD Mérida
  • CD Badajoz
  • CD Don Benito
  • CP Cacereño

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Notable people

Explorers

Several Spanish conquistadors hailed from Extremadura, including Vasco Núñez de Balboa, the first European to lead an expedition to reach the Pacific Ocean from America; Hernando de Soto the first European to lead an expedition to the territory of the modern-day United States; Hernán Cortés and Francisco Pizarro, who conquered the Aztec and Inca empires respectively; Francisco de Orellana, who explored the length of the Amazon; Pedro de Valdivia, the first governor of Chile; and Sebastián Vizcaíno, who was a Spanish soldier, entrepreneur in the Philippines, explorer of the Californias, and diplomat in Japan.

Politicians

  • José de Carvajal y Lancáster (First Secretary of State under Ferdinand VI between 1746 and 1754)
  • Manuel Godoy (twice First Secretary of State under Charles IV, between 1782 and 1798, and between 1801 and 1808)

Artists

  • Luis de Morales (1512)
  • Francisco de Zurbarán (1598)
  • (1919)
  • Eduardo Naranjo (1944)

thumb|150px|[[Benito Arias Montano]]

Writers and poets

thumb|150px|[[El escritor José de Espronceda, portrait by Antonio María Esquivel () (Museo del Prado, Madrid)]]

thumb|150px|[[Carolina Coronado]]

thumb|150px|[[José María Gabriel y Galán]]

  • (writer, 1496)
  • Benito Arias Montano (philosopher and writer, 1527)
  • José de Espronceda (romantic poet, 1808)
  • Juan Donoso Cortés (writer, 1809)
  • Carolina Coronado (romantic poet, 1821)
  • José María Gabriel y Galán (poet, 1870)
  • Mario Roso de Luna (philosopher, astronomer and writer, 1874)
  • Luis Chamizo Trigueros (poet, 1894)
  • Jesús Delgado Valhondo (poet, 1909)
  • Dulce Chacón (poet, 1954)
  • Elisa Herrero Uceda (writer, 1957)
  • Miguel Herrero Uceda (writer, 1964)
  • Jorge Camacho (poet, 1966)

Scientists

  • José Antonio Pavón Jiménez (botanist known for researching the flora of Peru and Chile, 1754)
  • Mario Roso de Luna (philosopher, astronomer and writer, 1874)
  • Francisco Elías de Tejada y Spínola (philosopher, law & politics theorist)
  • Emilio Santos Corchero (theoretical physicist)

Sports

  • José Calderón (basketball player, 2006 FIBA World Championship winner)
  • Manuel Piñero (golfer, member of the successful European 1985 Ryder Cup team)
  • Enrique Tornero Hernández (swimmer, gold medalist at the 1996 Summer Paralympics)

Football

  • Adelardo (14 appearances for Spain between 1962 and 1970)
  • Rafael Gordillo (75 appearances for Spain between 1978 and 1988)
  • Roberto Marina (1 appearance for Spain in 1985)
  • Manolo (28 appearances for Spain between 1988 and 1992)
  • Ernesto Valverde (1 appearance for Spain in 1990, manager of FC Barcelona between 2017 and 2020)
  • Ángel Cuéllar (2 appearances for Spain between 1994 and 1995)
  • Fernando Morientes (47 appearances for Spain between 1998 and 2007, three-time UEFA Champions League winner)
  • Ito (1 appearance for Spain in 1998)
  • César Sánchez (1 appearance for Spain in 2000, UEFA Champions League winner)
  • Yannel Correa (3 appearances for Uruguay in 2019)
  • Pedro Porro (1 appearance for Spain in 2021)

Musicians and TV

Extremadura has produced many musicians, including: Cristóbal Oudrid (pianist and composer), Rosa Morena (singer), Soraya Arnelas (singer), (singer), Roberto Iniesta (singer of rock band Extremoduro), Pablo Guerrero, Bebe (singer), Al Carmona (conductor), Esteban Sánchez (pianist), Gecko Turner (singer).

TV personalities include: Isabel Gemio, , Raquel Sánchez-Silva and Berta Collado.

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See also

  • Extremaduran cuisine
  • Extremadura (Vino de la Tierra)
  • List of presidents of the Extremaduran Assembly
  • New Extremadura

References

;Citations

;Bibliography

  • Extremadura, Spain - Google Maps
  • Spanish regions: Extremadura traditional clothing