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Ferrol, Spain

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Ferrol
City & Naval Station
Flag of Ferrol
Coat of arms of Ferrol
Location of the City & Naval Station of Ferrol within Galicia.
Location of the City & Naval Station of Ferrol within Galicia.
CountrySpain
RegionGalicia
ProvinceA Coruña
Metropolitan CouncilFerrol
Type of Sea PortsSports, Fishing, Commercial & Military
Subdivisions21 Boroughs
NUTS-CodeES4
FerrolterraFerrol, Eume & Ortegal
Settlement History
List
Government
 • TypeMetropolitan Council
 • BodyFerrol City Council
 • MayorVicente Irisarri Castro (PSdeG)
Area
 • City & Naval Station942.06 km2 (363.73 sq mi)
 • Land81.9 km2 (31.6 sq mi)
Population
 (2007)INE
 • City & Naval Station241,528 Ferrolterra
 • Urban
77,859 Ferrol City Centre
 • Metro
163,669 Ferrol Borough Region
Demonym(s)ferrolan (m), ferrolana (f)
Time zoneCET (GMT +1)
 • Summer (DST)CEST (GMT +2)
Postcode
15401 - 15406
Area code+34 981
Websitehttp://www.ferrol.es/

Ferrol is a city in the province of A Coruña in Galicia, located on the Atlantic coast in north-western Spain. As of 2007, it has urban population of 77,859 and metropolitan area of over 241,528.

The city has been a major naval shipbuilding centre for most of its history, being the capital of the Spanish Navy's Maritime Department of the North since the time of the early Bourbons. Before that, in the 17th century, Ferrol was the most important arsenal in Europe. Today, the city is also known as the home of the shipbuilding yards of Navantia[1].

The city was the birthplace of the Spanish General Francisco Franco in 1892, and was officially known as El Ferrol del Caudillo from 1938 to 1982. It was also the birth place of the founder of the Spanish socialist party PSOE, Pablo Iglesias, in 1850.

History

Megalithic Tomb in Ribeira, 125 km from the City of Ferrol.

The existence of prehistoric human settlements in this green corner of Iberia is back up by the abundance of burial chambers, megalithic monuments as well as Petroglyphs and other archaeological findings. The Phoenicians established in this area different dried and salted cod stations and their presence together with the presence of the Ancient Greeks is well documented by historians like Herodotus amongst others. In Roman times, in the 1st century BC, a fishing port existed in the bay of Ferrol. After the fall of the Western Roman Empire the whole Iberian Peninsula, including Ferrol, was raided by the Vandals and occupied in 411 by the Suebi; their kingdom was incorporated in 584 by Leovigild to the Visigothic kingdom of Spain. [2]

Raided from 711 to 739 by the Arabs, Ferrol was ultimately recaptured by the Visigothic king of Asturias in 754 remaining onwards an integral part of Christian Spain. [3]

The House of Asturias established an important Christian Outpost to protect their realms from the Arab invaders. In the 14th century Henry II gave the town to the powerful Andrade family. [4]

In 1568[5] a fire reduced to rubble the old medieval town; in the same period some parts of the existing fortifications at the entrance of the estuary were built[6]. As a naval base, at that time the town was considered more important as a Royal Arsenal than as a safe harbour.

With the arrival of the Bourbons in the 18th century, Ferrol became a leading naval centre [7]. Ferrol was made Capital of the Maritime Department of the North, formed under Ferdinand VI and Charles III for the defence of the Spanish Colonial Empire in America. Rapid improvements followed, notably under the leadership of the Marquis of Ensenada, and the position of Ferrol was made almost unassailable from the sea, the difficulties of disembarking troops on its precipitous coast being strengthened by a renewed line of fortresses and newly built castles, including that of San Carlos.

The Royal Dockyards of A Graña and Ferrol, built between 1726-1783[8], produced ships protected with copper sheets from the rolling mills of Xubia. In 1772, The Spanish Royal Academy of Naval Engineers of Ferrol, the first such academy in Spain, was created.

Ferrol was virtually impossible to blockade in the age of sail, as strong westerly winds would take any blockading force away along the treacherous north coast of Spain where they had no safe haven. The geography of Ferrol meant that an entire Spanish fleet could slip out on a single tide. By the time the British were able to resume the blockade, the Spanish would be safely away and out to sea. Despite these advantages, a decline set during the reign of Charles IV, and in 1800, after the defences had been reduced, a British fleet of 109 vessels landed troops on the beach of Doniños to take the Castle of San Felipe. Although only equipped with meagre artillery, the castle's small defence force under the command of Count Donadio together with a sizable number of volunteer citizens of Ferrol, successfully resisted the attack and the fleet withdrew. The alliance with England during the Peninsular War of 1808-14 failed to prevent the deterioration in the town’s fortunes. The arsenals and fortresses were abandoned and they were easily occupied by the French in 1809.

Aerial view of the city (2009).

Under Ferdinand VII, Ferrol lost its title of capital. New activities sprang up, however, in the mid-19th century, during the administration of the Marquis de Molina[9], Spanish Minister for Naval affairs, which included amongst other political successes the construction and launch in the Royal Dockyards of Ferrol of Spain's first steam propelled ship in 1858.

The second half of the 19th century brought to the Royal Dockyards of Ferrol not just plenty of work but social and political tensions which will end up in the failed republican uprising of 1872[10].

Ten years after the Spanish-American War of 1898 [11] [12], in which Spain lost Cuba and the Philippines, the Maura Government, in an attempt to restore the Spanish Navy and Spanish shipbuilding industry hired to the Spanish Society for Naval Construction (whose major investors were the British firms John Brown, Vickers and Armstrong[13]) the shipbuilding yards, workshops, foundries and dry docks in Ferrol.

For a period of sixteen years, all the technicians were exclusively British, and the situation was not altered till 1925 when the management was taken over by Spanish engineers, as one of the new policies introduced by the then newly created government, including ministers both civil and military, of the dictator Miguel Primo de Rivera (1923–1930). The arrival of the British coincided with the construction of a local electric-powered trolley streetcar’s line (1924-1961)[1].

In sight of the outbreak of a civil war, and because there was fear of social unrest in the naval station, the Foreign Office in London, [14] [15] organized a ship to repatriate all the remaining British citizens and on July 22, 1936 HMS Witch (D89)[16] departed from Ferrol back to Britain. At the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) the shipbuilding yards, workshops, foundries and dry docks in Ferrol were taken over by the state and fully nationalized in 1945 under the name "Bazàn", later renamed "IZAR", and, starting from January 2005, Navantia. The town was the birthplace of dictator Francisco Franco, after whom the city was officially known as El Ferrol del Caudillo from 1938 to 1982. The end of the dictatorship and the arrival of democracy in 1978 did not help Ferrol, [17] and from 1982 to the early 1990s, the city confronted numerous problems due to a decline in the naval sector. The beginning of the new millennium however, has been a time of economic expansion and prosperity in general [18]. A new motorway and an outer-port [19] have been recently built.

Ferrol hosted the large NATO Maritime Exercise Loyal Mariner (RN) in June 2008,[20].

Climate

Template:Ferrol Climate

Economy

Primary Industries include horse breeding, fish farming and fishing (specializing in the Atlantic shoals]]), mining (ENDESA), non-timber forest products, quarries and timber. Secondary Industries incldue shipbuilding, ship engines, wind turbines, electrical equipment, ironworks, Textiles, food (canned fish) and wood-made products.

Tertiary activities include mercantile, fishing and military ports, restaurants, media, hotels and tourism.

Sister cities

These are the official sister cities of Ferrol:

Notable people

See also

Partial view of the Navantia shipyards in Ferrol.

References

  • Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  1. ^ NAVANTIA Spanish Company, Leader in Military Shipbuilding Template:En icon
  2. ^ (Britoniensis ecclesiae episcopus) Mailoc or Maeloc was the bishop of Britonia who participated in the Second Council of Braga (572). Template:En icon
  3. ^ Official Web-site of the Diocese of Ferrol-Mondoñedo Template:Sp icon
  4. ^ Interesting document showing the royals of Spain from 1492 till 1805: Spanish Empire Template:En icon
  5. ^ “History of Ferrol” (1846) El Ferrolano Newspaper, 10th February 1846, no.1, Front Cover: Ferrol
  6. ^ UNESCO World Heritage List: El Ferrol (Submission Papers) 27/04/2007. Template:En icon
  7. ^ The City and Naval Station of El Ferrol during the Reign of Charles III of Spain by the Dutch pilot Hugh Debbieg ( 1731-1810) Template:En icon
  8. ^ "Ferrol." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Template:En icon
  9. ^ "The Armies of Europe, Spain as a War Making Power" (1858) The New York Times, 6th February 1858, Page 4, 1074 words: New York Template:En icon
  10. ^ "Entrance into Ferrol of the Government Troops" (1872) The New York Times, 16th October 1872, Page 1, 554 words: New York Template:En icon
  11. ^ "Great Activity at Ferrol" (1898) The New York Times, 11th June 1898, Page 1, 129 words: New York Template:En icon
  12. ^ The launch of “Cardenal Cisneros” the first “Pre-dreadnought battleship” built in Ferrol, Spain (1897) "The Ferrol and the Galician-rias commercial-role with North, South and Central America":El Correo Gallego (Spanish Newspaper) 19th March 1897by Jose R. de Trujillo, Spanish Royal Navy Commander Template:Es icon
  13. ^ "SPANISH NAVY: Huge Contract in British Hands" (1909) The Manchester Guardian, 1st February 1909, Page 12: Manchester Template:En icon
  14. ^ "British Vice-Consulate at Ferrol": General Correspondence FO 63/1041. The National Archives - Official Web-site Template:En icon
  15. ^ "British Vice-Consulate at Ferrol": General Correspondence FO 72/1689. The National Archives - Official Web-site Template:En icon
  16. ^ "British Sending Troops" (1936) The New York Times, 22th July 1936, Page 3, 110 words: New York Template:En icon
  17. ^ Shipbuilding crisis after the arrival of democracy in Spain "Ferrol Shipyards":Financial Times 19th Octuber 1984 Template:En icon
  18. ^ Fridtjof Nansen class frigates during one of the final stages for completion in Ferrol Template:En icon
  19. ^ Views of the new outer-port of Ferrol, an intermodal freight transport port design to suit the new needs Template:En icon
  20. ^ NATO Maritime Exercise Loyal Mariner (RN) in June 2008 accessdate=2008-11-27 Template:En icon