Bilbao, Basque Country and Spain



Spain

Languages

In Spain we have four different languages: Spanish, Catalan, Galician and Basque. The first three are rooted in Latin; no one knows where Basque comes from.

If you go to any of these regions you will hear Spanish and/or the native language depending on the city or town you are in; but for sure you will be able to read all the public notices, road signs and directions -towns names are different in both languages usually-, etc in both languages, do not get confused.

Currency

Prices are in pesetas (pts), e.g., 10.000 is ten thousand pesetas (we use the point instead of a comma to mark thousands, while we use a comma instead of your decimal point). But we never use cents in prices.....

Notes are of 1.000, 2.000, 5.000 and 10.000 pts. Coins are of 1, 5, 10, 25, 50, 100, 200 and 500 pts.

The US dollar price varies between 100 and 150 pts; therefore a quick way to convert pesetas to US$ is: take out the last two digits and add to the remaining figure an amount between 0 and half of it.... Example: 7.000 pts will be somewhere in between 70$ and 105$....

Provinces and Autonomies

Spain is divided into 52 (?) Provinces. Each province has a most important town that becomes the Capital of the Province. For example, Cristina's province is Vizcaya and the capital is Bilbao where she was born. Sometimes -most of the times- the province and the city capital share the same name, for example: Barcelona province, Barcelona capital.

Now: the provinces in Spain are grouped into Autonomies which are, more or less, independent administrative entities, economically speaking, from the central government. That is, Spain becomes like a federation of autonomies with a central government located in Madrid, which is not only capital of the province Madrid, but also the capital of Spain. For example: Catalun~a is an autonomy, Galicia is an autonomy, Baleares is an autonomy.

If you wonder if the Basque Country is an autonomy.... SEE BELOW :-)

The Basque Country

The History and the Language are basic features to understand a culture. A distintive feature of the Basque Country is the fact of staying in the same area since Prehistoric times. This area corresponds to the West Pirenees, spreading to the Northeast in the France we know today and to the Southwest in the Spain we know today.

Its strategic location in the Pirenees makes the Basque Country a crossing land of uncountable cultures coming from the North and the South. These qualities have conformed the character of the modern basque people: PROTECTOR of their history and OPEN to new things.

Geography

The Basque Country stands in the North part of Spain. It occupies an area of 7261 square kilometres and with a population of 2159701 inhabitants. The map only shows the 3 provinces in the Autonomy.

The geograghy of The Basque Country is a complexity of mountains and valleys. The mountain ranges of Gorbea, Aitzgorri and Aralar -with mountain tops of 1500 meters- separate the coast from the inland area. The basque coast is mostly a rocky coast, with 90% of it formed by cliffs and the rest by beaches and sandy places. The continental platform only goes into the ocean for a few miles before rushing down to almost 3.000 metres of depth. A peculiarity is water temperature: in winter it is the average for its latitude, but in summer it reaches temperatures similar to those of warmer seas. Because of this, the sea coast of The Basque Country constitues a very important reserve for life. In this area you can find:
In general the climate of the Basque Country is humid-warm, becoming softer and more rainy on the atlantic coast, while inland presents bigger temperature changes.

Provinces

The Basque Country is historically composed by 7 Provinces, 3 in France and 4 in Spain. The Spanish Provinces are: Navarra, Guipuzcoa, Alava and Vizcaya. Vizcaya can be written Bizkaia if you use the Basque language. Remember, if you come to the Basque Country all the readings and announcements will be written in both languages: Basque and Spanish, and very often names have COMPLETELY different spelling... so do not get confused if you see sometimes Bilbao (Spanish) and others Bilbo (Basque).

The names of the Capitals and Provinces in the Spanish Basque Country in both languages are (Spanish -- Basque): (In these pages we are using mostly the Spanish names.)

I guess you would assume that there is a Spanish Autonomy grouping the Provinces in the Basque Country, right? Well, no. Autonomies started being defined once the democracy arrived in Spain in 1978. What happened is that the Province of Navarra had kept during Franco's Dictatorship different privileges (better!) than the other basque Provinces. For that and for other political reasons Navarra ended up creating its own autonomy, different from the so-called Basque Country autonomy, which is composed by the other three provinces. Clear? For this reason you can hear pretty frequently the argument: does Navarra belongs to the Basque Country?

The Basque Language

The Basque Country's ancient language, the Basque, presents characteristics no comparable to any other language in the world. In Basque, the Basque Country is called Euskadi or Euskalherria (herri == pueblo == people/village); the language is Euskera and the people, the basques, are Euskaldunes.

As an example of how the Basque looks like, Cristina's last name is in fact a basque word, or better, a set of basque words:
- etxe-a = the (a) house (etxe) .
- aurre-ko = in front (aurre) of (ko).
Aurrecoechea is the spelling in Spanish; the spelling in Basque would be/is Aurrekoetxea; it sounds the same....
I always wondered if the basque spelling would ease my "torture" when spelling my name to foreigners ... :-)

As you can tell from Cristina's last name, basque last names very often tell about location, the location of the family house. Aurrecoechea- tells about a house that is located in the front, the first one. There are in fact several houses -Caserios (typical basque house)- named after Aurrecoechea in the Basque Country. Ask Cristina if you are curious to know where -in which villages- these houses are.....

I (Cristina) didnt learn Basque in school because of the political situation at the time. My uncle and godfather Anton gave me a small book to learn the Basque in our region. What happens is that the Basque language changes slightly from Province to Province; what I learned was the Basque in my province Vizcaya. By the way: to overcome this problem of having different dialects once we were an Autonomy, the Governement created an official Basque language for the community: it is called Batua; unfortunately Batua keeps much more from the Guipuzcoan than from the Vizcayan.... a pity.

A short Euskera lesson, from my small repertoir in BizkaiEuskera.
Pronunciation tips: z,x,s sound the same as in s; n~ is like in Spanish, sounds like gn in French.
The list of words goes: Basque - American - Spanish

Sports/Games

By nature, Basques are expansive people, fond of entertainment, and the numerous outstanding festivities held throughout the year give them ample opportunity to enjoy themselves. We come closer to the world of these celebrations with music and dancing, two indispensable features of almost all of the festive proceedings.

In the Basque Country the winter goes by quickly between the fiestas of Olentzero, the serenading groups of Santa Agueda, the "Tamborradas" -drumming processions- and the carnivals.

After Easter week with its strange rituals of burnning male and female Judases, the true festive season is upon us, the summer, packed with celebrations which are noticiable centred round nature. The cults of water, fire and nature kingdom, open the doors wide to various different celebrations known as Saint's Day fiestas. These always include the ancient custom of the bertsolaris' musical commentary - in rhyming songs composed on the spot- on the exploits of the participants of the country games and sports.

All of this makes up the cultural tradition of a people whose fiestas and celebrations are an expression of its state of mind, its deep-rooted character and strong personality.

Cooking

Many people in The Basque Country state, without modesty, that the basque cooking is the best in the world. That may be a chauvinism. However, that is not so far from reality if we assure that in little places of the world there are so many possibilities of exercising the so called "good eating" like in Euskadi.

Basque people have made from taste-exercising one of the defining characteristic of their culture. In this land, the cult of good cooking is extended to all levels , included the most popular one. Thus, it's not strange that in traditional recipes from housewifes of rural farmhouses (caserios) and small fishing ports, or the talent of male groups in gastronomical societies, where the most famous basque cooks are inspired for preparing their most exquisitive dishes.

We invite you to know some of our most typical dishes. Although, undoubtly, the best you can do is to taste them.

BILBAO

Great Bilbao

We call El Gran Bilbao (Big or Great Bilbao) to the area that includes Bilbao city plus the almost 30 towns around in a 10 Km circled area approximately at both banks of the river (La Ria), El Nervion. It can be considered one of the most relevant industrial, commercial and financial centres in Spain, (third place in population after Madrid and Barcelona).

Map of Great Bilbao

(Ignore the message "we are here" written on the map in LEIOA, where the University is located...
-yes, we took the map from their page :-)


Due to its strategical situation, in a natural comunication way of the Ebro valley and the plateau of Castilla with the Cantabrico sea, it developed during the Medium Age an important commercial activity as well as its busy docks. Also the early development of the siderurgical industry was eased by plenty iron deposits found in the surroundings of Bilbao.

Bilbao's port, where the traditional iron exporting and coal importing stood out until recently, spreads along the Nervion estuary. It held in the past the biggest traffic of the Cantabrico sea. The siderurgical and metallurgical activities have decreased in the last years with the end of one of the main industries byu the river: Altos Hornos. Still the main economical activities in the great Bilbao are mechanical, chemical, food, wood, building and graphic arts industries, electronics and software in the last years.

Bilbao City

Bilbao is the capital of Bizkaia, it is situated in the valley of Nervion river, 20 Km away from the Cantabrico sea. The metropolitan entity of Great Bilbao is one of the most relevant industrial, commercial and financial centre of Spain.

Map of Bilbao City

CURRENT DATA:

Total surface area: 41,25 Km cuadrados
Population: 372.786 inhab.
Pop. Density: 9.325 inhab. per Km
Elevation: 19 metres above sea-level
Climate: oceanic, with mild winters and summers.