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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Aranjuez Cultural Landscape (Spanish: El Paisaje Cultural de Aranjuez) is located in the town of Aranjuez, Community of Madrid, Spain. It includes the Royal Palace of Aranjuez, the Island Garden, the urban area — geometrically organised — and the Prince's Garden.
UNESCO World Heritage Site | |
---|---|
Location | Spain |
Criteria | Cultural: ii, iv |
Reference | 1044 |
Inscription | 2001 (25th Session) |
Coordinates | 40°02′11″N 03°36′34″W |
This Cultural Landscape contains a series of market gardens, wooded promenades, agricultural landscapes and the Natural Reserve The Regajal-Sea of Ontígola — in which a butterfly reserve can be found. It was added to the UNESCO's World Cultural Heritage list in 2001. [1]
The sophisticated Aranjuez Cultural Landscape, which derives from different sources, marks an initial period in the desing development of this landscape. It represents the union of certain cultural influences to create a cultural landscape. This one had a formative influence over the evolution on this field.
Aranjuez has seen, during a period of time, several cultural exchanges in a specific cultural area. This cultural area has had a strong influence both the development of the monument and the creation of its landscape.
Aranjuez represents a model for the particular culture of its area. Yet the city has become more and more vulnerable since the disappearance of the Real Audiencia in the early years of the century, which had such an important influence in its development.
This area is characterized by a long history of human settlements before becoming into a strategic fortress in the Roman Age, located by a river crossing (the Tagus and the Jarama) and at a crossroads, in south Madrid and northwest Toledo.
By the end of the 14th century, the knights had already built a palace in the woods. But it was Philip II of Spain in the 16th century who created the first period of splendour. A new palace was built, with large ornamental and vegetable gardens, made using geometrical principles. It was also a private and personal place for ease. During the 17th century, Aranjuez became the annual residence of the royalty and a place to show off and hunt. It was source of inspiration for the difussion of some of the greatest Spanish poets of the Spanish Golden Age.
Before it became a strategic fortress in Roman times, the city of Aranjuez had seen a large number of human settlements. Afterwards, its location by a river crossing and at a crossroads – which was influential on several occasions – played an important role in the political geography of that period. Aranjuez was located in a sparsely populated region. Because of that it was finally granted to the Order of Santiago by the Crown in the Medieval Era. Towards the end of the 14th century, a palace was built by the knights in the woods.[2]
Aranjuez became a royal site in the 15th century, but it was king Philip II in the 16th century who created the first period of splendor. The city was also a private and personal retreat.
The period of splendor continued throughout the 18th century. It finally concluded with the construction of a new city near the palace. During the reign of Charles III, the city and its surroundings became a place to deal with Physiocratic, farming, scientific and social ideas, which are located in the heart of the Enlightenment. Charles IV tried to provide models both for the practice of horticulture and the design of model farms. Such cultural greatness died when, under the external pressure of French revolutionary ideas and the ambitions of Napoleon, the Mutiny of Aranjuez marked, by the turn of the century, the end of the Ancien Régime in Spain. [3]
After a brief resurgence, which found expression in modernity and eclecticism through the Spanish Royal Sites during the first half of the 19th century, the end of the reign of Isabel II of Spain marked the end of the exclusive role of the Crown in the history of this streambed complex and the community. The local government became independent from de Royal authority (1836) and the use of the Royal family of Aranjuez decreased.
During the Revolution of 1868, the Crown’s property came under the State’s control and eventually, all that was left of Aranjuez in 1870 were pieces of their former property. Meanwhile, the increase in population and the construction of a railway line (1851) stimulated enormous economic activity. During the 20th century, Aranjuez became a satellite city with high population density of Madrid, and an industrial and cultural center in which its own memory and maintenance started deteriorating. However, it generally maintains its integrity, and there is growing a sense of respect and new attitudes towards the city.[4]
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