Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

Haro (Spanish: [ˈaɾo] ) is a town and municipality in the northwest of La Rioja province in Northern Spain. It hosts the annual Haro Wine Festival, as it produces red wine. Its architectural heritage includes the plateresque main entrance of the Church of Santo Tomás, the work of Felipe Vigarny, numerous palaces, and the old town, which was declared a Historic-Artistic Site in 1975.[citation needed]

Haro
Coat of arms of Haro
Haro is located in La Rioja, Spain
Haro
Haro
Location of Haro within La Rioja
Haro is located in Spain
Haro
Haro
Haro (Spain)
Coordinates: 42°35′N 2°51′W / 42.583°N 2.850°W / 42.583; -2.850
Country Spain
Autonomous community La Rioja
ComarcaHaro
Government
 • MayorLaura Rivado Casas (PSOE)
Area
 • Total40.53 km2 (15.65 sq mi)
Elevation
479 m (1,572 ft)
Population
 (2018)[1]
 • Total11,309
 • Density280/km2 (720/sq mi)
Demonym(s)harense; jarrero, ra
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CET)
Websitewww.haro.org/es

Haro was the first town in Spain to have electric street lighting.[citation needed]

History

edit

There are several theories about the founding of Haro, though the most realistic[citation needed] theory is that of Domingo Hergueta, who argued that before the town, there was a lighthouse (Spanish: faro) near the village of Cerro de la Mota which illuminated the mouth of the Ebro river. The town was named for the lighthouse, and Faro later evolved into Haro.

During the Roman rule of Hispania, a fort called Castrum Bibilium was built in the cliffs of Bibilio.[citation needed] The first mention of Haro dates back to the year 1040, in a document of king García Sánchez III of Navarre"el de Nájera".[citation needed] Alfonso VI of León and Castile entrusted the tenencia to Diego López I de Haro after the death of Count García Ordóñez and the first of the lords of Biscay to attach the name of this town to his patronymic was Diego's son, Lope Díaz I de Haro.

In the Middle Ages, Haro was home to a Jewish community until the expulsion of the Jews.[2]

Since the early 19th century Haro has established a worldwide reputation for being the most important wine town in the Rioja wine region and remains so today even though the number of Bodegas in the region have multiplied 8 times to 574 during the past 50 years (1970 to 2020). The key focus of this reputation is at the Barrio Estación where 7 of the best Rioja Bodegas are located - namely Bodegas Bilbainas (founded 1859); Compañia Vinícola del Norte de España [CVNE] f.1879; R. López de Heredia (f 1877); Bodegas Roda (f 1989); Bodegas Muga (f.1932); Bodegas La Rioja Alta S.A. (f.1890). In other parts of the town are Bodegas Martnez Lacuesta (f.1873); Bodega Berceo (f.1801); Carlos Serres (f.1896) and Ramon Bilbao (f.1924). Féderico Paaternina was founded in 1897 and became a very influential name in the wine business in Spain until its final collapse in 2010 when the Bodega closed and the brand of Banda Azul was sold to Berberana following a very difficult period after the appropriation of their owners Rumasa in 1983 by the new Spanish Government and the failure of the subsequent owner to keep the company as a going concern.(1) [3]

 
Plateresque Facade de la Church of Santo Tomás, Felipe Bigarny's work.

Notable people

edit
 
Haro Wine Festival

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Municipal Register of Spain 2018. National Statistics Institute.
  2. ^ "Virtual Jewish World: Haro, Spain". Jewish Virtual Library. Retrieved 1 July 2024.
  3. ^ Wines of Spain by Jeremy Watson published 2002 by Editores Montagud of Barcelona. The New Spain of John Radford published by Faber in 1992 and Rioja by Ana Fabiano published in 2012.
edit

42°35′N 2°51′W / 42.583°N 2.850°W / 42.583; -2.850