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Visitors generally only see a part of the real Catalonia:
a seaside area, a ski resort, a modern but historical city
like Barcelona, or a nature reserve like the Ordesa and Monte
Perdido National Park. There is nothing wrong with that, they
are all good reasons to visit the region, but to get a grasp
on what makes Catalonia tick, you need a larger perspective,
and most of all you need an idea of the Catalan psyche. Catalans
have the reputation of being hard-working and money-loving,
not necessarily in that order, enterprising and inventive,
and the most flattering thing you can say about a Catalan
is that he has seny. An approximate translation of
this noun could be "cleverness," but the closest
English words to seny I know are the North British
nouse, which shares the Catalan sense of "getting
things right," or the adjective canny, particularly
in its Northumbrian meaning, which includes the idea of anticipation.
Administration and Political Divisions.
Catalonia borders Andorra and France to the north, the Mediterranean
to the east, the Valencia region to the south and Aragón
to the west. It is one of what are called the "historic"
autonomous regions of Spain, together with the Basque Country
and, to a lesser extent, Galicia — the term refers as
much to the linguistic singularity of these regions as to
their actual independence historically. Its government is
the Generalitat, a word which includes both legislative
(parliament) and executive (cabinet and president) branches.
It covers four provinces: Gerona (Girona in Catalan), Lerida
(or Lleida), Barcelona and Tarragona. These provinces are
in turn divided into comarques, roughly the same
as counties.
Geography. Because of its different geographical
features and climatic influences, Catalonia is one one of
the most varied regions in Spain. The Pyrenees dominate the
north of the region, while the south of the region runs from
mountainous to hilly to flat as a pancake, the Ebro Delta
in the very south, one of the most important wetlands in Spain,
and the fertile plain behind it being the most notable features.
Girona is a rugged coastal province, where the influence of
the Mediterranean on its climate and nature is evident (though
it has its section of the Pyrenees for good measure). Lerida
(Lleida in Catalan) is the only wholly inland province of
Catalonia, its capital sitting on its very own plain (the
Plana de Lleida), south of its Pyrenean foothills
which rise up into the mountains proper, east of Andorra.
Agriculturally prosperous Tarragona is the flattest, most
southerly Catalan province, though the Central System runs
into it from the west creating extremely rugged terrains.
Barcelona, the most urban of the four provinces with a population
of around five million (though less than a third of them live
in the municipality of Barcelona itself) is extremely hilly
rather than mountainous, but the sheer verticality of Montserrat
Mountain is probably its most interesting point. All told,
it would be difficult to find a region anywhere with scenery
as varied as Catalonia's. Fortunately, the Catalans are more
aware of the value of this than others and the region has
a whopping seven national parks and any number of protected
areas of other kinds.
Traditions
Music. The sardana is the Catalan
national folk dance and music, though originally only from
the north of the region. It is a circle dance, popular since
at least the 16th century. Its music is bouncy, played at
jolly andante tempo usually by a sardana band called a cobla
(which apparently involves 11 musicians playing 12 instruments,
don't ask me to elaborate, I don't know).
Correfocs. Firework processions with monstrous
figures, particularly devils.
Castells. Castles, spectacular human towers.
Six tiers is considered child's play, nine is not uncommon.
Competitions are held, and the real fun comes when they have
to get down.
Practical Catalonia
Language. Catalan and Spanish. Note that
Spanish-speaking visitors need not learn the local language
unless they want to (though the odd word will be much appreciated):
practically all Catalans are bilingual. But Catalan-speakers
are quite aggressive about it, and will slip back into Catalan
at the first opportunity, cutting mere Castilian Spanish speakers
out altogether. Is this rude or just a local custom? It is
a custom, but so is spitting on the floor, in other words
it is bloody rude (let's be lenient, though: forty years of
Francoist repression is enough to make anyone's manners slip
a little). In addition to Catalan, a language called Aranese
is spoken in the Val d'Aran in the Pyrenees. It is a variety
of the Gascon dialect of Occitan, the language of the troubadours,
and in spite of the tiny population of the Val d'Aran (7,000,
by no means all of whom speak Aranese), it is an official
language, unlike France which has far more Occitan speakers.
You are extremely unlikely to hear it, but it's nice to know,
isn't it?.
Eating and Drinking. Catalan cuisine does
not have quite the same prestige as Basque cuisine, but it
is gaining ground and top Catalan restaurants such as Ferran
Adrià's El Bulli are right up there with the
best in the world. For obvious reasons, Catalan cuisine differs
according to whether the area in question is near the sea
or up in the mountains, but in general it is essentially Mediterranean,
based on fresh vegetables, fish, poultry, olive oil, wine
and wheat products - bread and pasta (beef and veal are less
common than in Castile, at least traditionally). Butifarra
is a Catalan cured pork sausage. Escalivada is sliced,
barbecued peppers and aubergines. You will find ali-oli
sauce everywhere in Spain, particularly in the form of patatas
ali-oli, a budget traveller's staple, but it is Catalan
in origin: it is often erroneously called "garlic mayonnaise,"
but should not in fact contain eggs. Pa amb tomàquet,
also called pan tomaca, is lightly toasted bread,
rubbed with fresh tomato and sprinkled with olive oil and
salt and served with, for example, slices of cured ham. It
has become popular everywhere in Spain, as indeed has the
tosta, which is what it sounds like, a slice of toast,
served like a mediaeval trencher underneath a prepared filling
or a simple piece of meat and generally eaten with a knife
and fork.
In terms of wine, Catalonia has five denominaciones de
origen, including the champagne-method cava, and a number
of other wine producing areas. The most notable D.O. is Penedés,
which makes worthy reds and excellent, fruity white wines.
Getting There. Barcelona is indecently well
connected, easyJet, for example, operating flights from Gatwick,
Luton, Stansted, Bristol, Liverpool, Newcastle, Paris Orly,
Geneva, and Berlin. Girona is also easy to get to, and Ryanair
runs flights to it from nine British and twelve continental
European airports.
SPV Articles, Sections and Links
Pages
Barcelona
Barcelona, the ducal city.
Costa Brava
The Costa Brava is, together with the Costa del Sol, the best-known
part of Spain's coastline. Although it has suffered from development,
it still has unspoilt corners, sheltered coves, some of the
most attractive scenery in the Mediterranean and delightful
beaches. A page of selected, annotated links.
Costa Dorada
The Costa Dorada - the Golden Coast, so named for the colour
of its beaches and the quality of the light. A page of selected,
annotated links.
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