The Murcia (autonomous community) reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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Murcia (autonomous community)

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Comunidad Autónoma de la Región de
Murcia
image:ccaa-murcia.png
CapitalMurcia
Area
 - total
 - % of Spain
Ranked 9th
11 313 km²
2,2%
Population
 - Total (2003)
 - % of Spain
 - Density
Ranked 10th
1 226 993
2,9%
108,46/km²
Demonym
 - English
 - Spanish

Murcian
murciano/a
Statute of Autonomy June 19, 1982
ISO 3166-2MU
Parliamentary
representation

 Congress seats
 Senate seats
 

9
2
PresidentRamón Luis Valcárcel Siso (PP)
Comunidad Autónoma de la Región de Murcia


Murcia is one of Spain's seventeen autonomous communities, located in the southeast of the country between Andalucia and Valencia, on the Mediterranean coast.

It consists of one province, and contains the city of Murcia which is the capital of the province and the community. Other cities located in Murcia include Cartagena and Lorca. See List of municipalities in Murcia.

Murcia is bordered by Andalucia (provinces of Almería and Granada), Castile-La Mancha (province of Albacete), which was historically connected to Murcia until 1833, the Comunidad Valenciana (province of Alicante), and the Mediterranean Sea.

The community measures 11 313 km² and has a population of 1,2 million, of whom one-third live in the capital.

History

The Carthaginians established a permanent trading depot on the Murcian coast at Cartagena, which the Romans called Carthago Nova. Roman Murcia was a part of the province of Hispania Tarraconensis. Under the Moors, who introduced the large-scale irrigation on which Murcian agriculture depends, the province was known as Todmir; it included, according to Idrisi, the 11th century Arab cartographer based in Sicily, the cities of Murcia, Orihuela, Cartagena, Lorca, Mula and Chinchilla. The kingdom of Murcia, which came into independent existence after the fall of the Omayyad Caliphate of Cordoba included Albacete as well as Murcia. Murcia was joined to the kingdom of Castile in the 13th century. Murcia became an autonomous region in 1982.

Communications


 
Autonomous Communities of Spain
Andalusia | Aragon | Asturias | Balearic Islands | Basque Country | Canary Islands | Cantabria | Castile-La Mancha | Castile-Leon | Catalonia | Extremadura | Galicia | La Rioja | Madrid | Murcia | Navarre | Valencia | Ceuta | Melilla | Plazas de soberanía