Montaña Palentina
Montaña Palentina | |
---|---|
Country | Spain |
Autonomous community | Castile and León |
Province | Province of Palencia |
Municipalities | 18 municipalities |
Population (2021) | |
• Total | 20 968 |
Most populated municipality | Aguilar de Campoo |
Least populated municipality | Cervera de Pisuerga |
Source: INE (01-01-2020) |
Montaña Palentina is a comarca in the province of Palencia, in Castile and León, in Spain. It is the sub-provincial division used by the Deputation of Palencia in its publications, although it does not correspond to the natural comarca, as it does not include La Valdivia , in the east.
It has a population of 20 968 inhabitants. Aguilar de Campoo is the most populated urban area, with around 6 806 inhabitants.[1]
Geography
[edit]The comarca of Montaña is geographically unified due to its rugged nature, although traditionally communications have not been easy between the different sectors for the same reason. The name refers to its belonging to an administrative unit, the province of Palencia, although the great distance from the capital and the difference with the rest of the regions of this province make it a singular unit.[2]
Montaña Palentina has a natural environment of great environmental and scenic quality that is preserved, in a large part of the surface, under three figures of protection: Montaña Palentina Natural Park, Covalagua Natural Area and the Natural Area of Las Tuerces .[3]
The landscape and ethnographic characteristics make it very attractive as an example of tourism in rural areas. In recent years it has been provided with consolidated tourist resources and infrastructure and is committed to continuing to consider tourism as one of the strategic elements for revitalising this territory, without forgetting its integration into the rest of the region's economic activities.[4]
Geographically located to the north of Palencia (about 100 km from the capital), it is one of the northernmost areas of Castile.[5]
It is bordered to the west by the province of León, to the north by Cantabria, from which it is separated by Sierra de Híjar, Sierra de Albas and Curavacas Massif; to the east by Burgos and to the south by the Palencia region of Saldaña-Los Valles. Two sectors can be distinguished, Alto Pisuerga and Alto Carrión , although other sub-regions can also be mentioned, such as Fuentes Carrionas, La Pernía, La Braña, Campoo and Valdivia.[5]
The highest elevations of the entire Cantabrian mountain range (excluding the Picos de Europa massif) are located here: Peña Prieta (2538 m), Curavacas (2524 m) and Espigüete (2450 m).[6]
The waters collected by these mountains give rise to the source of the two rivers whose valleys run parallel to the south of the province: Pisuerga, to the east, and Carrión, to the west, which let their waters rest in the reservoirs of Requejada , Aguilar and Ruesga , and in those of Camporredondo and Compuerto , respectively, forming between them the tourist route of the Ruta de los Pantanos .[7]
This region forms part of the Cantabrian mountain range, and is located on its southern edge, which makes it a transitional area between two geomorphological units: the Atlantic mountains and the plains of the sedimentary basin of the Douro.[3]
Municipalities
[edit]The region is made up of 18 municipalities with 158 population centres.
The municipalities and their population are as follows:[8]
Municipality | Population |
---|---|
Aguilar de Campoo | 6842 |
Barruelo de Santullán | 1183 |
Berzosilla | 41 |
Brañosera | 246 |
Castrejón de la Peña | 360 |
Cervera de Pisuerga | 2316 |
Dehesa de Montejo | 136 |
Guardo | 6153 |
La Pernía | 320 |
Mudá | 82 |
Polentinos | 42 |
Pomar de Valdivia | 463 |
Respenda de la Peña | 154 |
Salinas de Pisuerga | 317 |
San Cebrián de Mudá | 162 |
Santibáñez de la Peña | 1044 |
Triollo | 64 |
Velilla del Río Carrión | 1299 |
Total | 21 224 |
Fauna and flora
[edit]The forests are home to a rich array of species, including oak, beech, sessile pine, holly, yew, and more.[9] The area boasts excellent pastureland, ideal for grazing, as well as rich communities of lichens and mosses, which ensure a plentiful and high-quality supply of hunt. The rivers are renowned for their cleanliness and the quality of their trout fishing.[9]
Among the notable large mammals in the area are deer, roe deer, wild boar, wolves, and brown bears.[9] In June 2010, the municipality of San Cebrián de Mudá witnessed the introduction of seven European bison, comprising five females and two males, from Poland.[10]
The topography of the region is characterised by the presence of mountain landscapes interspersed with lush valleys, including Castillería, San Quirce, Redondos, Santullán and Covalagua , which create a notable contrast with the strikingly shaped reliefs of Las Tuerces and Cañón de la Horadada .[11]
Demography
[edit]The figure of 16 inhabitants/km is very close to the depopulation threshold, to which are added worrying symptoms of ageing and sluggishness in a vegetative balance that is tending to fall.[12][13]
Economy
[edit]Livestock farming and agriculture (albeit to a lesser extent) have historically been the dominant traditional activities.Towards the close of the 19th century, a period of sudden prosperity emerged in certain localities due to the advent of coal mining (the Palencia mining basin is entirely within the district), although this economic activity has since become virtually obsolete.[14] The chemical and agri-food industries are also worthy of note, with the biscuit factories in Aguilar de Campoo (Galletas Gullón and Grupo Siro ) being the most significant industry in the area.[15]
Following the rural exodus and the development of new forms of economic organisation, these activities, with the exception of the aforementioned agri-food industry, have become less and less important, leading to crises in basic activities.[16]
However, in the 1990s, the Montaña Palentina experienced a renaissance as an area of interest for rural tourism, driven by its natural environment and historical and artistic heritage, which was leveraged as a key economic resource.[17]
The region participated in community initiatives supported by the European Union's rural development programmes, promoting tourism in this area.[18]
Tourism
[edit]Motivation of tourism activity:
- Creation of the Fuentes Carrionas National Hunting Reserve in 1966.[19]
- I Provincial Week of Fuentes Carrionas, study of various aspects of the project of the Reserve, as well as contributing to the dissemination of its natural resources, at the same time as it was intended to promote adequate hunting regulations, control big game and fishing species and improve transport and communication infrastructures, together with accommodation.[20]
- II Provincial Week of Fuentes Carrionas, in which the same proposals continued to be highlighted.[20]
- Within the framework of the III Development Plan, the National Economic and Social Trade Union Council held in 1971 took up and expanded on the tourism proposals of previous years.[20]
- The IV Economic and Social Trade Union Council of Palencia, in 1972, extended the actions in this area to the eastern sector of the region, especially to the valley of Santullán. This valley, once dynamic thanks to mining, was affected at the end of the sixties by the closure of the coal mines, in response to which the public agents proposed the socio-economic reconversion of these municipalities, promoting alternative activities to mining, among which tourism was seen as ‘a catalyst for wealth’.[20]
- III Provincial Tourism Assembly of Palencia, in 1974. Introduction of new proposals for action in the field of tourism, highlighting the tourist potential of the natural areas of Las Tuerces and the Cueva de los Franceses, as well as the historical and artistic heritage, which had been relegated to second place in favour of the use of the natural resources of the region.[20]
- Inauguration of the Parador Nacional de Turismo in Cervera de Pisuerga in 1975. A milestone in the tourist panorama of the Montaña Palentina, through which it was intended to attract a more selected and qualified tourism. In this way, this region became part of the state network of Paradores de Turismo and, consequently, a point of reference within the Spanish tourist panorama.[20]
- The 1980 Provincial Plan for the Development of Tourist Resources, which echoed the same sporting and tourism-related actions proposed throughout this stage.[20]
- The rural development policies of the European Union have been applied in the Montaña Palentina through the community initiative LEADER, whose two programmes, LEADER I (1991–1994) and LEADER II (1995–1999), have been managed and applied in this region through the local action group FEDERACIÓN ADEMPA, under the strategy of promoting regional economic development through one activity, tourism, and through the joint cooperation of the different local agents, both public and private. In this way, a large part of the LEADER programmes' budget has been allocated to tourism promotion, the development of rural tourism and the promotion of complementary activities.[21]
Locations
[edit]- High concentration of Romanesque buildings, the Romanesque of northern Palencia (whose candidacy was presented for World Heritage status, but was not successful, which is why it is on UNESCO's Tentative List).[22]
- Interesting industrial landscape that can be seen in the vestiges resulting from mining activity, including the railway line built in the times of splendour of this activity.[23]
- Traditional buildings and popular architecture.[23]
- The richness of the landscape can be enjoyed on various routes and from different viewpoints.[23]
- Reservoirs used for recreational and scenic purposes.[23]
- Activities such as water sports, hiking, horse riding or cycle-rail routes.[19]
- Mudá town centre with its characteristic oval-shaped rock.[24]
Gastronomy
[edit]- As a first course: pulses in thick broth, garlic soups.[25]
- Second course: Meat (Meat from Cervera and Montaña Palentina ) stewed, roasted and, in spring time, trout.[25]
- Delicacies in this area: mushrooms and snails.[25]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Álvarez, Beatriz (2021-10-04). "La Montaña Palentina experimenta un ligero repunte poblacional" [Montaña Palentina experiences a slight population recovery]. Cadena SER (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2025-01-03.
- ^ SER, Cadena (2016-03-07). "El PSOE pide en el Congreso la elaboración de un Plan de emergencia para la Montaña Palentina" [PSOE calls on Congress to draw up an emergency plan for Montaña Palencia]. Cadena SER (in European Spanish).
- ^ a b Aguña Aguerri, María Isabel (2002). "La larga trayectoria del desarrollo turístico en la Montaña Palentina" [The long history of tourism development in Montaña Palentina] (PDF). Cuadernos de Turismo (in Spanish). 10. Universidad de Murcia: 124. ISSN 1139-7861.
- ^ Aguña Aguerri, María Isabel (2002). "La larga trayectoria del desarrollo turístico en la Montaña Palentina" [The long history of tourism development in Montaña Palentina] (PDF). Cuadernos de Turismo (in Spanish). 10. Universidad de Murcia: 135. ISSN 1139-7861.
- ^ a b La Pedrera Pindia (2016). Ascensiones en la Montaña Palentina [Ascents in Montaña Palentina] (PDF) (in Spanish). Diputación de Palencia. p. 4. ISBN 978-84-608-9822-1.
- ^ "Fuentes Carrionas". Hiking Iberia (in Spanish).
- ^ A. D. Grupo Montaña Pegaso (2019). Montaña Palentina: Pico Murcia y Tres Provincias. Información adicional [Montaña Palentina: Pico Murcia y Tres Provincias. Additional information] (PDF) (in Spanish).
- ^ INE (2018).
- ^ a b c "Flora y Fauna | Barruelo de Santullán" [Flora and fauna]. Ayuntamiento de Barruelo De Santullán (in Spanish).
- ^ "San Cebrián de Mudá, tierra de bisontes" [San Cebrián de Mudá, land of bison]. El Norte de Castilla (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2010-06-16. Retrieved 2025-01-03.
- ^ La Pedrera Pindia (2016). Ascensiones en la Montaña Palentina [Ascents in Montaña Palentina] (PDF) (in Spanish). Diputación de Palencia. ISBN 978-84-608-9822-1.
- ^ Congreso de los Diputados. XI Legislatura. (February 23, 2016). "Proposición no de Ley presentada por el Grupo Parlamentario Socialista, sobre el desarrollo de un Plan de emergencia para la comarca de la Montaña Palentina" [Proposition no of Law presented by the Socialist Parliamentary Group, on the development of an emergency plan for the comarca of Montaña Palentina.] (PDF). Boletín Oficial de las Cortes Generales (in Spanish). p. 29.
- ^ "El PSOE se interesa en el Congreso de los Diputados por el futuro de la empresa "Agua Palentina"" [The PSOE is interested in the Congress of Deputies in the future of the company ‘Agua Palentina’.]. PSOE de Palencia (in Spanish). October 17, 2016.
- ^ Valderrueda, Diario de. "La minería, en el recuerdo de la Montaña Leonesa y la Montaña Palentina" [Mining, in the memory of Montaña Leonesa and Montaña Palentina]. Diario de Valderrueda - Actualidad de la Montaña Oriental Leonesa y Palentina (in Spanish).
- ^ Fernández González, Lidia (December 6, 2024). "La historia galletera de Aguilar de Campoo: 143 años de tradición" [Aguilar de Campoo's biscuit history: 143 years of tradition]. Diario de Valderrueda - Actualidad de la Montaña Oriental Leonesa y Palentina (in Spanish). Retrieved 2025-01-03.
- ^ Franco Jubete, Fernando (2007). "Agricultura y despoblación rural en Palencia" [Agriculture and rural depopulation in Palencia] (PDF). Publicaciones de la Institución Tello Téllez de Meneses (in Spanish) (78): 29.
- ^ Ortega Valcárcel, José; Alario Trigueros, Milagros Estilita; Caballero Fernández-Rufete, Pedro; Delgado Urrecho, José María; García Cuesta, José Luis; Molinero Hernando, Fernando; Ortega Villazan, María Teresa; Pascual Ruiz-Valdepeñas, María del Henar (1999). "Montaña Palentina (Estudio realizado en el marco del Convenio firmado entre la Consejería de Economía y Hacienda y la Universidad de Valladolid con fecha 26 de febrero de 1999)" [Montaña Palentina (Study conducted within the framework of the Agreement signed between the Regional Ministry of Economy and Finance and the University of Valladolid on 26 February 1999)]. Universidad de Valladolid. Facultad de Filosofía y Letras (in Spanish).
- ^ Cea Martín, Elena (2023). Plan para la recuperación económica de Palencia: una propuesta [Plan for the Economic Recovery of Palencia: A Proposal] (in Spanish). Universidad de Valladolid. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Empresariales.
- ^ a b Aguña Aguerri, María Isabel (2002). "La larga trayectoria del desarrollo turístico en la Montaña Palentina" [The long history of tourism development in Montaña Palentina] (PDF). Cuadernos de Turismo (in Spanish) (10). Universidad de Murcia: 127.
- ^ a b c d e f g Aguña Aguerri, María Isabel (2002). "La larga trayectoria del desarrollo turístico en la Montaña Palentina" [The long history of tourism development in Montaña Palentina] (PDF). Cuadernos de Turismo (in Spanish) (10): 128.
- ^ Aguña Aguerri, María Isabel (2002). "La larga trayectoria del desarrollo turístico en la Montaña Palentina" [The long history of tourism development in Montaña Palentina] (PDF). Cuadernos de Turismo (in Spanish) (10): 131.
- ^ Lafuente Batanero, Luis (2009). "Spanish tentative list". World Heritage Review (53): 124–131.
- ^ a b c d Aguña Aguerri, María Isabel (2002). "La larga trayectoria del desarrollo turístico en la Montaña Palentina" [The long history of tourism development in Montaña Palentina] (PDF). Cuadernos de Turismo (in Spanish) (10): 124.
- ^ Crespo, Gonzalo Alcalde (2009-07-16). "El pan de azúcar de Mudá" [Sugar bread from Mudá]. El Norte de Castilla (in Spanish).
- ^ a b c Diputación de Palencia (2007). Guía Gastronómica de la provincia de Palencia [Gastronomic Guide to the province of Palencia] (in Spanish).
External links
[edit]- Somos Palencia (in Spanish). Information about routes, leisure, villages and news of Montaña Palentina.
- Prieto Vielba, Juan Carlos; Castillo Oli, Jesús (2013). "Plan de Intervención "Románico Norte" 2005-2012. Antigua Merindad de Aguilar de Campoo. Castilla y León". Her&Mus. Heritage & Museography (in Spanish). 12: 32–41.
- Redondo, Marta (2005). "Entre trincheras La Montaña Palentina fue una zona muy castigada y también una de las que más sufrió durante la Guerra Civil" [Between trenches Montaña Palentina was a very punished area and also one of the areas that suffered the most during the Civil War]. Diario Palentino. Archived from the original on 19 June 2010. Montaña Palentina during the Civil War.