Vilanova i la Geltrú

Vilanova i la Geltrú
Municipality

Plaça de la Vila

Flag

Coat of arms
Vilanova i la Geltrú

Location in Catalonia

Coordinates: ES 41°13′27″N 1°43′32″E / 41.22417°N 1.72556°E / 41.22417; 1.72556
Country  Spain
Community  Catalonia
Province Barcelona
Comarca Garraf
Government
  Mayor Neus Lloveras Massana (2015)[1]
Area[2]
  Total 34.0 km2 (13.1 sq mi)
Elevation 22 m (72 ft)
Population (2014)[1]
  Total 65,941
  Density 1,900/km2 (5,000/sq mi)
Postal code 08800
Website vilanova.cat

Vilanova i la Geltrú (Catalan pronunciation: [ˌbiɫəˈnɔβə j ɫə ʒəɫˈtɾu]) is a city in the province of Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain and the capital of the Garraf comarca. Historically a fishing port, the city has a growing population of approximately 66,000, and is situated 40 km south-west of Barcelona, with the more famous coastal resort of Sitges some 10 km to the north-east. During the dictatorship of Francisco Franco (1939–75), the city's name was castilianized as Villanueva y Geltrú as part of the Anti-Catalan policies of the era.

The town has a long history, and experienced an efflorescence during the Romantic period evidenced by a wealth of opulent 19th century buildings. The atmospheric town square, the Plaça de la Vila,[3] and many of its iconic public buildings were principally financed by Josep Tomàs Ventosa Soler (1797-1874) a textile magnate who made his fortune in Cuba. A monument featuring a bronze statue of Ventosa stands in the center of the square. An identical monument stands in Matanzas, Cuba, where both statues were forged.[4] Today, children play around the monument and agile climbers from castellers to protestors to carnival pranksters climb the statue and adorn it with their own symbols (see photo).

Statue of city benefactor Josep Ventosa holding the estelada or Catalan independence flag.

During the dictatorship, large numbers of people fleeing poverty in Southern Spain settled in Vilanova, they are sometimes referred to by historians as "fugitives of fascism."[5][6] Although they experienced prejudice they became increasingly accepted and known as els altres Vilanovins or "the other Vilanovins." By 1970, a majority of the town's population had been born elsewhere.[7] In the first decade of the 21st century, there was another wave of immigrants (called nouvinguts or "newcomers" locally), this time primarily from North Africa, South America and Eastern Europe.[8]

The Church of San Antoni and bell tower in Vilanova, water color painting by Brad Erickson.

Economy

Agriculture and the maritime trade in wine were the traditional sources of income during the 18th and 19th centuries. Today, while agriculture and a significant fishing fleet continue to be sources of income, the primary economic activity is industry in the sectors of metal, textile and chemicals.[9]

View from Club Nautico Vilanova

Vilanova today

Vilanova i la Geltrú, has embraced new technologies for generations, and has had a vocational and traditional university since 1902, along with the UPC (Polytechnic University of Catalonia). The building Neapolis Public Innovation Agency for ICT and multimedia, was built in 2006.

Located 46 km from Barcelona and 44 km from Tarragona, it has the third largest port of Catalonia and is a major fishing port. The Brotherhood of Pescadors of Vilanova derives from the powerful and ancient Brotherhood of Sant Elm (founded in 1579). In 1921 the new Pòsit de Pescadors (Fishermen's Archive) was founded. Today fresh fish may be purchased directly on the Internet fish auction. Vilanova i la Geltrú has a estació Nàutica which hosts major sailing competitions at the national and international levels.

The city has seven Civic Centers that provide social services, host cultural activities and promote civic participation and convivència or engaged relations between neighbors.[10] On April 7, 2014, the city enacted a Municipal Ordinance to Promote Civility and Convivència with the objective of establishing norms of mutual respect, social cohesion and full respect for the dignity and rights of a plurality of expressions and cultural forms.[11] Vilanova's office of the Consortium for Linguistic Normalization offers free courses in the Catalan language and other services in the welcome of newcomers.[12]

Special programs are offered at the University Campus of the Mediterranean Interdisciplinary Reference Center, including courses in Society, Culture and Tourism, Environment, Information Society, Science and Technology, and Economics and Business.

The University Campus of the Mediterranean is an initiative of the City Council of Vilanova i La Geltrú, the Polytechnic University of Catalonia and European Institute of the Mediterranean under the aegis of the Municipal Institute of Education and Work (IMET).

One of the centers of research, development and innovation is found in a unique building designed by the Catalan architect Oriol Bohigas i Guardiola, Edifici Neapolis. This building is part of the European Network of Living Labs (ENoLL). In 2012, it initiated the Co-Working Center coinciding with the International Year of Cooperatives recognized by the United Nations.

Vilanova is linked to the region by highway C-32, also known as highway Pau Casals, or to the Garraf Barcelona motorway providing a connection to Barcelona El Prat Airport, the highway C-15, also known by the name Eix Diagonal, which links the historic town of Manresa and Autovía A-7 with the Mediterranean Sea.

The Railway of Vilanova is of vital importance. Built between 1882 and 1884 by the developer and director of roads Jeroni Granell i Mundet the railway links the línia of Rodalies Sant Vincenç de Calders - Maçanet de la Selva and connects to the imperial Roman city of Tarragona, the town of Tortosa, the town of Reus, and the City of Lleida.

Its population has increased in recent years. Currently several large projects are underway such as the extension of the beach, the polygon "Sant Jordi" (St. George) pattern 'Catalunya', and the future redevelopment of the waterfront.

Culture

The traditional and popular festivals (festes) celebrated in Vilanova i la Geltrú are among the richest and most varied in Catalonia.[13] Locals say that Vilanovins "always have a leg in the air" referring to their festive proclivity. And it is through participating in local festivals that Vilanovins, whether natives or recently arrived newcomers, intensify their sense of belonging to a community dedicated to active engagement between neighbors or convivència.[14]

Cap-grossos during Festa Major 2012.

Carnaval, held in late February, culminates in a week-long debauch of dances, masquerades, social satire, mock battles, permitted disrespect, feasts, processions, and pranks all in honor of Sa Majastat el Rei Carnestoltes (His Majesty the King Carnival) also known as the "king of the senseless" celebrated for his prodigious sexual prowess and devastating satire. Up to a third of the population participates in Les Comparses, a couples dance in which rival groups hurl hard candies at one another in what is called the Sweet War. Children are given a day off school to celebrate Dijous Gras (Fat Thursday) during which they celebrate the Merengada, a day long orgy of eating and fighting with sticky sweet meringue, leaving a sticky residue throughout the town. While many of the acts of carnaval remain constant, every year there are innovations and topical satire attacking the foibles of the rich, powerful, inept and corrupt.[15]

Firerun, Festa Major 2012, Vilanova i la Geltrú

Since 1784, Vilanovins have celebrated their Festa Major in early August, dedicated to the city's patron saint, the Virgin of the Snows (Mare de Déu de les Neus).[16] Processions begin with a correfoc (firerun) of ritual devils led by the Ball de Diables de Vilanova i la Geltrú, established in 1832 and one of eight dances of devils in Catalonia with a history of one hundred years or more.

Ball de Bastons, Vilanova, Festa Major 2012

The processions include traditional dances by costumed figures including the dances of the Serrallonga, Ball de Bastons, Cintes, Panderos, Cap-grossos (big-headed dwarfs), Cercolets, Pastorets, Gitanes, and Valencians; imaginary beings such as Gegants (giants), Dracs (fire-breathing dragons), and Mulasses (demonic Mules), and the construction of towering human castles (castell).

Senyera at Portal del Nin, Festa Major 2012, Vilanova i la Geltrú

Other festes celebrated in Vilanova include Tots Sants (November 1), Nadal (December 25), Cap d'Any (January 1), els Tres Tombs (January 17), la Diada de Sant Jordi (April 23), Nit de Sant Joan (St John’s Night) and Sant Pere (St Peter’s Day).[15]

Giant couple. Vilanova i la Geltrú.

Of international importance is the "Festival Internacional de Música Popular Tradicional", Vilanova International World Music Festival, which has been held since 1981 and is the oldest world music festival in Spain.

The Passeig Ribes Roges, along the beach, on a Sunday afternoon in May
Beachview

Vilanova has a museum, founded by the Catalan poet, historian and diplomat, Víctor Balaguer (1824–1901), the Biblioteca Museu Víctor Balaguer, which contains collections of Roman, Egyptian and prehistoric antiquities, as well as paintings, engravings, sculptures, coins and a large library. Vilanova also has a railway museum, the Museu del Ferrocarril de Vilanova i la Geltrú which contains one of the largest collections of historic steam engines in the world.

Apart from traditional seafood restaurants, and cutting edge presentations of local foods at culinary destinations such as L'Oganquit and Genito, Vilanova is a recognised centre for xató, a winter salad dressed with a rich sauce made from almonds, olives, fish, oil and garlic, which forms the basis for the Festival of Xató (Xatonada) in tandem with nearby villages and towns. Other local innovations include glòries, elaborate confections of meringue presented during carnaval that may be a dying tradition,[17] and the Mig-Mig, a refreshing summer drink invented at the gelateria Cal Llorens, is a fifty-fifty blend of orxata de xufa made from tigernuts and granissat de llimona or pulverized ice with lemon syrup.[18]

Folklore

Tradition maintains that Vila Nova (the new town) was founded by people fleeing the abuses of the feudal lord of the castle la Geltrú, particularly his exercise of the Droit du seigneur or jus primae noctis but there is no evidence that this is the case. Other traditions recount conflicts with invading Moors, the coming of the railroad, the inaccessible tunnels beneath the city and stories of a youth confounded by the reflection of the full moon in the water from which Vilanovins receive the nickname llunatics (lunatics), in reference to a supposed mercurial quality of unpredictable emotions.[19][20] Rather than a static tradition, folklore and festa in Vilanova are often used as a public way to respond to current events from immigration to national politics or to defy fears of new epidemics. In an annual children's Christmas play, the troubling ethnic caricature of the Moorish pirate, Moro Manani was replaced by the traditional Catalan figure the Caganer[21] and the avian flu scare was satirized in 2006 by the carnaval figure Moixó Foguer.[22]

Sports

The city has a roller hockey team, CP Vilanova, one of the most important in Spain, and a member of the main national roller hockey league OK Liga. In 2011 Vilanova hosted the CERS Cup Final Four.

Sister Cities

Notable people

References

  1. 1 2 "Ajuntament de Vilanova i la Geltrú". Generalitat of Catalonia. Retrieved 2015-11-13.
  2. "El municipi en xifres: Vilanova i la Geltrú". Statistical Institute of Catalonia. Retrieved 2015-11-23.
  3. Manyer, Ton. 2006. Vilanova: una de les places clàssiques. Castells, May–June, 46-7.
  4. Puig Rovira, Francesc X. 2003. Diccionari Biogràfic de Vilanova i la Geltrú. Ajuntament de Vilanova i la Geltrú.
  5. Candel, Francesc. 1964. Els altres catalans. Barcelona: Edicions 62.
  6. Candel, Francesc, and Josep Maria Cuenca. 2001. Els altres catalans del segle XXI. Barcelona: Editorial Planeta.
  7. Virella i Bloda, Albert. 1974. Vilanova i la Geltrú. Barcelona: Editorial Selecta.
  8. Ajuntament de Vilanova i la Geltrú. 2004. Vilanova i la Geltrú, una ciutat en creixement: població presenti escenaris de futur (1997-2014).
  9. La Vanguardia. 2006. Catalunya poble a poble. 14. Edicions 62.
  10. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on November 14, 2014. Retrieved April 16, 2014.
  11. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on April 17, 2014. Retrieved April 16, 2014.
  12. http://www.cpnl.cat/xarxa/cnlaltpenedes/
  13. La Vanguadia. 2006. Catalunya poble a poble. 14. Edicions 62.
  14. Erickson, Brad. 2011. Utopian Virtues: Muslim neighbors, ritual sociality, and the politics of convivència. American Ethnologist 38(1): 114-131.
  15. 1 2 Erickson, Brad. 2008. Sensory Politics: Catalan Ritual and the New Immigration. University of California, Berkeley.
  16. Canales Serrano, Antonio Fco. 1994. La Festa Major de Vilanova i la Geltrú al Segle XX. Collecció Llibres de l'Arç.
  17. Francàs, Ramon. 2006. Sense pena ni glòria: Els pastissers lamenten que les glòries de Vilanova es vagin perdent. Diari de Vilanova, February 24, 28.
  18. Martorell, Ramon Francàs. 2006. Què no hem de deixar de tastar a Vilanova i la Geltrú. Valls: Cossetània Edicions.
  19. Ferrer i Martí, Antoni. 2005. Mites vilanovins. Vilanova i la Geltrú: La Cep i la Nansa edicions.
  20. Raventós i Cañas, Xavier. 2006. Un Estiu diferent. Vilanova i la Geltrú: La Cep i la Nansa edicions.
  21. Erickson, Brad. Les virtuts cíviques del caganer. Caramella: Revista de música i cultura popular No. 25, pp. 47-50 (2011).
  22. Diari de Vilanova. 2006. Plomes amb control sanitari per al Moixó. February 24.
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