*** Welcome to piglix ***

Province of Castellón

Castelló
Castelló/Castellón
Province
Coat of arms of Castelló
Coat of arms
Map of Spain with Castelló highlighted
Map of Spain with Castelló highlighted
Coordinates: 40°10′N 0°10′W / 40.167°N 0.167°W / 40.167; -0.167Coordinates: 40°10′N 0°10′W / 40.167°N 0.167°W / 40.167; -0.167
Country Spain
Autonomous community Valencian Community
Capital Castellón de la Plana
Government
 • President Javier Moliner Gargallo (PPCV)
Area
 • Total 6,679 km2 (2,579 sq mi)
Area rank Ranked 38th
Population (2014)
 • Total 587,508
 • Rank Ranked 28th
 • Density 88/km2 (230/sq mi)
Demonym(s) Castellonense
Official language(s) Valencian and Spanish
Parliament Cortes Generales
Website Provincial website

Castellón (Spanish: [kasteˈʎon]) or Castelló (Valencian: [kasteˈʎo]) is a province in the northern part of the Valencian Community, Spain. It is bordered by the provinces of Valencia to the south, Teruel to the west, Tarragona to the north, and by the Mediterranean Sea to the east. The western side of the province is in the mountainous Sistema Ibérico area.

Castellón's capital is Castellón de la Plana (Valencian: Castelló de la Plana). The province had a population of 501,237 in 2002, 30% of whom were residing in the capital, 60% in its metropolitan area, and 85% along the coastline. As of 2012, the population had since grown to 604,564 people. The province, and in particular its idle large airport, has become a symbol of the wasteful spending and corruption prior to the Spanish financial crisis.

It is a bilingual territory, with many inhabitants speaking both Spanish and the local, co-official language of Valencian. Spanish and Catalan are closely related and understandable to a fair degree Catalan. There are marked distinctions in vocabulary and grammar which puts Catalan closer to Occitan in southern France and would make it difficult for a monolingual speaker of Spanish to understand. Usage is a source of some controversy and political but not to the degree as in Catalonia where the upper classes preferred Catalan to Spanish and thus preserved the vitality of the language in the national consciousness of the majority of the people there.


...
Wikipedia

...