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Reinosa

Reinosa
Municipality
Church of San Sebastián (16th century).
Church of San Sebastián (16th century).
Location of Reinosa in Cantabria.
Location of Reinosa in Cantabria.
Reinosa is located in Spain
Reinosa
Reinosa
Location in Spain
Coordinates: 43°0′7″N 4°8′16″W / 43.00194°N 4.13778°W / 43.00194; -4.13778Coordinates: 43°0′7″N 4°8′16″W / 43.00194°N 4.13778°W / 43.00194; -4.13778
Country  Spain
Autonomous community  Cantabria
Province Cantabria
Comarca Campoo
Judicial district Reinosa
Government
 • Alcalde José Miguel Barrio (2009) (PRC)
Area
 • Total 4.12 km2 (1.59 sq mi)
Elevation 851 m (2,792 ft)
Population (2009)
 • Total 10,307
 • Density 2,500/km2 (6,500/sq mi)
Demonym(s) Reinosanos
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 • Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Official language(s) Spanish
Website Official website

Reinosa is a municipality in Cantabria, Spain. As of 2009, it has 10,307 inhabitants. The municipality, one of the smallest by land area in Cantabria, is notable for being one of the nearest towns to the headwaters of the Ebro River. It is completely surrounded by the municipality of Campoo de Enmedio and was created a city by King Alfonso XII in 1927, being one of only three urban centres in Cantabria with that honour, the others being Santander and Torrelavega.

The first documents mentioning the town date back to the year 1000, when it was divided into four solars by Sancho García, the Count of Castile. By 1404, it was emerging as the main town of the region and was organised into seven Hermandades, military units aimed at retaining law and order. The procurators of these brotherhoods met once a month with the Corregidor to organise the town's affairs.

In 1497, Prince John, son of Queen Isabella I of Castile and King Ferdinand II of Aragon met his affianced wife Margaret of Austria here, the meeting or marriage ceremony probably taking place in La Casa de las Princesas.

In 1517 Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor was passing through the town when he was taken ill. He stayed for nine days at the Convento de San Francisco while he recovered. The convent was being built at the time, and a hundred years later had thirty friars while the town had five hundred inhabitants. In the eighteenth century, under the Bourbons, a new highway and a bridge over the River Ebro were built. These works contributed to an economic boom in the region and the town becomes a bustling and prosperous place, on one of the main routes to the port of Santander. In 1927 it received its charter as a city from King Alfonso XII.


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