Aran | |||
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Comarca | |||
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Anthem: Montanhes araneses (Occitan) "Aranese mountains" |
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Location of Aran in Catalonia |
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Country | Spain | ||
Autonomous community | Catalonia | ||
Province | Lleida | ||
Capital | Vielha e Mijaran | ||
Municipalities | |||
Government | |||
• Body | Conselh Generau d'Aran | ||
• Síndic | Carlos Barrera (CDA) | ||
Area | |||
• Total | 633.5 km2 (244.6 sq mi) | ||
Population (2014) | |||
• Total | 9,993 | ||
• Density | 16/km2 (41/sq mi) | ||
Demonym(s) | |||
Time zone | CET (UTC+1) | ||
• Summer (DST) | CEST (UTC+2) | ||
Largest municipality | Vielha e Mijaran | ||
Official languages | |||
Website | Conselh Generau d'Aran |
Aran (Occitan: [aˈɾan]; Catalan: [əˈɾan]; Spanish: [aˈɾan]) (previously officially called Val d'Aran) is an administrative entity in Catalonia, Spain, consisting of the Aran valley, 620.47 square kilometres (239.56 sq mi) in area, in the Pyrenees mountains, in the northwestern part of the province of Lleida.
Most of the valley constitutes one of only two areas of Spain, and the only part of Catalonia, located on the northern side of the Pyrenees. Hence, this valley holds the only Catalonian rivers to flow into the Atlantic Ocean; for the same reason, the region is characterized by an Atlantic climate, instead of a Mediterranean one. As of 2001, most people in Aran spoke Spanish (38.78%) as their native language, followed by Aranese (34.19%), then Catalan (19.45%) with 7.56% having a different native language. Speakers of languages other than the local Aranese are typically people born outside the valley, or their children.
Aran borders France on the north, the Spanish Autonomous Community of Aragon to the west and the Catalan comarques of Alta Ribagorça to the south and Pallars Sobirà to the east. The capital of the comarca is Vielha, with 3,692 inhabitants (1996). The entire population of the valley is about 7,130 (1996). The Garonne river flows through Aran from its source on the Pla de Beret (Beret Flat) near the Port de la Bonaigua. It is joined by the Joèu river (from the slopes of Aneto mountain) and passes underground at the Forau de Aigualluts. It then reappears in the Val dera Artiga before reaching the Aran valley, then through France and eventually to the Atlantic Ocean. The Noguera Pallaresa river, whose source is only a hundred meters from that of the Garonne, flows the opposite way towards the Mediterranean.