HISTORY
OF BILBAO
The Villa of Bilbao
as such was officially born on 15th June 1300, when D.
Diego López de Haro bestowed the Carta
Magna upon it.
Bilbao,
like many others cities in the world, is situated on the banks of a river.
This river, the Nervión, supplies drinking water as well water for irrigation
and inshore fishing, thus offering food as well as water for its inhabitants.
In addition, with the passing of time, the estuary has proved to be best
means of communication with the exterior.
At the beginning
there were two nuclei of population, two settlements of differing character:
that of the left bank, or Old
Bilbao , who were miners and iron-workers, and that of the right
bank, or Old Town, who handled all the comings and goings of mercantile
port traffic. Both parts were united by San
Anton Bridge, and here there was a harbour just at the point where
the high tide reached furthest inland.
Very
little is known about the history of the town before the Villa was founded.
Some historians have toyed with the idea that Bilbao was once Roman Flaviobriga,
on the basis that Roman coins have been found in the estuary, although
this teory has not been proved conclusively. What has been proved is that
we Bilbainos had contact with the Normans, true masters of the Atlantic
link back then in the 9th Century. Perhaps it was they who taught use
the arts of sailing and commerce.
During
the 12th and 13th Centuries, Bilbao and Bermeo figured as the two most
important comercial
ports, giving rise to a rivalry which lasted for centuries. Before the
foundation of the Villa, Bilbao had already gained an important economic
status, based upon its being the main distribution point of Castillian
products bound for the North sea and vice versa. This position as commercial
crossroads was decisive in the foundation of the Villa of Bilbao with
its own authorities, by-laws (those of Logroño) and municipal charter,
thus offering a series of privileges for those who came to live within
its walls. Bilbao owned exclusive rights over all navigational and commercial
activity in the estuary. Upon this strong basis, institucions and commercial
activity flourished alike. Exploiting the raw material to be found in
the hearts of the mountains which suround Bilbao, they wrought iron -
as both Shakespeare and Tirso de Molina, among others, mentioned. As had
always been the tradition, they cut timber from the forest of oak, beech
and chestnut, and built boats in which they sailed the seas in search
of new business and new commerce.
For
three hundred years two institutions dictated the Bilbaino way of life;
the Town Hall and the Consulate (1511-1829). Representing the University
of maritime contractors and merchants, they controlled all maritime and
onshore life, both civil and commercial. This governing body became so
important that in the 17th century, Bilbainos had their own Contract House
in Brigge, in order to do business in Belgium. The Consulate was dissolved
in the 19th century after a Code of Commerce was introduced throughout
the State.
So tightly-knit
was the collaboration between these institutions that they shared the
same building next to the erstwhile church of San Antón.
The integration
of Bilbao into the Santiago Way brought new culturaland artistic tendencies
into the area, which left its mark on the personality of the city of today.
Those pilgrims, travelling along The Way, also brought new sources of
income to the Villa.
The
history of Bilbao in The Moderm Age is one of the commercial activity,
acting as the nexus between the great Europe of the North Atlantic and
the interior Kingdom of Castille, as well as being a fundamental connection
with Seville and America.
Without
doubt the area which changed the whole detiny of Bilbao was the 19th Century.
During these one hundred years, Bilbao was designated capital of Vizcaya
(1820-1823); industrial development in the metropolitan area grew in leaps
and bounds based on the minning and iron and steel industries; the same
ocurred in the shipping and railway companys - in the 50 years between
1841 and 1891 over 1,000 kilometres of track was laid - Banks and even
the Stock market came into being.
Despite
being involved in many wars during this period - French invasion under
Napoleon in 1818, and two Carlist Wars on four different fronts (1835-36
and 1873-76) - economic development was overwhelming.
Bilbao,
which up until then had consisted of Old Bilbao and the Old Town, needed
both to grow physically and to reflect its economic expansion politically.
Thus began, in 1870, an annexation process, first takin Abando, then Begoña,
and later Deusto and Luchana (1924). As you can see, the city which we
know today is a comparatively recent invention. Its rapid progress is
reflected in the city's architecture; many of its monuments were erected
during this same period: Plaza
Nueva, Arriaga
Thetre, the Town Hall ...
During
the first part of the 20th Century Vizcaya reached a great economic peak
which saw its culmination in the happy 1920s, based pricipally upon the
sale of iron to England, some of which was destined, among other things,
for the manufacture of arms for the First World War.
After this
phase, and the changes wrought by The Civil War, the Villa saw its industry
at its greatest peak, attracting thousands of immigrants from different
parts of The State, who had to be provided with shelter in specially created
local districts. Owning to the short space of time in which these districts
were built, and the surrounding mountainous gegraphy, it was difficult
for Bilbao to follow lineal urban expansion.
Demographically
speaking, we must consider the fact that Great Bilbao, or the area of
influence of the Nervión Estuary, where that great industrial development
took place, boasts a million inhabitants; not so the Villa de Bilbao,
which has around four hundred thousand.
At
the moment the whole of this zone, which relied upon its industry as its
main source of income, is undergoing a period of economic recession. Even
so, its inhabitants look toward the future with optimism, and thus face
the difficult challenge of transforming the industrial society which took
root in the 19th Century into a city of high-quality service industries.
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