LOCATION:
In a
privileged position on the northeastern coast of the
Iberian peninsula and the shores of the Mediterranean,
Barcelona is the second largest city in Spain in both
size and population. It is also the capital of
Catalonia, 1 of the 17 Autonomous Communities that make
up Spain.
The capital of Catalonia is unequivocally a
Mediterranean city, not only because of its geographic
location but also and above all because of its history,
tradition and cultural influences. The documented
history of the city dates back to the founding of a
Roman colony on its soil in the second century B.C.
Modern Barcelona experienced spectacular growth and
economic revival at the onset of industrialization
during the second half of the 19th century. The 1888
World's Fair became a symbol of the capacity for hard
work and the international outlook projected by the
city. Culture and the arts flourished in Barcelona and
in all of Catalonia; the splendor achieved by Catalonian
modernism is one of the most patent displays.
Barcelona, more than just a single city, is really a
collection of multi-faceted and diverse cities. The
visitor unfamiliar with its history might be surprised
that such a modern and enterprising city preserves its
historic Gothic center almost intact, or by the curious
contrast between the maze of narrow streets and the
grid-like layout of the Eixample, the urban planning
"Enlargement" project of the end of the 19th century.
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