Estepa

Estepa is a municipality in the extreme south-east of the province of Seville. It had a population of 12.631 in 2013.[2] The town is located north of the Sierra del Becerro mountains.

Estepa
Flag
Coat of arms
Motto(s): 
Latin: Ostippo, Quid Ultra?
(Estepa, What else?)
Estepa
Location in Spain
Coordinates: 37°17′30″N 4°52′45″W
Country Spain
Autonomous community Andalusia
ProvinceSevilla
ComarcaSierra Sur de Sevilla
Founded1241
Government
  MayorJuan García Baena (PSOE)
Area
  Total202.42 km2 (78.15 sq mi)
Elevation
604 m (1,982 ft)
Population
 (2018)[1]
  Total12,503
  Density62/km2 (160/sq mi)
Demonym(s)Estepeño/a
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
41560
WebsiteOfficial website

History

Estepa possesses a very ancient past and has well-preserved remains to testify to this. Some date back to prehistory including flint tools and axes. The remains reveal the later accession of Carthaginian people. At least two settlements are known: one situated in Los Canterones, shown by ancient deposits some 6 km from the town of Estepa, and the other under present-day Estepa.[3]

Estepa is mentioned in classical sources as Astapa and Ostippo. The Romans destroyed the Carthaginian city of Astapa during the Punic Wars, as described by Titus Livius.[4] In the Roman epoch, the town bore the name Ostippo, a free city linked to the Conventus de Astigi (Écija). It was mentioned in the Antonine Itinerary.[4] The Roman city would have occupied the high part of the site, but little evidence remains. Numerous remains of agricultural developments suggest many small populations in the plains to the north of Estepa.

Torre del homenaje of the Alcázar of Estepa, on the hill of San Cristóbal.

The place continued to be inhabited during the Visigothic period.[5] Under the Arabs it adopted the name Istabba, and the poet Al Zawwali lived there for a while.[4] In 1267, having been taken by Fernando III during the Christian reconquest, the town was handed over to the Order of Santiago, to take charge of its defence as a frontier position.[4] Its greatest monumental and artistic achievements were attained during the 16th and 17th centuries under the marquesses of Estepa;[4][6] their palace was built on the site of the former Islamic fortress.

By the 19th century, although Estepa was expanding, the palace was in ruins and the area was known for banditry.[7] The town was granted the title of "city" (ciudad) in 1886.[4] During the Civil War it was soon taken over by Franco's forces.[8] After the war, widespread poverty led to substantial emigration to industrial areas of Spain and other European countries during the 1950s and 1960s; the population remained at a constant level. Social conflict was still present in the area after the return to democracy in Spain, as seen in a strike of agricultural workers in 1990.[9]

Economy

Estepa is well known for its production of Christmas-time sweets, mainly mantecado, or traditional Spanish crumble cake, notable for being based on pork fat. Since 2009 the production of these confections have been protected by a protected designation of origin, Mantecados de Estepa.[10][11] Estepa has 30 such factories,[12] 15 of which are partners in an export trade association, Coexema A.I.E. The factories produce about 18 million kilograms of Christmas sweets annually, and from September to December they employ in total about 2,000 employees.[6] Over 90% of the workers at these factories are women.[13]

Other industries are gaining prominence in the area as well, such as Graphic Arts, mechanical constructions, machinery, factories, transport, slaughterhouses, limestone production, etc. South of the mountain range is an industrial estate called "The Heart of Andalucia" with more than 140,000m2 of surface area divided into 96 plots. It is financed by Espa and Sodestepa LLC.[14]

An important agricultural activity is olive growing: about 9,500 ha of land within the municipality is planted to olives[15] and about 24 million kilograms of a protected designation of origin olive oil are produced annually.[6]

Torre de la Victoria

Tourism is also a major part of Estepa's economy. Tourists can visit many monuments and historical places, such as Convento de Santa Clara, Convento de San Francisco, a ruined fortress (Antiguo Alcázar), the Torre de la Victoria church tower, the Balcón de Andalucia viewpoint, and many churches.[5]

Twin towns

Estepa is twinned with:

gollark: It's not trying to constantly react to the cursor position or something.
gollark: With clicks all you get is just events saying "someone clicked here", which works fine with multiple users.
gollark: With two players there are two "valid" cursor positions, which you have to distinguish between and process properly.
gollark: Not really.
gollark: It'll get mouse_move events from both, meaning that depending on how it's done you would end up with it working "correctly" but with multiple things selected, randomly flicker between them, or it might implode or something.

See also

Further reading

  • Antonio Aguilar y Cano (1886), Memorial Ostipense, Ediciones Anel, ISBN 84-400-8835-3
  • José María de Mena (1981), Heráldica municipal de la provincia de Sevilla, Caja de Ahorros San Fernando de Sevilla
  • Rosario Garza Cortés (1996), La Villa de Estepa al final del dominio santiaguista, Ayuntamiento de Estepa, ISBN 84-921268-0-9
  • P. Alejandro Del Barco García (1994), La antigua Ostippo y actual Estepa, Ayuntamiento de Estepa, ISBN 84-606-1786-6
  • Antonio Rivero Ruiz (1994), Semblanzas estepeñas, Ayuntamiento de Estepa, ISBN 84-606-1787-4
  • José Reina Reina, Juan Luis Machuca (2003), Fiestas y tradiciones populares en Estepa, Ayuntamiento de Estepa, ISBN 84-932236-4-6
  • Germán Rodríguez Aguilar, Ramón Ortiz Benjumea (2006), Guía turística de Estepa, Ayuntamiento de Estepa, ISBN 84-932236-7-0
  • Jesús María Reina Reina (2007), Crónicas de la comarca de Estepa en la Segunda República, IES Aguilar y Cano, ISBN 978-84-608-0584-7

References

  1. Municipal Register of Spain 2018. National Statistics Institute.
  2. Estepa, 29 July 2008, Sistema de Información Multiterritorial de Andalucía, Instituto de Estadística de Andalucía, accessed 18 August 2008
  3. Seville Province, Estepa, Andalucia.com, accessed 24 Feb 2014
  4. Historia de Estepa, Ayuntamiento de Estepa, accessed 4 July 2011
  5. Historia de Estepa, sevillainfo.com, accessed 4 July 2011
  6. Reyes Manuela González Relaño, Estepa, accessed 2 July 2011
  7. Breve reseña histórica de la comarca de Estepa Archived 2013-09-09 at the Wayback Machine, Mancomunidad de municipios de la comarca de Estepa, accessed 1 July 2011
  8. Leandro Álvarez Rey (2006), Andalucía y la guerra civil: estudios y perspectivas (p. 186), Universidad de Sevilla, ISBN 9788447210671, accessed=2 July 2011
  9. Huelga agraria en la Sierra Sur de Sevilla, El País, 28 December 1990, Madrid, accessed 30 June 2011
  10. La Junta admite la denominación de calidad de los mantecados de Estepa, El Mundo, Sevilla, 15 September 2009, accessed 3 July 2011
  11. Pliego de Condiciones de la Indicación Geográfica Protegida “Mantecados de Estepa”, Consejería de Agricultura y Pesca de la Junta de Andalucía, 30 July 2010, accessed 3 July 2011
  12. History and Tradition Archived 2014-01-03 at the Wayback Machine, Regulating Council of Mantecados de Estepa, accessed 24 Feb 2014
  13. Anastasia Téllez Infantes, Identidad socioprofesional e identidad de género. Un caso empírico, Gaceta de Antropología, Universidad Miguel Hernández (Elche), accessed 9 July 2011
  14. Alberto Mallado, Estepa ... will have a new Industrial Estate, ABC Sevilla, 29 June 2003, accessed 24 Feb 2014
  15. Sistema de Información Multiterritorial de Andalucía: datos de Estepa, 2009, Instituto de Estadística de Andalucía, accessed 10 July 2011
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.