BASQUES

băsks, people of N Spain and SW France. There are about 2 million Basques in the three Basque provs. and Navarre, Spain; some 250,000 in Labourd, Soule, and Lower Navarre, France; and communities of various sizes in Central and South America and other parts of the world. Many preserve their ancient language, which is unrelated to any other tongue. They have guarded their ancient customs and traditions, although they have played a prominent role in the history of Spain and France.

The origin of the Basques, almost certainly the oldest surviving ethnic group in Europe, has not yet been determined, but they antedate the ancient Iberian tribes of Spain, with which they have been erroneously identified. Genetically and culturally, the Basque population has been relatively isolated and distinct, perhaps since Paleolithic times. Primarily free peasants, shepherds, fishermen, navigators, miners, and metalworkers, the Basques have also produced such figures as St. Ignatius of Loyola, St. Francis Xavier, and Francisco de Vitoria.

History

Before Roman times, the Basque tribes, little organized politically, extended farther to the north and south than at present. But the core of the Basque country resisted Romanization and was only nominally subject to Roman rule. Christianity was slow in penetrating (3d–5th cent.). Once converted, the Basques remained fervent Roman Catholics, but they have retained a certain tradition of independence from the hierarchies of Spain and France.

The Basques withstood domination by the Visigoths and Franks. Late in the 6th cent. they took advantage of the anarchy prevailing in the Frankish kingdom and expanded northward, occupying present-day Gascony (Lat. Vasconia), to which they gave their name. The duchy of Vasconia, formed in 601 and chronically at war with the Franks, Visigoths, and Moors, was closely associated with, and at times dominated by, Aquitaine. In 778 the Basques, who had just been reduced to nominal vassalage by Charlemagne, destroyed the Frankish rear guard at Roncesvalles, but they subsequently recognized Louis the Pious, king of Aquitaine, as their suzerain.

The duchy of Gascony continued, but the Basques early in the 9th cent. concentrated in their present habitat and in 824 founded, at Pamplona, the kingdom of Navarre, which under Sancho III (1000–1035) united almost all the Basques. Although Castile acquired Guipúzcoa (1200), Álava (1332), and Vizcaya (1370), the Castilian kings recognized the wide democratic rights enjoyed by the Basques. Guernica was the traditional location of Basque assemblies.

With the conquest (1512) of Navarre by Ferdinand the Catholic, the Basques lost their last independent stronghold. After the 16th cent., Basque prosperity declined and emigration became common, especially in the 19th cent. Basque privileges remained in force under the Spanish monarchy, but in 1873 they were abolished because of the Basques' pro-Carlist stand in the Carlist Wars. To regain autonomy, the Basques supported nearly every political movement directed against the central authority.

In the civil war of 1936–39, the Basque provs., not including Navarre, defended the republican government, under which they had autonomous status; the Basques of Navarre supported the Franco forces. The Franco government, once in power, for the most part discouraged Basque political and cultural autonomy, but Basque nationalism retained its appeal to the Basques, and they continued to wage their fight for self-determination.

Following Spain's return to democracy, limited autonomy was granted to the region, and in 1980 the first Basque parliament was elected. Nonetheless, terrorist activities by the Basque separatist organization, Basque Homeland and Freedom (Euzkadi Ta Azkatasuna; ETA), which had begun in 1968, continued, ultimately killing about 800 people by the end of the 1990s, many of them police officers and soldiers. From 1983 to 1987 a secret government-sponsored death squad killed 27 and wounded about 30, most members of the ETA.

Basque nationalism, often involving unrest and violence by and against the ETA, has continued, but Basque terrorists and a separatist party lost some popular support in the 1990s. In 1996, Spanish and French officials agreed on joint measures to crack down on the terrorist group; a cease-fire (1998–99) by the ETA failed to lead to a peace accord. In 2001, Basque nationalist candidates won more than 50% of the vote in the regional parliamentary elections, but only about 10% supported the party aligned with the ETA. In 2002 that political party, then called Batasuna, was accused of collaborating with the ETA and suspended for three years; it was permanently banned the following year. There is also strong support among French Basques for political automony.

Bibliography

See R. Gallop, A Book of the Basques (1930, repr. 1970).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Basques  - 1707 results

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...history and society were of Basque descent. 73 To this day the Basques are one of Chiles most...fighting between the Basques on the one hand and both non-Basque Europeans and Creoles...other, in which sixteen Basques died. 75 In 1608, renewed...
...taking up traditional Basque dance." This seeming...the fact that the Basques in Spain, at last...waking up the sleepy Basques who have lived in...about the growth of Basque culture on the Spanish...people in the French Basque provinces represent less than 9 percent of Basques. But they have played...
...orchestrated from Madrid. The Basques could not escape from...Other parts of the Basque territories, however...corrupted democracy, Basques participated together...were fertile ground for Basque nationalism (Garmendia...was able to mobilize Basques against Spaniards and...
...whether the non-Basques even enter into the Basque frame of reference...significandy, the non-Basques are believed to...expects the non-Basque to remain in the...of a new non-Basque does not create...village. The non-Basques reverse the definition...
...constitute the non-Basque, population. The...relationship between the Basques and non-Basques...hostile. The non-Basques resent the Basque attitude of racial...demeaning whereas in the Basque value system it...way of life. Basques in the two villages...
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journal articles on: Basques  - 176 results

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...inexorably for the Basques as well. He is also conscious that Basque society has suffered...Francos dictatorship on Basque culture, or the attitude of Basques towards bohemes...literary interpreter of Basques. It was his Basque family trilogy the...
...cities, and restructuring Basque family life.14 Basques found themselves and...idealistic assertions that the Basques are one people, Basque society today is marked...the vast majority of Basques (87%) agree that Basque society has the right...
...person narrative. Basque emigration to Idaho is...in many cases, other Basques, struggle to earn enough...briefly as possible, one Basque in Idaho wrote home circa...Through harsh treatment of Basques, Franco solidified an...passage that a return to Basque country was not in the...
...S. State Department, "Basque Fatherland and Liberty (ETA...Askatasuna (ETA), "The Basques and their Fight for Freedom...The widow of an assassinated Basque police officer offered a similar...undermined the commitment by many Basques subsequent to the transition...
Oroitzapenak Memories: Basque Oral History Project. by Troy Reeves OROITZAPENAK MEMORIES: BASQUE ORAL HISTORY PROJECT. Produced by Basque Museum And Cultural Center, Boise, Idaho; http://www.basquemuseum.com/oralhistory/index...
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magazine articles on: Basques  - 142 results

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...to stamp out the Basque identity, as embodied...instance: We, the Basques, must avoid mortal...in Euskera, the Basques call their country...Euskalherria (land of the Basque language) and refer...is accepted as a Basque. But so fragmented...language that there are Basques who cant understand...
Basque Elections Loom; Can the Basques Live with Spain...Jackson Can the Basques Live With Spain...independence of the Basque country. The other...the past by the Basque Nationalists. The...On the same day Basques from several political...
...test the mood in the Basque country after Etas brutal...had been promised that Basques like Brits, remembering...printed with "Euskadi" (Basque homeland) were on sale...Ikeme Altube, that the Basque government had considerable...passports to state we are Basques, not Spaniards," she...
...LEGITIMACY, BUT MANY BASQUES STILL FEEL UNABLE TO...of the Pyrenees, the Basque Country ranges from the...the moderation of the Basque Nationalist Party (PNV...with repression. Many Basques went into exile, while...struggle. "Thousands of Basque nationalists were tortured...
Basques in Boise by Julie Fanselow...means "big festival" in the Basque language, and thats no misnomer...is the largest international Basque gathering outside the region...France, but you neednt be Basque to join the party. Basque...
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newspaper articles on: Basques  - 458 results

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...indicated 52 percent of Basques considered themselves Basque and Spanish. "But some...separate. "Many of the Basques have assimilated and dont even speak the Basque language anymore...relatively small number of Basques left fighting the ETA...
...owner of JT Bar, a Basque restaurant. "It...happen." About 200 Basques have made their home...Ely. Overall, the Basque population in the...about 58,000. Basques began as shepherds...come to JT Bar, a Basque restaurant, to chat...children. About 200 Basques have made their home...
...War of the 1930s (the Basques were on the losing side...spoken in secret by some Basque families, especially...in schools. Today, Basque children can speak it...discontent Oppression of the Basques by Spanish dictator Francisco Franco spawned the Basque separatist movement...
...Toshacks team take on a Basque XI in Bilbao. But...think again. The Basques dont get many chances...Uruguay (5-1). The Basques players come from...their colours. The Basque team to face Wales...us that 40,000 Basque fans screaming on...game means to the Basques, said Toshack...
...tensions within Spains Basque region over its...future of what Basques call "Euzkadi...as some radical Basques advocate. While the Basque language has a...ever before. The Basques are among the most...aunt was born of Basque parents in a remote...
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encyclopedia articles on: Basques  - 24 results

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...about 2 million Basques in the three Basque provs. and Navarre...rights enjoyed by the Basques. Guernica was the...traditional location of Basque assemblies. With...cultural autonomy, but Basque nationalism retained its appeal to the Basques, and they continued...
...largely inhabited by Basques: Spanish Navarre...is the largest Basque city and one of the...Guernica . Although Basque was recognized as...region in 1978, most Basques speak French or Spanish...up to 1936, see Basques . Shortly after the...provinces autonomy. The Basque nationalist leader...
BASQUE LANGUAGE tongue of uncertain relationship...language has eight dialects. Speakers of Basque are for the most part bilingual, and there are many Basques who do not speak the language. Basque is definitely not an Indo-European tongue...
...city of Pamplona ; the Basque Country , with the ports...the Catalans and the Basques. Castilian is the standard...to Portuguese), and Basque, unrelated to any other...for Asturias and the Basque Country. Cordoba became...the W Pyrenees, the Basques held out against both...
...is thought to have been pursued by the Basques from land as early as the 10th cent...cent., however, that the appearance of Basques in those waters is established by record...largely by the Dutch who, with the Basques, apparently developed methods of flensing...
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