CÁDIZ

käˈdēth, city (1990 pop. 156,903), capital of Cádiz prov., SW Spain, in Andalusia, on the Bay of Cádiz. Picturesquely situated on a promontory (joined to the Isla de León, just off the mainland), it is today chiefly a port exporting wines and other agricultural items and importing coal, iron, and foodstuffs. Shipbuilding and fishing are other industries. There is a Spanish naval base in Cádiz and a U.S. naval base at nearby Rota. The Phoenicians founded (c.1100 b.c.) on the site the port of Gadir, which became a market for tin and the silver of Tarshish. It was taken (c.500 b.c.) by the Carthaginians and passed late in the 3d cent. b.c. to the Romans, who called it Gades. It flourished until the fall of Rome, but suffered from the barbarian invasions and declined further under the Moors. After its reconquest (1262) by Alfonso X of Castile, its fortifications were rebuilt. The discovery of America revived its prosperity, as many ships from America unloaded their cargoes there. Columbus sailed from Cádiz on his second voyage (1495). In 1587, Sir Francis Drake burned a Spanish fleet in its harbor, and in 1596 the earl of Essex attacked and partly destroyed the city. But it continued to flourish and in 1718, after Seville's port had become partially blocked by a sandbar, Cádiz became the official center for New World trade. After Spain lost its American colonies, the city declined. During the siege by the French—which Cádiz resisted for two years (1810–12) until relieved by Wellington—the Cortes assembled in the city and issued the famous liberal constitution for Spain (Mar., 1812). Cádiz fell to the Nationalists almost immediately in the Spanish Civil War. In 1980 Phoenician sarcophagi were discovered at two different sites, supporting the theory that the city is of Phoenician origin. One of the oldest and best-preserved Roman theaters was discovered in Cádiz in 1980. The clean, white city has palm-lined promenades and parks. Its 13th-century cathedral, originally Gothic, was rebuilt in Renaissance style; the new cathedral was begun in 1722. Cádiz has several museums and an art gallery with works by Murillo, Alonso Cano, and Zurbarán. In the church of the former Capuchin convent hangs the Marriage of St. Catherine by Murillo, who was at work on this painting when he fell from a scaffold to his death.

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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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Questia Books and Articles on: CAdiz
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books on: CAdiz  - 3047 results

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...disappointed. Columbuss ship-chandler at Cadiz saved on the wine- casks, so that they...who made a fine showing at inspection in Cadiz, promptly sold their blooded barbs and...needed money to live in proper style at Cadiz, and figured out that a cheap plug was...
...government, called the Junta Superior de Cadiz, which asserted its authority over the...Regency depended for funds on taxes raised in Cadiz and on the money sent to the port by Spanish...America, it depended on the good will of the Cadiz junta. Lovett points out that, "in view...
CHAPTER II THE MEN OF CADIZ SPAIN MADE HER French Revolution, that...just seen, in the Peninsula when the Cadiz Cortes proclaimed the miraculous advent...Outside a few coastal cities, headed by Cadiz, Spain was entirely without a bourgeoisie...
...that they were not "owners" of the Amoco Cadiz pursuant to the Act. See In re Oil Spill by the Amoco Cadiz off the Coast of France on March 16, 1978...to $700,000, the value of the Amoco Cadiz after sinking. Amoco argues that the district...
...4. Santa Ana Sp 104 137 Recaptured, reached Cadiz, dis masted. P. de Asturias Sp 54 109 Lost main and mizzen in gale, reached Cadiz. Pluton F 60 132 Again reached Cadiz, sinking. * Heros F 12 24 Reached Cadiz, rigging...
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journal articles on: CAdiz  - 226 results

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Commerce and Cadiz in Spensers Prothalamion. by Judith Owens...uniformly, acclaimed as heroic--in the Cadiz expedition of 1596. We should also think...mercenary motives in such enterprises as Cadiz--through the associations of silver...
...themselves rebel. He shows that diplomacy between U.S. representatives and Spanish officials was carried out in Paris, Madrid, Cadiz- and in U.S. cities like Philadelphia. Although the United States never really left behind its cultural allegiance to England...
...his death, Charles Fairbanks (1968) published a fairly comprehensive study of Nueva Cadiz and cut crystal beads. He defined Nueva Cadiz Plain and Nueva Cadiz Twisted types and recognized a red variety for morphologically similar beads in the Northeast...
...after 1936 but re-emerged in nearby Cadiz in 1954 as a "festival of folklore" whose...ethnography (1997) of carnival in the city of Cadiz in which he reads not a diversification...Guadalete River where it opens onto the Bay of Cadiz. El Puertos past is linked to the sea...
...500 awaiting embarkation for Flanders at Cadiz either died or were dismissed because of...Atlantic fleet had its own hospital at Cadiz,91 with a capacity in the 1690s of about 300.92 By the end of the reign, the Cadiz hospital was the lynchpin of a network...
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magazine articles on: CAdiz  - 154 results

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Light in Cadiz by Bill Williams This school shows a quite different sensibility from most...relationship of the individual to society and humanity to the elements. Cadiz depends on the sea and is immensely old. Founded by the Phoenicians 3000...
...lawyers in the southern Spanish city of Cadiz proclaims the virtues of elegant restraint...of marvellous south light. The city of Cadiz is said to have been founded in the eleventh...peninsula on the south side of the Bay of Cadiz, and drenched in Atlantic luminance...
...Cadizs Skyline a Contemporary Lookout Post. by Rob Gregory Through the passage of time, the dense and narrow street patterns of Cadiz have caused the city to rise up to conquer a new realm on top of its buildings. By exploiting the benefits of the warm winter...
Dispatches from the Field by Antonieta Cadiz It is difficult to find an American over 50 who does not remember what he or she was doing the day John F. Kennedy or Martin Luther...
...financials for budding water privateer Cadiz, Inc., of which Brackpool is C.E...experience in the water business. Yet Cadiz is slated for a precedent-setting fifty...million developing. The Met would pay Cadiz to store surplus Colorado River water in...
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newspaper articles on: CAdiz  - 984 results

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...Overwhelmingly Spanish, Europes Oldest City of Cadiz Is Enticing Britons with Its Cafe Culture...but the magnificent white beaches of Cadiz on the Costa de la Luz are dominated by...Yorkshireman complained after he bought a house in Cadiz and promptly relocated to Marbella. However...
To Cadiz, Where Life Is Just One Long Lunch; A Tapas...TOMMY NICHOLS ILL declare my hand: I love Cadiz. It is beautiful - grand sandstone buildings...more than anything else, I think I love Cadiz because this tiny, crowded blob of land...
To Cadiz, Where Life Is Just One Long Lunch; A Tapas...TOMMY NICHOLS ILL declare my hand: I love Cadiz. It is beautiful - grand sandstone buildings...more than anything else, I think I love Cadiz because this tiny, crowded blob of land...
Supreme Court Upholds Cadiz as IBP President. Byline: REY G. PANALIGAN...Court declared yesterday Jose Anselmo Cadiz as holdover national president of the...Vera could not assume the presidency, Cadiz as outgoing president continued presiding...
DO THE BIZ IN CADIZ! Buyers Looking for Authentic Spain Will...Rowlinson THERES no sensible reason why Cadiz should be overshadowed by the glitzier...trading role during Spains colonial heyday, Cadiz is refreshingly free from f ish and chips...
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encyclopedia articles on: CAdiz  - 54 results

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CADIZ ka deth, city (1990 pop. 156,903), capital of Cadiz prov., SW Spain, in Andalusia, on the Bay of Cadiz. Picturesquely situated on a promontory (joined to the Isla de Leon, just off the mainland), it is today chiefly a port...
...port of Malaga , and the Atlantic port of Cadiz . The Sierra Nevada , rising from the Mediterranean...colonies in Andalusia, notably at Cadiz and Tartessus (possibly the biblical Tarshish...restrictions. Trade and commerce, especially in Cadiz and Barcelona, were stimulated. The Jesuits...
...comprising the provinces of Almeria, Cadiz, Cordoba, Granada, Huelva, Jaen, Malaga...coastal colonies, notably Gadir (now Cadiz and, supposedly, the inland town of Tartessus...declined, although the ports of Seville and Cadiz flourished as centers of trade with the...
PUERTO DE SANTA MARIA pwar to tha san ta mare a, town (1990 pop. 64,849), Cadiz prov., S Spain, in Andalusia, on the Bay of Cadiz at the mouth of the Guadalete River. It is a commercial center, exporting sherry wine...
GADIR Spain: see Cadiz . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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