GIBRALTAR

jĭbrôlˈtər, British crown colony (1995 est. pop. 32,000), 2.5 sq mi (6.5 sq km), on a narrow, rocky peninsula extending into the Mediterranean Sea from SW Spain. Most of the peninsula is occupied by the Rock of Gibraltar (Lat. Calpe), one of the Pillars of Hercules, which guards the northeastern end of the Strait of Gibraltar, linking the Mediterranean with the Atlantic. The town of Gibraltar lies at the northwest end of the Rock of Gibraltar. The peninsula is connected with the mainland by a low sandy area of neutral ground. West of the peninsula is the Bay of Gibraltar, an inlet of the strait. There is a safe enclosed harbor of 440 acres (178 hectares). The rock, of Jurassic limestone, contains caves in which valuable archaeological finds have been made. It is honeycombed by defense works and arsenals, which are largely concealed. A tunnel bisects the rock from east to west.

The town is a free port, with some transit trade; financial services and duty-free shopping are economically important. The climate is mild and pleasant, and tourism has become an important industry. During the many years that Gibraltar was a British fortress, most of the area was taken up by military installations, and the civilian population was kept small. Many of the laborers lived in the Spanish border town of La Línea. The population is mostly of English, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, or Maltese descent. Nearly three quarters of the population is Roman Catholic, and there are Protestant, Muslim, and Jewish minorities. English is the official language.

History

The name Gibraltar derives from the Arabic Jabal-al-Tarik [mount of Tarik], dating from the capture (711) of the peninsula by the Moorish leader Tarik. The Spanish Held the peninsula (1309–33) but did not definitively recover it from the Moors until 1462. The English have maintained possession since 1704 despite continual Spanish claims. The British post was besieged unsuccessfully by the Spanish and French (1704), by the Spanish (1726), and again by the Spanish and French (1779–83).

In World War I, Gibraltar served as a naval station. Many refugees fled there in the Spanish civil war (1936–39). In World War II its fortifications were strengthened, and most of the civilian population was evacuated. It was frequently bombed in 1940–41, but not seriously damaged.

After the war Spain renewed claims to Gibraltar, which, as a British strategic air and naval base, continued to be a major source of friction between Britain and Spain. The residents affirmed (1967) their ties with Britain in a UN-supervised referendum, and in 1981 all residents were granted full British citizenship. From 1969 to 1985, Spain closed its border with Gibraltar, although pedestrian traffic was again permitted across beginning in 1982.

In 1991, Britain removed its military forces from Gibraltar, while retaining it as a dependency. Tensions between Spain and Gibraltar continued through the 1990s, however, as Spain accused Gibraltar of being a hotbed of drug trafficking, tobacco smuggling, money laundering, and tax evasion. A 1997 Spanish proposal for joint British-Spanish sovereignty was rejected by the Gibraltarian government, and a referendum in 2002 on shared British-Spanish sovereignty almost unanimously approved of that rejection.

Bibliography

See studies by H. S. Levie (1983) and G. J. Shields (1987).

____________________

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: Gibraltar  - 5898 results

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Vicksburg: Fall of the Confederate Gibraltar Vicksburg: Fall of the Confederate Gibraltar Terrence J. Winschel MCWHINEY FOUNDATION...Terrence J. Vicksburg: fall of the Confederate Gibraltar/ Terrence J. Winschel p. cm. -- Civil...
...227 XXXI. GIBRALTAR AND MALLAGA 251 XXXII. GIBRALTAR AND TOULON 277...A NEW AND EXACT MAP OF GIBRALTAR To face p. 256...
...British Honduras, Hong Kong, Fiji, Cyprus, Gibraltar, and the Falklands Select Documents...149 Ten-point Agreement, 1979 507 F GIBRALTAR 509-634 150 O.E.S. Lloyd: Note on the Gibraltar City Council, 1948 509 151 Mary Fisher...
...1.Admiral Rodney; 2. The Relief of Gibraltar; 33. Loss of the Initiative; 4. Rodney in...Atlantic 388 1.Gibraltar and the Cape; 2. The Cost of Gibraltar; 3. The Defence of Trade; 4.Return of the...
...39 VII. GIBRALTAR--A "GOB" ON A SHINGLE 48...islands, and the voyage continued, and Gibraltar reached in three or four days. A day...galleries being readily obtained. From Gibraltar, running along the coasts of Spain and...
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journal articles on: Gibraltar  - 294 results

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Gibraltar on the rocks: the American stake in a sovereignty dispute...Foreign Secretary Jack Straw on a May 3, 2002 visit to Gibraltar. In view of Britains role as administering power and...of the last remnants of the far-flung British Empire, Gibraltar and its fate nonetheless possess considerable significance...
A Rocky Road: The Political Fate of Gibraltar. by Norman Ho Gibraltar, commonly nicknamed "The Rock," is an unusual...caught in a 21st century geopolitical context. Gibraltar is one of the worlds most contested territories...
The Fugitives Gibraltar: Escaping Slaves and Abolitionism in New Bedford, Massachusetts...following passage of the 1850 Fugitive Slave Act. In The Fugitives Gibraltar Kathryn Grover asks why the city had this fugitive-friendly spirit...
Gibraltar Killings: British Media Ethics By Myrna Reid Grant...the Rock," on the killing of three IRA operatives in Gibraltar, provides a case study for the examination of the British...killed three Irish Republican Army (IRA) members in Gibraltar. On April 28, Thames Television aired a current affairs...
...European Parliament (EU) voting rights. Gibraltar and French Polynesia are two dependencies...the existing situation is contested. Gibraltars British citizens live on EU territory...part of this paper, the Crown colony of Gibraltar, ceded to Great Britain in 1713, and...
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magazine articles on: Gibraltar  - 404 results

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Gibraltar: Shaking Up the Rock: A Crippled Sub Is Reviving Talk about Gibraltars Colonial Status. by Tyler Maroney On the...a British nuclear submarine, limped into the port of Gibraltar, powered by its emergency diesel generators. Having...
Gibraltar: apple of discord: as Gibraltar conducts a referendum on its future, Martin Murphy shows the...ending the long-standing dispute with Spain over the status of Gibraltar. One of the ideas mooted was to cede sovereignty to Spain in...
300 Years of Brits on the Rock: As Gibraltar Celebrates 300 Years of British Sovereignty...When William Makepeace Thackeray visited Gibraltar in the 1840s, be was struck by the disparity...Main Street, the principal artery of Gibraltar town, be commented, "It is a curious...
...On: The Strange and Telling Struggle over Gibraltar. by DAVID PRYCE-JONES Gibraltar is one of the last outposts of the British...allowed self- determination, the people of Gibraltar would choose virtually unanimously to stay...
1704: Blenheim, Gibraltar and the Making of Great Power: Jeremy...1704, British naval forces captured Gibraltar and held out against Franco-Spanish...a few weeks earlier the seizure of Gibraltar had brought together Britains role...
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newspaper articles on: Gibraltar  - 2262 results

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Could Rock Be Music to Your Ears?; Destination Gibraltar. GIBRALTAR - more than just a rock? We think so. Its a little...evade the French and Spanish attempt to recapture Gibraltar. There are miles of tunnels underground, many added...
Gibraltar Days. GB Airways will begin a daily service between Heathrow and Gibraltar from 25 March, using a Boeing 737 and the companys new...A320. Outbound flights will leave at 7.20am, arriving in Gibraltar at 11.15am, with returns at 8pm, arriving at Heathrow...
Gibraltar Rocks. Byline: JANE SLADE There is a destination...scoop up Dont be put off by the first sign you see at Gibraltar airport, announcing that Rotary International meets at...into schools and hospitals. Even so, that doesnt mean Gibraltar is dumbing down its military past. Far from it. In fact...
Travel: Underneath Gibraltar; It Is 300 Years Old and Is Claimed...Simon Hadley As solid as the rock of Gibraltar. Or so goes the old saying. However...proud of being part of Great Britain, Gibraltar has its own unique personality neither...
Annes Visit to Gibraltar Is an Insult to Us, Say the Spanish...diplomatic storm today as she arrives in Gibraltar for celebrations to mark the 300th...formal complaint about the trip. Gibraltars chief minister responded by telling...
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encyclopedia articles on: Gibraltar  - 53 results

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GIBRALTAR jibrol t r, British overseas territory (2005 est...Spain. Most of the peninsula is occupied by the Rock of Gibraltar (Lat. Calpe ), one of the Pillars of Hercules , which guards the northeastern end of the Strait of Gibraltar, linking the Mediterranean with the Atlantic. The town...
GIBRALTAR, STRAIT OF , Lat. Fretum Herculeum or Fretum Gaditanum, passage, c.36 mi (58 km) long, connecting the Atlantic...northwesternmost Africa. Its western limits are Cape Trafalgar (Spain) and Cape Spartel (Morocco); its eastern limits Gibraltar and Point Almina (just E of Ceuta, NW Africa). The straits width ranges from 8 mi (12.9 km) off Point Marroqui to 27...
ELIOTT, GEORGE AUGUSTUS, 1ST BARON HEATHFIELD OF GIBRALTAR 1717 90, British general. Appointed (1775) governor of Gibraltar, he was forced to defend it against a combined Spanish and French siege that lasted three and a half years (1779 83...
...Atlantic Ocean, southward to the Strait of Gibraltar, which separates it from Africa. ( Gibraltar itself is a British possession, although...from the French border to the Strait of Gibraltar, is washed by the Mediterranean. In the...
...prov., S Spain, on the Strait of Gibraltar. Situated on the Spanish border...city from the British colony of Gibraltar , La Linea is fortified and holds...strategic importance. La Linea supplies Gibraltar with fresh fruits and vegetables...
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