Alqueria
An alquería (Spanish: [alkeˈɾi.a]; Valencian: alqueria [aɫkeˈɾi.a], Portuguese: alcaria [aɫkɐˈɾi.ɐ]; from Arabic al-qarīa, "village, hamlet") in Al-Andalus made reference to small rural communities that were located near cities (medinas).[1] Since the 15th century it makes reference to a farmhouse, with an agricultural farm, typical of Levante and the southeastern Spanish, mainly in Granada and Valencia. In the case of the Valencian Community, Joan Fuster, in his book called El País Valenciano, makes an extensive reference to the Valencian alquerías.[2]
History
An alquería is a small rural community formed by a few houses. There live one or more families, who worked exploiting the surrounding lands, as well as carrying out livestock activities.[1] Around the 15th century it begins to acquire its current meaning.[3] In the Horta of Valencia, where traditionally they have always been more plentiful, it is the corresponding dwelling to an important agricultural exploitation, usually on irrigated lands, unlike the hut, typical of the smallholding, and the masia, of cereal and livestock character.[3] By the end of the Middle Ages this Andalusian farm fortress evolved into more modern forms, with a small palace-like look, inhabited by rural lords.[3]
Many of the alquerías in the modern sense have disappeared due to various factors. Some adopted different activities, such as mills or workshops, although many of them suffered from abandonment due to the lack of use or depopulation. Moreover, in the urban expansionary policy, the alquerías are goods which are coveted in terms of the economic value that the greenfield that they occupy has.[3] All this has implied much of the alquerías that still exist to be seriously threatened with ruin. Some, of private property, have been restored as a dwelling, usually as a second residence, but they are not the most numerous ones.[3] Due to the rise of the rural tourism, many of the rest ones have been adapted to the hotel tradebranch as accommodations or restaurants, other cultural centers or museums.
Typologies
Valencian alquerías
In the typical Valencian alquería, the floor is a rectangle, which is sometimes joined with another perpendicular one, thus forming a right-angle; some other are formed by two squares, one recorded on the other.[3] There are also farms with an irregular floor. Its elevation is almost always of a smooth façade. The door, which usually has an arch formed by an exact semicircle, can be non-arched. In the frontispiece or façade there are one or two rows of windows; the oldest ones used to have tribolados profiles which are divided by algimeces or mullions. On the ground floor there can be found what properly constitutes the housing, being especially noteworthy the studio or the double chamber.At the bottom of the ground floor we can find the home, with its large bell chimney.[3] When there are two floors, the first may have rooms, which originally would be dedicated to the lords. The ordinary thing is the following: the only floor constitutes the sware, designed to save the harvests, and formerly for rearing silkworms. The cover of the alquerías have always Moorish tiles.[3]
The alquerías of Granada
Some alquerías from Granada and other provinces of Eastern Andalusia have survived until nowadays. In the Alpujarras and the region of Guadix, they are currently being recovered for rural tourism, others were converted into farms or councils.
Others, however, were not that lucky and they disappeared as a result of the exodus to big cities.
Companies using this name
Since this name is so characteristic of the Valencian land, many companies have adopted it for their trade names.
See also
References
- 1 2 Ibiza i Osca, Vicent; Mut i Ruiz; J. Enric (1995). Estudi sobre l'església de Sant Vicent Màrtir de Guadassuar (in Catalan). Guadasuar: Ajuntament de Guadassuar.
- ↑ Joan Fuster El Paía Valenciano. Barcelona: Ediciones Destino, 1962, p. 74-75.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Alquería". Gran Enciclopedia Temática de la Comunidad Valenciana. Historia. Editorial Prensa Valenciana. 2009.
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