Pamplona (Basque: Irunea / Iruñea / Iruña) is the capital city of Navarre, Spain. It has a population of 171,150, and is 92 kilometres from the town of San Sebastián, and 407 kilometres from Madrid. From the 9th century up to the 12th century, Navarrese country was known as the Kingdom of Pamplona.
Pamplona is famous for the San Fermín festival, on July 7, also known as The running of the bulls or 'encierro'. Ernest Hemingway made this feature of Pamplona famous in his writings and was duly honored by having a street in the city named after him, Avenida de Hemingway.
The area South of Pamplona is hot, dry, arid and very similar to the landscape found in parts of Southern California and Northern Mexico. Northwards, however, it is cold and dry and very similar to the landscape of New Zealand's forest. The city itself is very green: together with the old section of the city, which hosts the San Fermín festival, with its cobbled streets, it is a pleasant tourist destination.
Located at an altitude of 444 m above sea level on a hill overlooking the Arga River and overlooking the surrounding valley, Pamplona has been populated for more than 2000 years. In the winter of 74-75 B.C., the area served as a camp for the Roman general Pompey. He is considered to be the founder of "Pompaelo" (Pamplona).
By the 2nd century, Pamplona was a significant Roman town with a forum and hot baths. By 409, however, Pamplona was controlled by the Visigoths - it served as an episcopal see from the end of the seventh century - and from the eighth century, it was run by the Moors. After his expedition to Zaragoza in 778, Charlemagne tore down the defensive walls surrounding Pamplona.
In 781 Abd ar-Rahman I reconquered the city. Destroyed by Abd ar-Rahman III in 924, Pamplona was reduced to a small country village also called Iruña and later Navarreria.
By the 10th century, Pamplona benefitted from pilgrimages to Santiago de Compostela, and gave rise to new city areas beside the original Navarreria site: the "Burgo de San Cernin", supported by the Kingdom of Navarre and mainly inhabited by Franks and merchants, and the village of "San Nicolás". These three independent towns, being placed so close together, were almost always engaged in quarrels among themselves, until the King of Navarre Charles III the Noble united all of them into the single city of today by the "Privilegio de la Unión" signed in 1423.
In 1515 the area of Navarra associated itself with the Castiles and became an autonomous kingdom with its own institutions and laws. By the 17th century, Pamplona became a fortress on the edge of the Pyrenees. During the 18th century, several beautiful palaces were built in the capital of Navarra such as the Casa Consistorial or Town Hall in 1752. The neoclassic facade of the Cathedral was undertaken in 1783.
The city did not escape the regional wars of the 19th century. French troops occupied the city after a surprise attack when they had pretended to be citizens playing nearby with snow balls, and remained in Pamplona until 1813. During the Carlist Wars (1833, 1872) Pamplona supported the Isabelian monarchy, as opposed to rural Navarra which fought in favor of the pretender to the throne, Don Carlos.
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