Plces to see in ( Castile La Mancha - Spain ) Campo de Criptana
Plces to see in ( Castile La Mancha - Spain ) Campo de Criptana
Campo de Criptana is a municipality and town in the province of Ciudad Real in the autonomous community of Castilla-La Mancha. It is found in the region known as La Mancha.
The area surrounding Campo de Criptana has been inhabited since prehistoric times. Prehistoric implements of hunting, gathering, and agriculture have been found in various locations, as have ceramics, particularly from the Bronze Age. From historic times, the most plentiful remnants have been Ibero-Roman.
Settlement of the present city center of Campo de Criptana dates from the 13th century, though the municipal area was occupied by human beings much earlier. Numerous archaeological remains and historical documents attest to the existence of inhabited centers since the Bronze Age. There is evidence of settlements of some importance—at least since the Middle Ages—named Criptana, Villajos, Posadas Viejas and El Campo, as well as others of lesser significance, such as Villagordo, El Pico de la Solana, etc.
Criptana, located about two kilometers east of the present city center, was granted, under the name of Chitrana, by the Order of St. John in 1162 to the Toledo Mozarab nobleman Miguel Assaraff in order that it be resettled. Later it passed to the Order of Santiago, forming the center of an estate that also had property in Villajos and Pedro Muñoz. By the 14th century it was again depopulated.
Villajos, some four kilometers to the north of the current city center, had been peopled since prehistoric times. It appears in a citation from 1162, together with Chitrana, Spain, and Attires, as property of the Order of St. John. In various medieval documents it is mentioned under other names such as Villa de Alios and Villa de Ajos. It was depopulated from the 12th century, and the current hermitage was built over the original church of its city center.
Hardly any documented information exists about Posadas Viejas, except that it was situated near Camino de la Puente, south of the present railway line, and that it was depopulated around 1300.
El Campo grew up in the current location of the city center, around a fortified position of the Cerro (hill) de la Paz, which served as an outpost of the Castillo (Castle) de Criptana. Despite being at the time the newest center, arising with the repopulation in the 13th century, it attracted people from the surrounding centers, perhaps on account of the quality of its water and air. The towns referred to above disappeared, giving way to the new community. Named Campo de Criptana, it is first referred to in documents from the early 14th century.
Throughout the Middle Ages, the population of the town center grew, helped along by the facilities provided by the various maestres (masters) of the Order of Santiago. The survey records of Philip II (1575) report some 1,000 households (between four and five thousand inhabitants), which by the first decade of the 17th century had risen to 1,300–1,500 households. From this time its population shows the unfortunate state of a rural society affected very severely by climate, epidemics of disease, poor harvests, and excessive taxation. The recovery was very slow until well into the 19th century.
Until the beginning of the 19th century, the local economy was based on traditional Mediterranean agriculture—grains, olives, and grapes—with the addition of wool. In the early 19th century there began to be a certain amount of industrialization related to the primary economy, in particular the manufacture of flour, and most of all, wine-making. The railway arrived in the second half of the 19th century and had a significant effect on this process of industrialization. In the second half of the 20th century tourism became a catalyzing new element of the local economy.
Until 1999 the municipal area also included Arenales de San Gregorio, which was situated 13 kilometers southeast of the main core, and had 700 inhabitants. After that date San Gregorio constituted an independent municipality.
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Qué ver en Campo de Criptana, Ciudad Real - Tierra de Gigantes
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Ciudad Real Tourist Attractions: 13 Top Places to Visit
Planning to visit Ciudad Real? Check out our Ciudad Real Travel Guide video and see top most Tourist Attractions in Ciudad Real.
Top Places to visit in Ciudad Real:
Corral de Comedias de Almagro, Plaza Mayor de Almagro, Lagunas de Ruidera, Mulini a Vento, Sacro Convento y Castillo de Calatrava La Nueva, Tablas de Daimiel National Park, Plaza Espana – Valdepenas, El Palacio del Marques de Santa Cruz, Plaza Mayor - Ciudad Real, Castillo de Penarroya, Iglesia de San Agustin, Iglesia de Nuestra Senora de la Asuncion, Plaza Mayor - San Carlos del Valle
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SPAIN windmills of La Mancha (hd-video)
There are still many (rebuilt) windmills in this region, made famous by Don Quixote. We visited Consuegra, Mota del Cuervo and Campo de Criptana.
Reupload because of music rights claim.
Unterwegs in Spanien - Ávila
Die Stadt ist seit 1985 Weltkulturerbe der UNESCO. Wichtigstes Monument ist die 2500 Meter lange, komplett erhaltene romanische Stadtmauer (11. bis 14. Jahrhundert) mit ihren 88 Türmen und neun Stadttoren.
Places to see in ( Castile La Mancha - Spain ) Consuegra Windmills
Places to see in ( Castile La Mancha - Spain ) Consuegra Windmills
Consuegra is famous due to its windmills. They became famous in the 16th century, when Don Quixote was first published. The introduction of the windmills was made by Caballeros Sanjuanistas, who brought these machines that helped millers.
These machines used the wind to grind grain (the most common grain is wheat). The windmills were transmitted from fathers to sons. They usually consisted of two rooms or levels. Millers had to carry sacks of grains that could weigh 60 or 70 kilos to the top floor, they rotated the sails of the windmill as the top part of the windmill or dome was movable. They stopped being used at the beginning of the 1980s.
Some of the most important parts of the windmill are:
Tunnel or canal: through it the grain goes down.
Container: where the grain is stored
Piece of wood: for moving the sails
All of them had names to differentiate one from another:
Names in 1963:
La zorra
La tuerta
Mochilas
Vista alegre
Panza
Bolero
Santo domingo
Chispas
Rastrero
Por si pega
Bateria
Espartero
Blanco
Names today:
Sin nombre
Clavileño
Chispas
Espartero
Rucio
Cardeño
Caballero del verde gabán
Alcancia
Ruinas
Sancho
Mambrino
Bolero
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【Full HD】Madrid La capital de España R¡i¡ / Spain
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Spain Trip 2017 #1 Consuegra
The windmills of Don Quixote fame can still be found in the La Mancha region of Spain. This series of medieval windmills stands beside a 12th c. castle in the hills above the town of Consuegra. You can climb up the interior of one of the windmills to see the apparatus. The video ends with a series of still photos taken by my wife, Pam.
The Windmills of Consuegra, Spain
The Windmills of Consuegra, Spain
Consuegra is famous for its windmills. These are the same ones, though restored, that Don Quixote fought in Cervante's novel The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha when he mistook the sails for the arms of giants. Because of the windmills Consuegra is part of the 'Don Quixote trail' which takes travellers around the main sights mentioned in the book.
The first windmill appeared more in the 11th century, although in Castile-La Mancha it was not before the 16th century. Once these lands stood about 32 mills in the region now total 10 mills. Today, only three mills date back to the 16th century (Burleto, Infante and Sardinero). The rest were built in the 20th century. Typical manchegskie mill-This whitewashed building with one door and small square window. They were built of wood. Upstairs are the spider that spun by the wind and driven by a toothed gear. Gear mechanism in turn moved the circular stone, located on the second in the same stone. Between these two stones were wheat, which result milled. Thus, in particular, has the crosspieces Burleto mill diameter of six meters and with twelve windows, as it is believed that in this area the twelve winds blowing. The interior consists of three levels. Serve as the bottom two barns, and trills level is the threshing mechanism, which is still working.
The windmills are attractive round white windmills with black roofs and sails and sit in a line of 11 along the top of a hill. There were 13 originally and 11 of them remain. Each of the windmills has its own name. The windmills stopped being used for grinding grain in the 1980s though one is now used as an ice-cream shop - a welcome place to cool down from the high summer temperatures experienced in Castilla La Mancha. The tourist office is housed inside one of the windmills giving you a chance to step inside.
The windmills and the surrounding planes and views over Consuegra below are highly photogenic. The fields around Consuegra turn purple in the autumn as the saffron crocuses bloom and one of the windmills (the one called Sancho) is set in motion each year for the celebration's of the harvest of the saffron crop. The celebrations take place on the last weekend of October. Also on the ridge overlooking the town is a ruined castle of 10th century Moorish origin and from here you get great views over the surrounding plains and the windmills.
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Cerro Caldérico, Molinos de Viento de Consuegra, Toledo. Windmills of Consuegra, Spain. España 2014
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CERRO CALDÉRICO
Visitamos la localidad manchega de Consuegra, perteneciente a la comunidad autónoma de Toledo.
Sobre el Cerro Calderico, están situados 12 bellos molinos de viento, que recuerdan los tiempos y aventuras de Don Quijote de la Mancha.
Es uno de los grupos de molinos mejor conservados y más grandes de toda Castilla la Mancha.
A los molinos también les acompaña el imponente castillo de la Muela o de Consuegra, de origen musulmán.
Un Bello lugar, muy fotogénico para los amantes de la fotografía.
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We visited the town of Consuegra Mancha, part of the autonomous community of Toledo.
About the Cerro Calderico are located 12 beautiful windmills, reminiscent of times and adventures of Don Quixote.
It is one of the best preserved groups and largest in Castilla La Mancha mills.
A Mills also accompanies them the imposing castle or Consuegra Muela of Muslim origin.
A beautiful place, very photogenic for lovers of photography.
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