Linares, Jaén Explained

Official Name:Linares
Settlement Type:Municipality
Nickname:La ciudad minera – The mining city
Motto:Nunc coepi haec mutatio dexterae excelsi
Pushpin Map:Spain#Spain Andalusia#Spain Province of Jaén
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Spain
Coordinates:38.0833°N -41°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Spain
Subdivision Type1:Autonomous community
Subdivision Name1:Andalusia
Subdivision Type2:Province
Subdivision Name2:Jaén
Government Type:Mayor–council
Governing Body:Ayuntamiento de Linares
Leader Party:C's
Leader Title:Mayor
Leader Name:Raúl José Caro - Accino Menéndez
Area Total Km2:197.5
Elevation Footnotes:(AMSL)
Elevation M:419
Population Total:57414
Population Density Km2:auto
Population Demonym:linarense
Timezone1:CET
Utc Offset1:+1
Timezone1 Dst:CEST
Utc Offset1 Dst:+2
Postal Code Type:Postal code
Postal Code:23700
Area Code:+34 (Spain) + (Jaén)
Website:www.ciudaddelinares.es

Linares (pronounced as /es/[1]) is a municipality of Spain belonging to the province of Jaén, Andalusia. It is considered the second-most important city in that province and had a population of 56,525 in the most recent census (2021). The altitude is 419m (1,375feet) and the total area of the municipality is 195.15km2.

Overview

Location

Located in the Central-Western part of the province, the city of Linares is the second-biggest city in the province after the capital, Jaén. It is also the commercial capital of Sierra Morena, as well as the referential city in the surrounding areas.

Geography

The city territory is orientated in a NE-SW direction, giving the transition in altitude decreasing between the higher northern area of Sierra Morena; being Paño Pico (552 m) the highest area of the municipal territory; and the lowest area, the Guadalimar Valley in the South-Western limit, with an altitude of (318 m).

Climate

The city has a Mediterranean Climate (Csa) clearly divided into four seasons, with hot and dry summers where the temperatures can reach frequently 40 °C, two transitioning seasons, spring and autumn, that concentrate most of the annual rainfall; and a moderate winter, with temperatures that can sometimes drop below 0 °C during night time, and occasional rainfall.

The annual medium temperature oscillates between 8 °C in January and the 27 °C in July. The daily variations can reach 20 °C.

The annual rainfall is about 500 mm, with frequent fluctuations along the years. Snow is rarely spotted in the city and storms, that are quite frequent especially around summer and early autumn, can cause hail and big amounts of rainfall in shorts periods.

History

Near to Linares is the ancient Iberian town of Castulo, which dates to antiquity and earned much of its revenue from the lead mines located there.

Hitherto a hamlet of the land of Baeza, Linares was granted township status in 1565.[2]

Around the middle of the 19th century Linares became an important mining center with lead mines nearby. The smelting of lead, the manufacture of lead sheets and pipes, and the production of by-product silver from the lead ores led to a significant population increase. The 6,000 inhabitants in 1849 became 36,000 in 1877. This commercial and industrial growth brought the concession of the title of city in 1875.

Transport

The city is well connected to the rest of Spain. The A-4 highway, NIV Madrid-Cádiz, is located 12km (07miles) to the west at Bailén. The A-32 highway, also traverses through the city.

There is a railroad station at Linares-Baeza, with lines connecting Madrid and Cádiz, and Madrid-Granada-Almería. The railroad has also a cargo deck.

Economy

The lead mines of Linares were in almost uninterrupted activity from pre-Roman times until the 1990s.[3] There were also lead smelters and gunpowder, dynamite and rope factories as auxiliary to the mining industry. Currently, the mines of Linares are protected as cultural heritage.

Santana Motor, the former producer of all-terrain vehicles for the Spanish Army, was shut down in 2011 due to the economic recession. There is also a factory producing trains (Construcciones y Auxiliar de Ferrocarriles), a factory that produces components for wind turbines (Grupo Daniel Alonso y Gamesa), and a beet sugar plant (Azucareras Reunidas de Jaen S.A.), that produces biodiesel from colza oil, palm oil, soybeans, and sunflower oil.

Sport

Historically the town was always represented by a professional football team, however as the teams folded new ones came to replace them, producing a long timeliness of continuous clubs since 1909: SG Linarense (1909–20), Linares FC (1920–29), Gimnástica Linarense (1929–31), Linares Deportivo (1940–46), Atlético Linares (1946–48), CD Linares (1952–64), Linares CF (1961–90), CD Linares (1990–2009) and Linares Deportivo (2009–present).

Linares was also the place where the annual Linares chess tournament was held.

Education

The city has also a recent university campus known as the Scientific-Technological Campus, opened in 2015, that offers a wide range of engineering studies, belonging to the University of Jaén since 1 July 1993.

Personalities

The bull ring in Linares is famous for the death in 1947 of bullfighter Manolete (Manuel Rodríguez Sánchez). On 28 August every year, people place flowers on his statue in Linares. Manolete's death is remembered in the ring by putting a bunch of roses in the place where he fell.

Linares is the birthplace of classical guitarist Andrés Segovia, singer Raphael and the hometown of jazz vocalist Virginia Maestro and Blessed Manuel Lozano Garrido, who was beatified on Saturday 12 June 2010 in Linares. Also, it is the hometown of the writer Fanny Rubio[4]

International relations

See also: List of twin towns and sister cities in Spain.

Twin towns – Sister cities

Linares is twinned with:

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Las marcas que identifican el habla de la tierra del ronquío. Diario Jaén. 2012-10-28. es.
  2. Book: Castillo Armenteros, Juan Carlos. Ponencia marco: Los años enigmáticos: la aldea de Linares, desde sus orígenes hasta la independencia de Baeza (1565). https://dialnet.unirioja.es/descarga/articulo/4067289.pdf. María Victoria. Gutiérrez Calderón. 2012. Actas I Congreso de Historia de Linares. Diputación Provincial de Jaén ; Centro de Estudios Linarenses. 978-84-695-4129-6.
  3. Book: Miguel Calvo Rebollar . Minerales y Minas de España, Vol.2 Sulfuros y sulfosales . 1928. Museo de Ciencias Naturales de Alava . Vitoria, Alava (Spain) . 293–301. 1st. hardcover.
  4. Web site: Descubre los pueblos con más encanto de Jaén . Vipealo . 13 January 2021.