Pinet, Valencia Explained

Pinet
Settlement Type:Municipality
Image Alt:View of the village of Pinet, Vall d'Albaida, Valencia, Spain, from the west
Pushpin Map:Spain
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Spain
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: Spain
Subdivision Type1:Autonomous community
Subdivision Type2:Province
Subdivision Name2:Valencia
Subdivision Type3:Comarca
Subdivision Name3:Vall d'Albaida
Subdivision Type4:Judicial district
Subdivision Name4:Ontinyent
Coordinates:38.9833°N -0.3381°W
Elevation M:180
Area Total Km2:11.9
Population Demonym:Pinetell, pinetella
Population Density Km2:auto
Blank Name Sec1:Official language(s)
Blank Info Sec1:Valencian and Spanish
Timezone:CET
Utc Offset:+1
Timezone Dst:CEST
Utc Offset Dst:+2
Postal Code Type:Postal code
Postal Code:46838
Area Code Type:Dialing code
Leader Title:Alcalde
Leader Name:Juan Ramón Chismol Mahiques

Pinet is a municipality located in the north-east of the comarca of Vall d'Albaida in the south of the province of Valencia, Valencian Community, Spain, and some 82.6 km from the regional capital, Valencia.[1]

Pinet borders with the following municipalities: Barx, Quatretonda, Gandia and Llutxent, all of which lie within the province of Valencia.

Etymology

The name of the municipality is derived from the Valencian term pi, meaning “pine tree”.[2]

History and demography

Historically, the village belonged to the barony of Llutxent, under the authority of the Maza family, and subsequently the houses of Mandas and Dos Aguas.

In 1530, Pope Clement VII created the Vicariate of Pinet, which was run under the authority of the Dominicans of Llutxent until 1835.

By 1646, only 20 inhabitants were recorded as living in the municipality following the expulsion of the Moriscos, which was implemented was particular intensity in Valencia.[3]

Towards the end of the 18th century, the population had risen to around 150 inhabitants, before reaching some 300 hundred at the beginning of the 20th century.

By 1920, the population had reached 434 inhabitants, from which point it entered a progressive decline in consonance with the rural flight experienced in many areas throughout Spain during the 20th century.[4]

Recent demographic trend
1990199219941996199820002002200420052007
268249252235228212207192185190

Economy

The local economy was traditionally based on a combination of dryland (grape, prune, olive, almond and carob, among others) and irrigation (apple and other fruit) agriculture, dry stone walling and the production of baskets, rugs, espadrilles, hats and other articles made from esparto and palm leaves.

In common with other rural areas throughout Spain, these activities have been in decline since the mid-20th century, their place having been taken by livestock farming (poultry and pig farming), services, construction and tourism.

Geography and topography

Pinet is located in the north-east of the Valle de Albaida comarca and covers an area of 11.9 km2.

It is situated at the head of a horse-shoe shaped valley, the surface of which is composed of reddish marl deposited by water erosion originating in the mountains that lie at its north-easterly and northern extremes.

The municipality’s altitude ranges from 466 metres above sea level in its most southerly point, to 700 metres above sea level in the area known as Alto del Collado dels Caragols, located in its north east. The village of Pinet lies at an altitude of 348 metres. Pinet is located on the poorly-defined Pinet Syncline, which runs from North-North West to South-South East. This structure would appear to have been formed by two large, vertical faults.[4]

River Pinet

The River Pinet runs through the municipality from north to south, running eventually into the River Vernisa, which is in turn an affluent of the River Serpis.

As is characteristic with the rivers and streams in the region, the River Pinet is a wash, that is, a stream bed that is dry during the summer months and which carries abundant water following the typical heavy rains known as cold drop which fall in autumn and spring.[5]

Climate

The municipality enjoys a typically Mediterranean climate, characterised by hot summers and relatively cold winters, with an average of two snowfalls per year. The climate is rated Csa in accordance with the Köppen climate classification system.

The average annual temperature is around 17 °C, with maximums in summer of 45 °C and minimum in winter of -7 °C.[4] Rainfall averages around 600 mm per year, although recent years have seen volumes of more than 1000 mm, mainly due to the large downpours to which the area is subject during the autumn as a result of the weather phenomenon known as cold drop.

Flora and fauna

The predominant vegetation in the lower valley is that associated with dryland fruit farming (almonds, olives, apricots, etc.), whilst the surrounding mountains host pine and cork forests and shrubland, interspersed with holly oak and wild herbs and plants such as silene diclinis, laurel, snapdragon, honeysuckle, rosemary, thyme, oregano, etc.

The forested areas are home to such animal species as Bonelli's eagle, golden eagle, short-toed snake eagle, common bent-wing bat, finch and greenfinch, whilst the fruit trees are host to such species as titmice, sparrow, blackbird, golden oriole, wren, nightingale, Cetti's warbler and wagtail, among others.

There are also wild boar and rabbit present in the area.

El Surar

El Surar (in Spanish, El Paraje Natural Municipal de El Surar[2]), the southernmost cork oak forest in Valencia, is a Municipal Natural Park located in the municipalities of Pinet and Llutxent.

Declared a Municipal Natural Park by Generalitat Valenciana on March 4, 2005, it can be accessed on foot, by bicycle, on horseback or by car via signposted roads and tracks from the village of Pinet.

Route of the Monasteries of Valencia

Pinet lies on the Route of the Monasteries of Valencia (GR-236), a religious and cultural route that connects five monasteries located in central region of the Province of Valencia, (Valencian Community).

Of the Route’s four different itineraries, three (by foot, on horseback and by MTB) cross through Pinet, with a separate variant also passing through El Surar.

Monuments and festivities

Parish church of St. Peter the Apostle

The 18th-century parish church of St. Peter the Apostle has a single nave with chapels set between masonry buttresses.

Patron Saint festivities

Pinet celebrates its main festivities during the last weekend of June in honour St. Peter and the Christ of the Mountain.

Pinet “Llata” Festival

A fair held in late summer in celebration of Pinet’s traditional craft of manufacturing products from esparto and palm leaves. Includes practical demonstrations, workshops and a culinary fair with local gastronomic dishes.

Transport

The only road within the municipality is the CV-608, which connects the village of Pinet with the village of Llutxent, which lies on the CV-610 regional road, joining the towns of Gandia and Xàtiva.

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://consultas.cma.gva.es/areas/medio_natural/evaluacion_ambiental/eae/planeamiento/2013.049.1.01/Doc.%20Consultiu%20PDF%C2%B4S/DOCUMENTO%20CONSULTIVO%20PG%20PINET.pdf "Revisión del Plan General de Pinet"
  2. http://www.gencat.cat/llengua/BTPL/ICOS2011/290.pdf "Origen historicolingüístic i contingut semàntic de la toponímia municipal valenciana a través d'un SIG - Joan Carles Membrado Tena"
  3. Web site: O’Halley . Meaghan . 2013 . Placing Islam: Alternative Visions of the Morisco Expulsion and Spanish Muslim Christian Relations in the Sixteenth Century . Graduate School of Duke University.
  4. http://consultas.cma.gva.es/areas/medio_natural/evaluacion_ambiental/eae/planeamiento/2013.049.1.01/Doc.%20Consultiu%20PDF%C2%B4S/DOCUMENTO%20CONSULTIVO%20PG%20PINET.pdf "Revisión del Plan General de Pinet"
  5. http://www.sarc.es/sites/default/files/aielo_castellano.pdf "SARC de la Diputación de Valencia"