Catalonia is internally divided into eight regional divisions, known in Catalan as (singular vegueria, in Catalan; Valencian pronounced as /bəɣəˈɾi.ə/), following the regional plan of Catalonia. Each vegueria is further divided into comarques and municipalities, with the exception of the Aran Valley, considered a "unique territorial entity".[1]
The vegueries system is based on the feudal administrative territorial jurisdiction of the Principality of Catalonia, which was abolished with the Nueva Planta decrees of 1716.[2] The current division was established by the Statute of Autonomy of Catalonia of 2006 with two functions: an inter-municipal government and the arrangement of the services from the Generalitat de Catalunya.[3]
However, although the vegueries are intended to become Catalonia's first-level administrative division and a full replacement for the four diputacions of the official Catalan provinces within the Spanish system in the future and create a council for each vegueria,[4] the latter is currently still used administratively at state level,[5] [6] as changes to the statewide provinces system are unconstitutional.[7]
Vegueria | English name | Capital[8] | Population(1 Jan 2022)[9] | Date approved[10] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alt Pirineu | Upper Pyrenees | La Seu d'Urgell | 63,892 | July 2006 | |
Barcelona | Barcelona | Barcelona | 4,916,847 | April 2010 | |
Camp de Tarragona | Camp of Tarragona | Tarragona | 536,453 | January 2010 | |
Catalunya Central | Central Catalonia | Manresa | 413,349 | September 2008 | |
Girona | Girona | Girona | 761,690 | October 2010 | |
Ponent | Ponent | Lleida | 365,289 | July 2007 | |
Penedès | Penedès | Vilanova i la Geltrú | 497,764 | February 2017[11] | |
Terres de l'Ebre | Ebre Lands | Tortosa | 182,231 | August 2010 | |
Val d'Aran | Aran Valley | Vielha e Mijaran | 10,194 | July 2006 |
The origins of the vegueria go back to the era of the Carolingian Empire, when vicars (Latin: vicarii, singular vicarius) were installed beneath the counts in the Marca Hispanica. The office of a vicar was a vicariate (Latin: vicariatus) and his territory was a vicaria. All these Latin terms of Carolingian administration evolved in the Catalan language even as they disappeared in the rest of Europe. The Catalan terms were even subsequently Latinised: vicarius → vigerius.
The original functions of the vigeriate were feudal and it was probably initially hereditary. The veguer was appointed by his feudal lord, the count, and was accountable to him. He was the military commander of his vegueria (and thus keeper of the publicly owned castles), the chief justice of the same district, and the man in charge of the public finances (the fisc) of the region entrusted to him. As time wore on, the functions of the veguer became more and more judicial in nature. He held a cort del veguer or de la vegueria with its own seal. The cort had authority in all matter save those relating to the feudal aristocracy. It commonly heard pleas of the crown, civil, and criminal cases. The veguer did, however, retain some military functions as well: he was the commander of the militia and the superintendent of royal castles. His job was law and order and the maintenance of the king's peace: in many respects an office analogous to that of the sheriff in England.
At the end of the twelfth century in Catalonia, there were twelve vegueries. By the end of the reign of Peter the Great (1285) there were seventeen, and by the time of James the Just there were twenty one. Some of the larger vegueries included one or more sotsvegueries (subvigueries), which had a large degree of autonomy.
While the Principality of Catalonia continued to use vegueries as subdivisions of counties, elsewhere in the Iberian peninsula there were the merináticos (Kingdom of Aragon) and the corregimientos (Kingdom of Castile) whose functions were similar to those of the Catalan vegueries.
When the Kingdom of Sicily became a Catalan-run state, it was not subdivided into vegueries, since a similar Italian institution was already entrenched there: that of the capitania and the capità. The capità had similar to identical functions as the veguer. When the Catalans conquered the Duchy of Athens, they subdivided that duchy into three vegueries: Athens, Thebes, and Livadia.[12] In the Duchy of Neopatras which the Catalans conquered in 1319, the institution of the capità appeared instead of the vigeriate, but the captaincies (Siderokastron, Neopatras, and Salona) were similar to identical in function to the vegueries of Athens. In Athens, the offices of captain and veguer were often held by the same individual as capitaneus seu vigerius and variants. Once the Aragonese crown had finally subdued most of the Kingdom of Sardinia to their rule by the end of the fourteenth century, they had subdivided its government into vegueries. All the vegueries of the Catalan possessions were, by the Usages of Barcelona, constrained to be held for only three years by any individual, though in practice some kings ignored this. In Athens, a vicar general on the Italian model was instituted above the veguers.
Catalan vegueries have changed their limits along the history and there has not always been the same number of them. The vegueries of Catalonia at the time of James the Just were:[13] [14] [15]
Later, during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, four more vegueries were created:
Vegueries were officially abolished in 1716, when the vegueries were replaced by 12 corregimientos, a historical Castilian administrative division. In 1833, the new Spanish territorial division divided Spain into provinces, subdividing Catalonia in four (Barcelona, Lleida, Tarragona and Girona), which did not adequate to the comarques, but outside of minor differences remains in use today.[20]
During the Second Spanish Republic, after Catalonia obtained an autonomous government, it was divided into nine regions, which, in turn, were subdivided into comarques. The organisation was as follows:
In 1937, a government decree reinstated the name of, but they were abolished by the Francoist regime at the end of the Spanish Civil War.
Following Franco's death and Spain's return to a democratic system, the Catalan comarques were reinstated by the Catalan government in 1987, although the vegueries have yet to be formally recognised by the State.
Under the 2006 Statute of Autonomy, the four Catalan diputacions, which follow the Spanish province system, were to be superseded by seven consells de vegueries, additionally taking over many of the comarques
The law does not define any vegueria capitals and allows for creating or deleting any.[23] After some opposition from some territories, it was made possible for the Aran Valley to retain its government (included in the Regional Plan as Alt Pirineu i Aran, vegueria named Alt Pirineu)[24] and on August 3, 2016, Parliament approved the legislative initiative that advocated the creation of the eighth vegueria, Penedès.