Soria (Spanish pronunciation:[ˈsoɾja]) is a municipality and aSpanish city, located on theDouro river in the east of the autonomous community ofCastile and León and capital of theprovince of Soria. Its population is 38,881 (INE, 2017), 43.7% of the provincial population. The municipality has a surface area of 271,77 km2,[2] with a density of 144.97 inhabitants/km2. Situated at about 1065 metres above sea level, Soria is the second highest provincial capital in Spain.
Although there are remains of settlements from the Iron Age and Celtiberian times, Soria itself enters history with its repopulation between 1109 and 1114, by the Aragonese kingAlfonso I the Battler. A strategic enclave due to the struggles for territory between the kingdoms of Castile, Navarre and Aragon, Soria became part of Castile definitively in 1134, during the reign ofAlfonso VII.Alfonso VIII was born in Soria, andAlfonso X had his court established when he received the offer to the throne of theHoly Roman Empire. In Soria, the deposed kingJames IV of Mallorca died, andJohn I of Castile married. Booming during the Late Middle Ages thanks to its border location and its control over the cattle industry, Soria went into a slow decline over the next few centuries. It was damaged greatly during thePeninsular War.
The city preserves an important architectural heritage (extensive medieval walls, Renaissance palaces and architecturally distinctive Romanesque churches) and is home to the Numantine Museum (with pieces from the nearby Celtiberian city ofNumantia). Soria'sfootball teamCD Numancia is named after this city. It is one of the smallest cities to ever have had a team in Spain's top divisionLa Liga.
Today, its population of 38,881 makes Soria the least populated provincial capital of Castile and León and the second least populated in Spain (afterTeruel). Particularly important in its economy is the agri-food industry, while an increasing number of tourists are attracted by its cultural heritage. Soria was mentioned byUNESCO as a good example when including the Mediterranean diet in its Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.[3]
It is claimed that in Roman times there was a castle called Oria, purportedly named after a Greek knight called Doricus. Based on this folk etymology, some historians guessed that the first inhabitants of this city might have been theDorians. Archaeology has not confirmed that story. Instead it has suggested that the first inhabitants were theSuebi, whose kings (as reported by Tutor and Malo in theirCompedio historial de las dos Numancias) established one of their courts there. These two hypotheses have been abandoned because of lack of evidence. It seems more likely that the nameSoria may have its origin in the worddauria from the riverDurius (Douro).
Theshield of Soria has the following heraldic description:[4]
In a field ofgules (red), acastle, ofargent, crenellated with three battlements, lined up and marbled with sabre, rinsed withazure (blue) and a king's bust crowned with gold and with its attributes coming out of his homage, in its colour; silver embroidery loaded with the following legend: "Soria Pura Cabeza de Estremadura", written in saber letters.
The king in the coat of arms isAlfonso VIII, born in Soria, and the red field represents the blood shed by the Sorians, particularly in the battles ofAlarcos,Navas de Tolosa andAljubarrota.[5]
The oldest preserved example of the coat of arms is found in the high-medieval bell of San Gil, today theChurch of Nuestra Señora de la Mayor, which already reflected the city's motto.[6] Unlike the current official coat of arms, the king who now appears on the bust of the castle's keep on the castle's bell tower, is represented in the bell of San Gil with his entire body at the foot of the castle, leaving through its door.
Madonna del Mirón Hermitage, whose construction was begun in the 6th century by theSuebi.
The first recorded inhabitants in the area of Soria were theCeltiberians, around the 4th century BC.
After the fall of theWestern Roman Empire, the rebuilt city was occupied by theSuebi. Later, after theArab conquest of Spain, it grew in importance due to its proximity to the border of the Christian lands, which in the 8th century had settled along the Duero river.
In869 Soria was the centre of the rebellion of Suleyman ibn-Abus against theemir of Córdoba, who sent his sonHakan to quench it.
Alfonso I of Aragon and Navarre, the Battler seized the territory away from the sphere of the Kingdom of León, controlling the territory from 1109 to 1134,[7] entrusting the role of first tenant of Soria to Íñigo López already by 1119, when the effective repopulation should have started, although there are claims tracing it back some time earlier.[8] Soria was granted a shortfuero in March 1120, that also fixed limits to the medievalconcejo.[9] After the death of Alfonso I in 1134,Alfonso VII of León, the Emperor took control of the territory.[10] The shortfuero was confirmed by Alfonso VII in 1143.[11]
Due to its strategic placement at the borders of the Kingdoms ofCastile,Aragon,Navarre and León, Soria in the Middle Ages was at the centre of several conflicts between them.Alfonso VIII of Castile, in reward for its support, gave the city several privileges which it maintained until modern times. In 1195 the town was stormed bySancho VII of Navarre, but later recovered and continued to develop its splendour and trades.
The economical and social crisis of Spain in the early 20th century, and theSpanish Civil War withFrancisco Franco's dictatorship which followed, had negative effects on Soria and its neighborhood, which became depopulated due to strong emigration.
The policy of the current authorities aims to strengthen the local economy pivoting on Soria's tourism potential, and has also launched a programme of reconstruction for the neighbouring villages.
The poetAntonio Machado (1875–1939) spent five years in Soria teaching French in a secondary school, before moving toSegovia nearer Madrid. These years in Soria proved significant in his literary development. He married and lost his wife there and discovered much about the nature of the Castilian people – a subject the Generation of '98 authors were very interested in.Campos de Soria was a series of poems lamenting his wife's early death. They formed part of a major collectionCampos de Castilla.
The firewalking rituals performed at the Sorian village ofSan Pedro Manrique every June as part of the festival of San Juan have been declared as a tradition of National Tourist Interest and have attracted global attention through ethnographic and scientific studies and media coverage.[12][13]
remains of the medieval castle, commanding the town from the eponymous hill, and of the walls
The Church of San Nicolás de Soria (Spanish:Iglesia de San Nicolás) is a ruined remnant of aRomanesque-style church. It was declaredBien de Interés Cultural in 1962.
A few kilometres north of the town are the ruins ofNumantia, aCeltiberian town whose inhabitants destroyed it rather than let it fall toScipio. In Soria is theMuseo Numantino, devoted to the archaeological remains of this and other sites in the province.
The city is served by theSoria Railway Station, with daily services toMadrid viaGuadalajara. There are also many bus lines to neighbouring cities. A new highway has reduced the trip to Madrid by car down to 2 hours.[17]
Soria sits on the banks of Douro river, in its upper course. Its municipality is formed by the city, and four rural hamlets: Las Casas,Oteruelos,Pedrajas andToledillo; both Oteruelos and Pedrajas were small municipalities later absorbed by Soria by the 1970s.[18] The shape of the municipality is highly irregular and it is not even continuous, as it comprises three disjointed areas.[18]
Soria has anoceanic climate (Köppen:Cfb). Due to its altitude, winters in Soria are very cold by Spanish standards (3.6 °C (38 °F) in January) with almost 84 frost days per year. Summers are dry and warm (average 20.7 °C (69 °F) in July) with the daytime temperature usually around 29 °C (84 °F). Temperatures above 35 °C (95 °F) are not rare in summer, while lows can go under 10 °C (50 °F) at nights. It has scant rainfall (535 millimetres (21.1 in)) and spring is the wettest season. The low rainfall is in spite of its high elevation as the maritimeAtlanticlow-pressure systems are often blocked by the mountains closer to the coast. It is the coldest Spanish provincial capital.[19]
Climate data for Soria (1991–2022) 1,082m., extremes (1943-present)
Soria has a biomass district heating plant calledRed de Calor de Soria, which uses woodchip residue fuel from the local timber industry. Venture capital firm AXIS, part of Instituto de Crédito Oficial (ICO), the Spanish promotional bank, has made an equity investment in the project. The project plans to provide 80 GWh of renewable energy per year, which will heat 8,000 homes, saving 28,000 tons of carbon dioxide emissions.[27][28]
^Konvalinka, I., Xygalatas, D., Bulbulia, J., Schjoedt, U., Jegindø, E-M., Wallot, S., Van Orden, G. & Roepstorff, A. 2011. “Synchronized arousal between performers and related spectators in a fire-walking ritual”, ‘’Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108’’(20): 8514-8519