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Madrid is the capital and largest city of Spain.
The population of the city is roughly 3.3 million
and the entire population of the Madrid metropolitan
area is calculated to be 6.271 million. It is the
third largest city in the European Union, after
London and Berlin, and its metropolitan area is the
third largest in the European Union after London and
Paris. The city spans a total of 604.3 km²
(233.3 sq mi).
Madrid urban agglomeration has the 3rd largest
GDP in the European Union and its influences in
politics, education, entertainment, environment,
media, fashion, science, and the arts all contribute
to its status as one of the world's major global
cities. Due to its economic output, high standard of
living, and market size, Madrid is considered the
major financial centre of Southern Europe and the
Iberian Peninsula; it hosts the head offices of the
vast majority of the major Spanish companies. Madrid
is the most touristic city of Spain, the fourth-most
touristic of the continent, and is the 10th most
livable city in the world according to Monocle
magazine, in its 2010 index. Madrid also ranks among
the 12 greenest European cities in 2010. Madrid is
currently bidding to host the 2020 Summer Olympics.
The city is located on the Manzanares river in the
centre of both the country and the Community of
Madrid (which comprises the city of Madrid, its
conurbation and extended suburbs and villages); this
community is bordered by the autonomous communities
of Castile and León and Castile-La Mancha. As the
capital city of Spain, seat of government, and
residence of the Spanish monarch, Madrid is also the
political center of Spain. The current mayor is
Alberto Ruiz-Gallardón from the People's Party (PP).
While Madrid possesses a modern infrastructure, it
has preserved the look and feel of many of its
historic neighbourhoods and streets. Its landmarks
include the Royal Palace of Madrid; the Teatro Real
(Royal theatre) with its restored 1850 Opera House;
the Buen Retiro park, founded in 1631; the
19th-century National Library building (founded in
1712) containing some of Spain's historical
archives; an archaeological museum; and the Golden
Triangle of Art, located along the Paseo del Prado
and comprising three art museums: Prado Museum, the
Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, a museum
of modern art, and the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum,
housed in the renovated Villahermosa Palace.
There are several theories regarding the origin of
the name "Madrid". According to legend Madrid was
founded by Ocno Bianor (son of King Tyrrhenius of
Tuscany and Mantua) and was named "Metragirta" or
"Mantua Carpetana". Others contend that the original
name of the city was "Ursaria" ("land of bears" in
Latin), due to the high number of these animals that
were found in the adjacent forests, which, together
with the strawberry tree (Spanish: madroño), have
been the emblem of the city from the Middle Ages.
The most ancient recorded name of the city Magerit
(for *Materit or *Mageterit ?) comes from the name
of a fortress built on the Manzanares River in the
9th century AD, and means "Place of abundant
water".[21] If the form is correct, it could be a
Celtic place-name from ritu- 'ford' (Old Welsh rit,
Welsh rhyd, Old Breton rit, Old Northern French roy)
and a first element, that is not clearly identified
*mageto derivation of magos 'field' 'plain' (Old
Irish mag 'field', Breton ma 'place'), or matu
'bear", that could explain the Latin translation
Ursalia.
Nevertheless, it is now commonly believed[citation
needed] that the origin of the current name of the
city comes from the 2nd century BC. The Roman Empire
established a settlement on the banks of the
Manzanares river. The name of this first village was
"Matrice" (a reference to the river that crossed the
settlement). Following the invasions carried out by
the Germanic Sueves and Vandals, as well as the
Sarmatic Alans during the 5th century AD, the Roman
Empire no longer had the military presence required
to defend its territories on the Iberian Peninsula,
and as a consequence, these territories were soon
overrun by the Visigoths. The barbarian tribes
subsequently took control of "Matrice". In the 7th
century, the Islamic conquest of the Iberian
Peninsula saw the name changed to "Mayrit", from the
Arabic term ميرا "Mayra" (referencing water as a
"trees" or "giver of life") and the Ibero-Roman
suffix "it" that means "place". The modern "Madrid"
evolved from the Mozarabic "Matrit", which is still
in the Madrilenian gentilic.
Although the site of Madrid has been occupied since
prehistoric times, the first historical data that
concerns the city dates from the middle of the 9th
century, when Mohammad I ordered the construction of
a small palace (site occupied now by the Palacio
Real). Around this palace there was built a small
citadel (al-Mudaina). The palace was built
overlooking the River Manzanares, which the Muslims
called Mayrit meaning source of water (which in turn
became Magerit, and then eventually Madrid). The
citadel was conquered in 1085 by Alfonso VI in his
advance towards Toledo. He reconsecrated the mosque
as the church of the Virgin of Almudena (almudin,
the garrison's granary), now the Catedral de la
Almudena. In 1329 the Cortes first assembled in
Madrid to advise Fernando IV. Jews and Moors
continued to live in the city in their quarter,
still known today as the "Moreria", until they were
expelled.
When Philip II moved his court permanently to
Madrid, the city began to be embellished with
various palaces, convents, churches and other
historic buildings, most of which have survived to
the present. This Madrid, known as the Madrid de los
Austrias, is the most artistic and culturally rich
of all historical times to the city. The chief
architect of the time was Juan Gomez de Mora,
stylistic heir of Juan de Herrera and their sober
traces, but he began to use Baroque elements.The
work of this stage is the Plaza Mayor, and many
Baroque religious buildings.
With the Bourbons began a new era in the city.The
Royal Palace of Madrid and the buildings and
monuments of the Paseo del Prado (Salón del Prado
and Alcalá Gate) deserve special mention. They were
constructed in a sober Baroque international style,
often mistaken for neoclassical, by the Bourbon
kings. Neoclassical also appears at this time, with
Juan de Villanueva, who designed the building for El
Prado Museum.
In the early 20th century began the construction of
Gran Vía, with the task of freeing the old town.
They used different styles that evolve over time:
art nouveau, art deco, expressionist, etc. The
Edificio Telefónica, of American inspiration, at the
highest part of Gran Vía, is usually considered the
first skyscraper in Europe. And finally (in Franco's
period) the totalitarian style, the two skyscrapers
in the Plaza de España.
Plans for the construction of a new cathedral for
Madrid dedicated to the Virgin of Almudena began in
the 16th century, but the slow construction did not
begin until 1879. Francisco de Cubas, the Marquis of
Cubas, was the architect who designed and directed
the construction in a Gothic revival style.
Construction ceased completely during the Spanish
Civil War. The project was abandoned until 1950,
when Fernando Chueca Goitia adapted the plans of de
Cubas to a neoclassical style exterior to match the
grey and white façade of the Palacio Real, which
stands directly opposite. and was not completed
until 1993, when the cathedral was consecrated by
Pope John Paul II. On Calle Princesa, in the heart
of the district of Moncloa, lies el Ejército del
Aire, the headquarters of the Spanish Air Force. A
scaled-down replica of the famous Monastery San
Lorenzo del Escorial which lies about 50 kilometers
northeast of Madrid, el Ejército del Aire is a
classic example of Fascist Neoclassicism in Madrid.
The financial district in downtown Madrid between
the streets Raimundo Fernández Villaverde, Orense,
General Perón and Paseo de la Castellana, its
original conception (and its name) to the "Plan
General de Ordenación Urbana de Madrid", approved in
1946. The purpose of this plan was to create a huge
block of modern office buildings with metro and
railway connections in the expansion area of
northern Madrid, just in front of Real Madrid
stadium (currently named the Santiago Bernabéu
Stadium) and beside the brand new government complex
of Nuevos Ministerios. A botanical garden, a library
and an opera house were also included in the plans,
but these were never built.
Cuatro Torres Business Area is a business park that
was completed in 2008. This block contains the
tallest skyscrapers in Madrid and Spain (Torre
Espacio, Torre de Cristal, Torre Sacyr Vallehermoso
and Torre Caja Madrid). A new commercial and
economic area with plenty of skylines is expected to
be constructed during the next ten years according
to the "Enlargement of Castellana Street Project".
Madrid Barajas International Airport Terminal 4,
designed by Antonio Lamela and Richard Rogers
(winning them the 2006 Stirling Prize), and TPS
Engineers, (winning them the 2006 IStructE Award for
Commercial Structures) was inaugurated on 5 February
2006. Terminal 4 is one of the world's largest
terminal areas, with an area of 760,000 square
meters (8,180,572 square feet) in two separate
terminals: a main building, T4 (470,000 square
meter), and satellite building, T4S (290,000 square
meter), which are separated by approximately 2.5 km
(2 mi). The new terminal is meant to give passengers
a stress-free start to their journey. This is
managed through careful use of illumination,
available by glass panes instead of walls and
numerous domes in the roof which allow natural light
to pass through. With the new addition, Barajas is
designed to handle 70 million passengers annually.
Culture
Madrid is one of Spain's most popular destinations
and is renowned for its large quantity of cultural
attractions.
Art Galleries and Museums
Madrid is considered one of the top European
destinations concerning art museums. Best known is
the Golden Triangle of Art, located along the Paseo
del Prado and comprising three museums. The most
famous one is the Prado Museum, known for such
highlights as Diego Velázquez's Las Meninas and
Francisco de Goya's La maja vestida and La maja
desnuda. The other two museums are the Thyssen
Bornemisza Museum, established from a mixed private
collection, and the Reina Sofia Museum, where Pablo
Picasso's Guernica hangs, returning to Spain from
New York after more than two decades.
The Museo del Prado is a museum and art gallery that
features one of the world's finest collections of
European art, from the 12th century to the early
19th century, based on the former Spanish Royal
Collection. The collection currently comprises
around 7,600 paintings, 1,000 sculptures, 4,800
prints and 8,200 drawings, in addition to a large
number of works of art and historic documents. El
Prado is one of the most visited museums in the
world, and it is considered to be among the greatest
museums of art. It has the best collection of
artworks by Goya, Velazquez, El Greco, Rubens,
Titian, Hieronymus Bosch, José de Ribera and
Patinir; and works by Rogier van der Weyden,
Raphael, Tintoretto, Veronese, Caravaggio, Van Dyck,
Albrecht Dürer, Claude Lorrain, Murillo and
Zurbarán, among others.
The Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía
(MNCARS) is the Spain's national museum of 20th
century art. The museum is mainly dedicated to
Spanish art. Highlights of the museum include
excellent collections of Spain's greatest 20th
century masters, Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dalí, Joan
Miró, Juan Gris and Julio Gonzalez. Certainly the
most famous masterpiece in the museum is Picasso's
painting Guernica. The Reina Sofía also hosts a
free-access library specializing in art, with a
collection of over 100,000 books, over 3,500 sound
recordings and almost 1,000 videos.
The Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum is an art museum that
fills the historical gaps in its counterparts'
collections: in the Prado's case this includes
Italian primitives and works from the English, Dutch
and German schools, while in the case of the Reina
Sofia the Thyssen-Bornemisza collection, once the
second largest private collection in the world after
the British Royal Collection, includes
Impressionists, Expressionists, and European and
American paintings from the second half of the 20th
century, with over 1,600 paintings.
The Royal Academy of Fine Arts of San Fernando
currently functions as a museum and gallery that
houses a fine art collection of paintings from the
15th to 20th century: Giovanni Bellini, Correggio,
Rubens, Zurbarán, Murillo, Goya, Juan Gris, Pablo
Serrano. The academy is also the headquarters of the
Madrid Academy of Art. Francisco Goya was once one
of the academy's directors, and, its alumni include
Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dalí, Antonio Lopez Garcia,
Juan Luna, and Fernando Botero.
The Royal Palace of Madrid is the official residence
of Juan Carlos I of Spain, but he uses it only for
official acts. It is a baroque palace full of
artworks is one of the largest European Royal
Palaces, which is characterized by its luxurious
rooms and its rich collections of armors and
weapons, pharmaceutical, silverware, watches,
paintings, tapestries and the most comprehensive
collection of Stradivarius in the world
The National Archaeological Museum of Spain
collection includes, among others, Pre-historic,
Celtic, Iberian, Greek and Roman antiquities and
medieval (Visigothic, Muslim and Christian) objects.
Highlights include a replica of the Altamira cave
(the first cave in which prehistoric cave paintings
were discovered), Lady of Elx (an enigmatic
polychrome stone bust), Lady of Baza (a famous
example of Iberian sculpture), Biche of Balazote (an
iberian sculpture) and Treasure of Guarrazar (a
treasure that represents the best surviving group of
Early Medieval Christian votive offerings and the
high point of Visigothic goldsmith's work).
The Museum of the Americas (Spanish: Museo de
América) is a National museum that holds artistic,
archaeological and ethnographic collections from the
whole American continent, ranging from the
Paleolithic period to the present day. The permanent
exhibit is divided into five major thematical areas:
an awareness of America, the reality of America,
society, religion and communication.
The National Museum of Natural Sciences is the
National Museum of Natural History of Spain. The
research departments of the museum are: Biodiversity
and Evolutionary Biology, Evolutionary Ecology,
Paleobiology, Vulcanology and Geology.
The Naval Museum is managed by the Ministry of
Defence. The Museum's mission is to acquire,
preserve, investigate, report and display for study,
education and contemplation, parts, sets and
collections of historical, artistic, scientific and
technical related to naval activity in order to
disseminate the story sea of Spain; to help
illustrate, highlight and preserve their traditions
and promote national maritime awareness.
The Monastery of Las Descalzas Reales resides in the
former palace of King Charles I of Spain and Isabel
of Portugal. Their daughter, Joan of Austria,
founded this convent of nuns of the Poor Clare order
in 1559. Throughout the remainder of the 16th
century and into the 17th century, the convent
attracted young widowed or spinster noblewomen. Each
woman brought with her a dowry. The riches quickly
piled up, and the convent became one of the richest
convents in all of Europe. It has many works of
Renaissance and Baroque art, including a recumbent
Christ by Gaspar Becerra, a staircase whose
paintings were painted by unknown author (perhaps
Velázquez) and they are considered the masterpiece
of Spanish illusionist paint, and Brussels
tapestries inspired in paintings by Rubens.
The Museo Lázaro Galdiano houses an encyclopedic
collection specializing in decorative arts. The
collection includes paintings by Leonardo da Vinci,
Claudio Coello, Goya, Pedro Berruguete, El Greco,
Hieronymus Bosch, Rembrandt, Thomas Gainsborough,
Thomas Lawrence and Joshua Reynolds, sculptures by
Giambologna and Verrocchio; 10th century Byzantine
enamel; Arab and Byzantine ivory chests;
Hellenistic, Roman, medieval, renaissance, baroque
and romantic jewerly; Pisanello and Pompeo Leoni
medals; Spanish and Italian ceramics; Italian and
Arab clothes; and an interesting collection of
weapons including the sword of Pope Innocent VIII.
The Museo Nacional de Artes Decorativas (National
Museum of Decorative Arts) is one of the oldest
museums in the city. It illustrates the evolution of
the called "minor arts" (furniture, ceramics and
glass, textile, etc.). Its 60 rooms expones 15,000
objects, of the approximate 40,000 which it has.
The Museo Nacional del Romanticismo (National Museum
of Romanticism) contains a large collection of
artefacts and art, focusing on daily life and
customs of the nineteenth century, with special
attention to the aesthetics about Romanticism.
The Museo Cerralbo houses a private collection of
ancient works of art, artifacts and other
antiquities collected by Enrique de Aguilera y
Gamboa, XVII Cerralbo Marquis.
The Museo Nacional de Antropología(National Museum
of Antropology) provides an overview of the
different cultures in the world, with objects and
human remains from around the world, highlighting a
Guanche mummy of the island of Tenerife.
The Museo Sorolla is located in the building in
which the Valencian Impressionist painter had his
home and workshop. The collection includes, in
addition to numerous works of Joaquín Sorolla, a
large number of objects that possessed the artist,
including sculptures by August Rodin.
CaixaForum Madrid is a post-modern art gallery in
the centre of Madrid. It is sponsored by the
Catalan-Balearic bank la Caixa and located next to
the Salón del Prado. Although the CaixaForum is a
modern building, it also exhibits retrospectives of
artists from earlier time periods and has evolved
into one of the most visited museums in Madrid. It
was constructed by the Swiss architects Herzog & de
Meuron from 2001 to 2007, which combined an old
unused industrial building and hollowed it out at
the base and inside and placed on top further floors
which are encased with rusted steel. Next to it is
an art installation of green plants growing on the
wall of the neighbouring house by French botanist
Patrick Blanc. The red of the top floors with the
green of the wall next to it form a contrast. The
green is in reflection of the neighbouring Royal
Botanical Gardens.
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