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Terrassa

Terrassa (Catalan pronunciation: [təˈrasə], Spanish: Tarrasa) is a city in central-eastern Catalonia (Spain). It is one of the two capitals of Vallès Occidental county, along with Sabadell.

Terrassa
Castle of Vallparadís
Location of Terrassa
Location in Vallès Occidental county
Terrassa
Terrassa
Coordinates: 41°34′12″N 2°00′47″E / 41.570°N 2.013°E / 41.570; 2.013
Sovereign state Spain
Community Catalonia
RegionBarcelona
CountyVallès Occidental
ProvinceBarcelona
Government
 • MayorJordi Ballart (TxT [ca])
Area
 • Total70.2 km2 (27.1 sq mi)
Elevation
286 m (938 ft)
Population
 (2018)[2]
 • Total218,535
 • Density3,100/km2 (8,100/sq mi)
Demonym(s)terrassenc, -ca
egarenc, -ca
(Catalan)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postcode
08221 to 08229
Official language(s)Catalan and Spanish
ClimateCfa
Websitewww.terrassa.cat

The name Terrassa derives from Latin Terracia, either from earlier Terracium castellum (“earthen castle”),[3] or meaning "terrace", "area of flat land".[4]

It is the site of Roman Egara [ca], a former Visigothic bishopric, which became a Latin Catholic titular see. Since 2004, it is again the see of a bishopric.

The city is located in the Catalan Prelitoral depression (Depressió Prelitoral), at the feet of the Prelitoral mountain range (natural reserve of Sant Llorenç del Munt [ca]) and the average altitude of the city is 277 meters above sea level. It is 20 and 18 kilometres from Barcelona and Montserrat respectively.

Terrassa is the fourth largest city in Catalonia, after Barcelona, L'Hospitalet de Llobregat and Badalona.

History edit

 
The Masia Freixa of Terrassa, sea of parabolic arches

The remains that have been found indicate that the area where Terrassa stands has been inhabited since prehistory. In 2005, during the construction of a tunnel for one of the city's railway lines, a prehistoric site was found in Vallparadís Park, with stone tools and fossils of hunted animals dating back 800,000 to 1,000,000 years, making this one of the oldest prehistoric sites in Europe.

Terrassa originated as the Roman town of Egara (Municipium Flavium Egara), which was founded during the time of the emperor Vespasian (69–79 CE), alongside the torrent of Vallparadís (nowadays an urban park) close to the Iberian town of Egosa, on the site of which some ceramics and coins have been found.

In the 17th century it was the sight of the Terrasa witchtrials, where 6 women were arrested, tortured and convicted of witchcraft. Five of them were hanged on 27 October 1619 near a present-day railway bridge.[5]

Other important remains from the Middle Ages are the former cathedral, the castle of Vallparadís (from 1344 to 1413 a Carthusian monastery and today a municipal museum) and the tower of the castle-palace of the count-king.

In the 19th century the city played an important role in the industrial revolution, specializing in woollen fabrics, and today there is a major Modernista legacy as a result of the city's importance at that time. Particularly notable Modernista buildings include the Masia Freixa (1907), the Vapor Aymerich, Amat i Jover textile mill (1907) (now the Museum of Science and Industry of Catalonia), the Principal theater (1920), the city hall (1902), the Alegre de Sagrera house/museum (1911), the Industrial School (1904), the Gran Casino (1920), the Parc de Desinfecció (1920), and the Independència market (1908).

Terrassa is a partner city of the Art nouveau network,[6] a European network of co-operation created in 1999 for the study, preservation and development of Art Nouveau.

Terrassa is a famous movie production center in Europe and was named a City of Film by UNESCO. The city is home to the largest film studios in Catalonia and the Iberian Peninsula, the Parc Audiovisual de Catalunya, where numerous movies and TV Shows such as REC, A Monster Calls and Operación Triunfo have been filmed.

Catastrophes edit

 
Results of the 1962 flood in Terrassa the day after. Picture obtained in the Tobella's archive.

On 25 September 1962, after a long dry summer, between 212 and 252 litres of rain per square metre fell in three hours. It caused the rivers Llobregat and Besòs and their tributaries to overflow, creating a water avenue that caused 700 victims and heavy material losses.[citation needed]

The Vallès Occidental comarca was the most damaged. In particularly Terrassa, with 327 victims. The reason of these numbers was that building was permitted around two dry streams used to bring rain water to the Llobregat river. They met in a wedge shape and were not properly channelized. When the streams overflowed it created what was called "the dead triangle", with more than a hundred victims only in the Ègara neighbourhood.[7]

Ecclesiastical history edit

 
Ancient churches of Ègara.

The episcopal see of Ègara already existed by about 450 CE, when it was established on territory split off from the Roman Catholic Diocese of Barcelona, under the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Tarragona. Pope Hilarius confirmed its autonomy by denying a request around 469 to unite it with the Barcelona under its own first bishop, Ireneus.

It comprised parts of these Comarques of Catalonia (Catalan districts) : Alt Penedès, Anoia, Baix Llobregat, Vallès Occidental and Vallès Oriental. A Provincial Council of Tarragona was held there in 615.

It effectively succumbed to the Arab (Muslim) conquest in the 8th century and was probably suppressed, its territory being (rather nominally) returned to the Diocese of Barcelona. The Marian cathedral continued to exist until 718, when it was taken over during the Umayyad conquest of Hispania, but was rebuilt in the 12th century, and remains part of a monumental complex of ancient Visigothic-Romanesque churches of Sant Pere de Terrassa and Sant Miquel on the site.

After the Catholic Reconquista of the region in the tenth century, the see was not restored, its territory being incorporated in the (mother) diocese of Barcelona. Why a request to restore the bishopric by its Metropolitan of Tarragona, Cesareo, wasn't honored by Pope John XII (955–964) is unclear.

In 2004, Pope John Paul II created the new Diocese of Terrassa on territory taken from the Archdiocese of Barcelona. Its seat is the Cathedral of Holy Sprit.

Diocese of Egara edit

Suffragan Bishops of Egara
  • Ireneo (450? – death 465)
  • Saint Nebridio (516? – 527?), who was possibly transferred to Barcelona, which had a homonym incumbent in 540.[8]
  • Tauro (546? – ?)
  • Sofronio (589? – 592?)
  • Ilergio (594? – 610?)
  • Eugenio (633? – ?)
  • Vincenzo (653? – ?)
  • Giovanni (683? – 693?)
Titular see of Egara

In 1969 Pope Paul VI created the titular see of Egara.

The title has been held by:

Notable sites edit

The churches of Sant Pere (Saint Peter) edit

 
Sant Miquel.
 
Altarpiece of Sant Abdó i Sant Senén.

These three churches were built close to the site of old Ègara to be the seat of the Ègara Diocese, which was founded around 450 CE and remained in existence until the 8th century. This episcopal complex follows the Byzantine model of antiquity, with two churches (Sant Pere and Santa Maria) and a mausoleum (Sant Miquel). After a long period of construction, the churches were finished in the then-current manner about the 11th and 12th centuries and in Romanesque style, on the site of the pre-Romanesque buildings of the Visigothic period. The church of Santa Maria contains outstanding works of art, and there are murals dating from the Romanesque period to the Gothic. There is also an altar stone dating from the 10th century and medieval and Romanesque tombstones (one of which documents the name of the Roman town of Egara). In the transept there are three Gothic altarpieces.

  • Santa Maria (Saint Mary) the old Cathedral
  • Sant Pere (Saint Peter)
    • Transept and apse from 9th to 10th centuries
    • Nave from the 12th century
    • Mosaic from the 10th century (geometric designs)
    • Stone altarpiece of Sant Pere from the 10th century
    • Gothic frescoes from the 13th century
  • Sant Miquel (Saint Michael)
    • The Greek cross plan and the walls are the originals from the 6th century
    • Frescoes from the 7th and 8th centuries in the apse
  • Other items
    • Altarpiece of Sant Pere (1411) by Lluís Borrassà
    • Altarpiece of Roser (1587)
    • Altarpiece of Sant Ruf (17th century)
    • Altarpiece of Sant Miquel (1450–51) by Jaume Cirera and Guillem Talarn
    • Gothic altarpiece of Sant Abdó i Sant Senén (1460) by Jaume Huguet
    • Polychrome sculpture of Saint Mary from the 14th century

Other edit

The city is heir to a rich medieval, Modernista and industrial legacy, and possesses an extensive network of libraries, historical archives and museums.

  • The museum of Terrassa, municipally-owned, has various sections:
    • Castle/Charterhouse of Vallparadís, in the Park of Vallparadís
    • Visigothic-Romanesque churches of Sant Pere (Saint Peter)
    • Casa Alegre de Sagrera, Modernista house in Carrer Font Vella
    • Tower of the Palau, the only vestige of the castle-palace of the count-kings of Catalonia in Terrassa
    • Center of medieval interpretation of the city of Terrassa
    • Convent of Sant Francesc, cloister decorated with polychromed ceramics (1671–1673)
  • Museum of Science and Industry of Catalonia, in the former Aymerich Amat i Jover mill, managed by the Generalitat de Catalunya

Municipal Government edit

The Municipal Council has 27 seats and according to the result of the local elections of May 2023 is formed by:

 
Romanesque monastery at the top of la Mola (1107 m), the highest point of the natural reserve of Sant Llorenç del Munt i Serra de l'Obac

The municipal government is formed by a coalition of Tot per Terrassa, ERC and JUNTS. The Mayor is Jordi Ballart (TxT).

Transportation edit

Terrassa is well connected with Barcelona's port and airport by highway and railway. The C-58 and C-16 also link the city with (Manresa), (Girona, France), and (Tarragona).

The railway reached Terrassa in 1856, and nowadays two lines serve the city. The first, operated by Renfe, connects with Barcelona and Lleida, and the second, operated by FGC, with Barcelona. Recently FGC extended its line to the north of the city, building three new stations; one of them acts as a rail hub with the Renfe line. This extension is known as the Terrassa Metro.

Several interurban bus lines connect Terrassa with the closest cities and towns such as Sabadell, Castellar del Vallès, Martorell, Rubí, Sant Cugat del Vallès and Vacarisses.

Transport inside the city is provided by 14 bus lines operated by a municipal company (Transports Municipals d'Ègara). In the future, when the three new FGC stations and the two planned for the Renfe line are in use, the railway will also serve as urban transport.

Culture edit

Music and theater edit

A lot of musicians and actors are based in Terrassa because of the large number of music schools, a long amateur theater tradition and the local seat of the University of Drama. Since 1982, the Terrassa Jazz Festival has been especially outstanding, with guests like Stan Getz, Chet Baker, Dexter Gordon, Tete Montoliu, Dizzy Gillespie. Local bands such as Doctor Prats have also developed a national and international following.[9]

Mass media edit

Terrasa has a local newspaper, the Diari de Terrassa [ca], that is published daily from Tuesday to Saturday, as well as several radio stations: Ràdio Terrassa/Cadena SER Vallès on 828 AM and 89.4 FM, with more than 75 years of history behind it, being one of the pioneering radio stations in Catalonia and Spain; the municipal radio (Noucincpuntdos, 95.2 FM); and Radio Star de Terrassa, the city's cultural station, on 100.5 FM, which was founded in 1984 and is one of the historic local radios of Catalonia.

Also, the city has several local channels – TV20 Locàlia Vallès and Canal Terrassa, with an audience of more than 50,000 viewers. In addition, there is the free newspaper Terrassa Societat, published monthly with a circulation of 50,000, and Terrassa Month, published of Monday through Friday and also covering local events. Since 2005 the municipal digital newspaper e-newsterrassa.com, in Catalan, has been on line (as for 2013, this digital newspaper has been taken down). The municipal Web site www.terrassa.cat receives no fewer than 150,000 monthly visitors.

Sports edit

Terrassa was a pioneer in the introduction of field hockey and korfball in Catalonia and played an important role in the introduction of basketball. The most important sport in the city is field hockey. During the Barcelona Olympic Games in 1992, Terrassa was the city where the field hockey competition was played. The great number of hockey players from Terrassa who have participated in the Olympic Games over the years has led to Terrassa's being referred to as the "most Olympic city in the world". Between 1928 and 2004, Terrassa sent 124 athletes to the Olympic Games, the majority of whom were hockey players. Three local field hockey clubs, Atlètic Terrassa, Club Egara and Club Deportiu Terrassa have all won the División de Honor de Hockey Hierba and the Copa del Rey de Hockey Hierba. Atlètic Terrassa and Club Egara have also won the EuroHockey Club Champions Cup.

Other local sports teams include Club de Rugby Carboners de Terrassa, CN Terrassa (water polo), Terrassa FC (association football), CP San Cristóbal (association football) and Sferic Terrassa (basketball).

Terrassa is the home and birthplace of FC Barcelona and Spain national football team midfielder Xavi.

The city's castells teams are the Minyons de Terrassa and the Castellers de Terrassa. On 22 November 2015, Terrassa's Plaça Vella was the scene of the world's first successful 4 de 10 amb folre i manilles, completed by the Minyons.[10]

Twin towns edit

Terrassa is twinned with five cities:[11]

Terrassa also signed a protocol of special relations cooperation with:

Notable people edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "El municipi en xifres: Terrassa". Statistical Institute of Catalonia. from the original on 29 May 2023. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
  2. ^ Municipal Register of Spain 2018. National Statistics Institute.
  3. ^ Cardús, Salvador (1961). Nom i escut de Tarrassa. Patronat de la Fundació Soler i Palet. OCLC 1123914215.
  4. ^ Moran, Josep; Batlle, Mar; Rabella i Ribas, Joan Anton (2002). Topònims catalans: etimologia i pronúncia (in Catalan). Barcelona: Abadia de Montserrat. p. 165. ISBN 8484154319.
  5. ^ "¿Qué eran y quiénes eran las brujas catalanas?". ElNacional.cat. from the original on 30 October 2020. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
  6. ^ Art Nouveau network 18 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine, artnouveau-net.eu. Accessed 4 August 2022.
  7. ^ "Riuades 1962" (in Catalan). 4 March 2012. from the original on 16 March 2016. Retrieved 13 July 2016.
  8. ^ A. Lambert, lemma 'Barcelone', in Dictionnaire d'Histoire et de Géographie ecclésiastiques, vol. VI, 1932, col. 676.
  9. ^ [The Terrassan group Doctor Prats give their first live concert in Faktoria], terrassadigital.cat (in Catalan), archived from the original on 19 September 2016, retrieved 19 March 2020
  10. ^ Martín, Carol (12 November 2015). "Els Minyons de Terrassa fan història en descarregar el quatre de deu amb folre i manilles". Ara. from the original on 23 November 2015. Retrieved 22 November 2015.
  11. ^ "Hermanamientos". Ajuntament de Terrassa. from the original on 12 December 2022. Retrieved 26 January 2020.

Sources and external links edit

  • Terrassa City Council 9 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • Government data pages (in Catalan)
  • The best things to do in Terrassa (in English)
  • GCatholic; with Google satellite photo
Bibliography – ecclesiastical history
  • D. Mansilla, lemma 'Egara' in Dictionnaire d'Histoire et de Géographie ecclésiastiques, vol. XIV, Paris 1960, coll. 1462–1466

terrassa, egara, redirects, here, census, town, west, bengal, india, egara, paschim, bardhaman, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challeng. Egara redirects here For the census town in West Bengal India see Egara Paschim Bardhaman This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Terrassa news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Terrassa Catalan pronunciation teˈrase Spanish Tarrasa is a city in central eastern Catalonia Spain It is one of the two capitals of Valles Occidental county along with Sabadell TerrassaMunicipalityCastle of VallparadisFlagCoat of armsLocation of TerrassaLocation in Valles Occidental countyTerrassaShow map of CataloniaTerrassaShow map of SpainCoordinates 41 34 12 N 2 00 47 E 41 570 N 2 013 E 41 570 2 013Sovereign state SpainCommunity CataloniaRegionBarcelonaCountyValles OccidentalProvinceBarcelonaGovernment MayorJordi Ballart TxT ca Area 1 Total70 2 km2 27 1 sq mi Elevation286 m 938 ft Population 2018 2 Total218 535 Density3 100 km2 8 100 sq mi Demonym s terrassenc caegarenc ca Catalan Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postcode08221 to 08229Official language s Catalan and SpanishClimateCfaWebsitewww wbr terrassa wbr cat The name Terrassa derives from Latin Terracia either from earlier Terracium castellum earthen castle 3 or meaning terrace area of flat land 4 It is the site of Roman Egara ca a former Visigothic bishopric which became a Latin Catholic titular see Since 2004 it is again the see of a bishopric The city is located in the Catalan Prelitoral depression Depressio Prelitoral at the feet of the Prelitoral mountain range natural reserve of Sant Llorenc del Munt ca and the average altitude of the city is 277 meters above sea level It is 20 and 18 kilometres from Barcelona and Montserrat respectively Terrassa is the fourth largest city in Catalonia after Barcelona L Hospitalet de Llobregat and Badalona Contents 1 History 1 1 Catastrophes 2 Ecclesiastical history 2 1 Diocese of Egara 3 Notable sites 3 1 The churches of Sant Pere Saint Peter 3 2 Other 4 Municipal Government 5 Transportation 6 Culture 6 1 Music and theater 6 2 Mass media 7 Sports 8 Twin towns 9 Notable people 10 See also 11 References 12 Sources and external linksHistory editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Terrassa news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp The Masia Freixa of Terrassa sea of parabolic arches The remains that have been found indicate that the area where Terrassa stands has been inhabited since prehistory In 2005 during the construction of a tunnel for one of the city s railway lines a prehistoric site was found in Vallparadis Park with stone tools and fossils of hunted animals dating back 800 000 to 1 000 000 years making this one of the oldest prehistoric sites in Europe Terrassa originated as the Roman town of Egara Municipium Flavium Egara which was founded during the time of the emperor Vespasian 69 79 CE alongside the torrent of Vallparadis nowadays an urban park close to the Iberian town of Egosa on the site of which some ceramics and coins have been found In the 17th century it was the sight of the Terrasa witchtrials where 6 women were arrested tortured and convicted of witchcraft Five of them were hanged on 27 October 1619 near a present day railway bridge 5 Other important remains from the Middle Ages are the former cathedral the castle of Vallparadis from 1344 to 1413 a Carthusian monastery and today a municipal museum and the tower of the castle palace of the count king In the 19th century the city played an important role in the industrial revolution specializing in woollen fabrics and today there is a major Modernista legacy as a result of the city s importance at that time Particularly notable Modernista buildings include the Masia Freixa 1907 the Vapor Aymerich Amat i Jover textile mill 1907 now the Museum of Science and Industry of Catalonia the Principal theater 1920 the city hall 1902 the Alegre de Sagrera house museum 1911 the Industrial School 1904 the Gran Casino 1920 the Parc de Desinfeccio 1920 and the Independencia market 1908 Terrassa is a partner city of the Art nouveau network 6 a European network of co operation created in 1999 for the study preservation and development of Art Nouveau Terrassa is a famous movie production center in Europe and was named a City of Film by UNESCO The city is home to the largest film studios in Catalonia and the Iberian Peninsula the Parc Audiovisual de Catalunya where numerous movies and TV Shows such as REC A Monster Calls and Operacion Triunfo have been filmed Catastrophes edit See also 1962 Valles floods nbsp Results of the 1962 flood in Terrassa the day after Picture obtained in the Tobella s archive On 25 September 1962 after a long dry summer between 212 and 252 litres of rain per square metre fell in three hours It caused the rivers Llobregat and Besos and their tributaries to overflow creating a water avenue that caused 700 victims and heavy material losses citation needed The Valles Occidental comarca was the most damaged In particularly Terrassa with 327 victims The reason of these numbers was that building was permitted around two dry streams used to bring rain water to the Llobregat river They met in a wedge shape and were not properly channelized When the streams overflowed it created what was called the dead triangle with more than a hundred victims only in the Egara neighbourhood 7 Ecclesiastical history edit nbsp Ancient churches of Egara The episcopal see of Egara already existed by about 450 CE when it was established on territory split off from the Roman Catholic Diocese of Barcelona under the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Tarragona Pope Hilarius confirmed its autonomy by denying a request around 469 to unite it with the Barcelona under its own first bishop Ireneus It comprised parts of these Comarques of Catalonia Catalan districts Alt Penedes Anoia Baix Llobregat Valles Occidental and Valles Oriental A Provincial Council of Tarragona was held there in 615 It effectively succumbed to the Arab Muslim conquest in the 8th century and was probably suppressed its territory being rather nominally returned to the Diocese of Barcelona The Marian cathedral continued to exist until 718 when it was taken over during the Umayyad conquest of Hispania but was rebuilt in the 12th century and remains part of a monumental complex of ancient Visigothic Romanesque churches of Sant Pere de Terrassa and Sant Miquel on the site After the Catholic Reconquista of the region in the tenth century the see was not restored its territory being incorporated in the mother diocese of Barcelona Why a request to restore the bishopric by its Metropolitan of Tarragona Cesareo wasn t honored by Pope John XII 955 964 is unclear In 2004 Pope John Paul II created the new Diocese of Terrassa on territory taken from the Archdiocese of Barcelona Its seat is the Cathedral of Holy Sprit Diocese of Egara edit Suffragan Bishops of Egara Ireneo 450 death 465 Saint Nebridio 516 527 who was possibly transferred to Barcelona which had a homonym incumbent in 540 8 Tauro 546 Sofronio 589 592 Ilergio 594 610 Eugenio 633 Vincenzo 653 Giovanni 683 693 Titular see of Egara In 1969 Pope Paul VI created the titular see of Egara The title has been held by Justo Goizueta Gridilla O A R 14 January 1970 retired 15 February 1978 as Bishop Prelate of Territorial Prelature of Madera Mexico 1970 01 14 1988 02 02 previously Apostolic Administrator of same Madera 1967 14 January 1970 died 1991 Juan Francisco Sarasti Jaramillo C I M 8 March 1978 23 December 1983 as Auxiliary Bishop of Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cali Colombia 8 March 1978 23 December 1983 later Bishop of Barrancabermeja Colombia 23 December 1983 25 March 1993 Metropolitan Archbishop of Ibague Colombia 25 March 1993 17 August 2002 Metropolitan Archbishop of above Cali 17 August 2002 retired 18 May 2011 and Apostolic Administrator of Buenaventura Colombia 21 February 2004 29 April 2004 Paulius Antanas Baltakis O F M 1 June 1984 17 May 2019 Luis Miguel Romero Fernandez M Id 20 March 2020 present Auxiliary Bishop of Rockville Centre New York CityNotable sites editThe churches of Sant Pere Saint Peter edit nbsp Sant Miquel nbsp Altarpiece of Sant Abdo i Sant Senen These three churches were built close to the site of old Egara to be the seat of the Egara Diocese which was founded around 450 CE and remained in existence until the 8th century This episcopal complex follows the Byzantine model of antiquity with two churches Sant Pere and Santa Maria and a mausoleum Sant Miquel After a long period of construction the churches were finished in the then current manner about the 11th and 12th centuries and in Romanesque style on the site of the pre Romanesque buildings of the Visigothic period The church of Santa Maria contains outstanding works of art and there are murals dating from the Romanesque period to the Gothic There is also an altar stone dating from the 10th century and medieval and Romanesque tombstones one of which documents the name of the Roman town of Egara In the transept there are three Gothic altarpieces Santa Maria Saint Mary the old Cathedral Apse from the 6th century Nave from the 11th century with exterior Lombardy style decorations Romanesque frescoes of Saint Thomas Becket from the 12th century Frescoes from the 13th century Sant Pere Saint Peter Transept and apse from 9th to 10th centuries Nave from the 12th century Mosaic from the 10th century geometric designs Stone altarpiece of Sant Pere from the 10th century Gothic frescoes from the 13th century Sant Miquel Saint Michael The Greek cross plan and the walls are the originals from the 6th century Frescoes from the 7th and 8th centuries in the apse Other items Altarpiece of Sant Pere 1411 by Lluis Borrassa Altarpiece of Roser 1587 Altarpiece of Sant Ruf 17th century Altarpiece of Sant Miquel 1450 51 by Jaume Cirera and Guillem Talarn Gothic altarpiece of Sant Abdo i Sant Senen 1460 by Jaume Huguet Polychrome sculpture of Saint Mary from the 14th century Other edit The city is heir to a rich medieval Modernista and industrial legacy and possesses an extensive network of libraries historical archives and museums The museum of Terrassa municipally owned has various sections Castle Charterhouse of Vallparadis in the Park of Vallparadis Visigothic Romanesque churches of Sant Pere Saint Peter Casa Alegre de Sagrera Modernista house in Carrer Font Vella Tower of the Palau the only vestige of the castle palace of the count kings of Catalonia in Terrassa Center of medieval interpretation of the city of Terrassa Convent of Sant Francesc cloister decorated with polychromed ceramics 1671 1673 Museum of Science and Industry of Catalonia in the former Aymerich Amat i Jover mill managed by the Generalitat de CatalunyaMunicipal Government editThe Municipal Council has 27 seats and according to the result of the local elections of May 2023 is formed by nbsp Romanesque monastery at the top of la Mola 1107 m the highest point of the natural reserve of Sant Llorenc del Munt i Serra de l Obac All for Terrassa Tot per Terrassa TxT 11 seats 33 46 Socialists Party of Catalonia Partit dels Socialistes de Catalunya PSC 7 seats 20 91 Vox Vox 3 seats 10 49 Republican Left of Catalonia Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya ERC 2 seats 7 56 Together for Catalonia Junts per Catalunya JUNTS 2 seats 7 56 People s Party Partit Popular PP 2 seats 6 56 The municipal government is formed by a coalition of Tot per Terrassa ERC and JUNTS The Mayor is Jordi Ballart TxT Transportation editTerrassa is well connected with Barcelona s port and airport by highway and railway The C 58 and C 16 also link the city with Manresa Girona France and Tarragona The railway reached Terrassa in 1856 and nowadays two lines serve the city The first operated by Renfe connects with Barcelona and Lleida and the second operated by FGC with Barcelona Recently FGC extended its line to the north of the city building three new stations one of them acts as a rail hub with the Renfe line This extension is known as the Terrassa Metro Several interurban bus lines connect Terrassa with the closest cities and towns such as Sabadell Castellar del Valles Martorell Rubi Sant Cugat del Valles and Vacarisses Transport inside the city is provided by 14 bus lines operated by a municipal company Transports Municipals d Egara In the future when the three new FGC stations and the two planned for the Renfe line are in use the railway will also serve as urban transport Culture editMusic and theater edit A lot of musicians and actors are based in Terrassa because of the large number of music schools a long amateur theater tradition and the local seat of the University of Drama Since 1982 the Terrassa Jazz Festival has been especially outstanding with guests like Stan Getz Chet Baker Dexter Gordon Tete Montoliu Dizzy Gillespie Local bands such as Doctor Prats have also developed a national and international following 9 Mass media edit Terrasa has a local newspaper the Diari de Terrassa ca that is published daily from Tuesday to Saturday as well as several radio stations Radio Terrassa Cadena SER Valles on 828 AM and 89 4 FM with more than 75 years of history behind it being one of the pioneering radio stations in Catalonia and Spain the municipal radio Noucincpuntdos 95 2 FM and Radio Star de Terrassa the city s cultural station on 100 5 FM which was founded in 1984 and is one of the historic local radios of Catalonia Also the city has several local channels TV20 Localia Valles and Canal Terrassa with an audience of more than 50 000 viewers In addition there is the free newspaper Terrassa Societat published monthly with a circulation of 50 000 and Terrassa Month published of Monday through Friday and also covering local events Since 2005 the municipal digital newspaper e newsterrassa com in Catalan has been on line as for 2013 this digital newspaper has been taken down The municipal Web site www terrassa cat receives no fewer than 150 000 monthly visitors Sports editTerrassa was a pioneer in the introduction of field hockey and korfball in Catalonia and played an important role in the introduction of basketball The most important sport in the city is field hockey During the Barcelona Olympic Games in 1992 Terrassa was the city where the field hockey competition was played The great number of hockey players from Terrassa who have participated in the Olympic Games over the years has led to Terrassa s being referred to as the most Olympic city in the world Between 1928 and 2004 Terrassa sent 124 athletes to the Olympic Games the majority of whom were hockey players Three local field hockey clubs Atletic Terrassa Club Egara and Club Deportiu Terrassa have all won the Division de Honor de Hockey Hierba and the Copa del Rey de Hockey Hierba Atletic Terrassa and Club Egara have also won the EuroHockey Club Champions Cup Other local sports teams include Club de Rugby Carboners de Terrassa CN Terrassa water polo Terrassa FC association football CP San Cristobal association football and Sferic Terrassa basketball Terrassa is the home and birthplace of FC Barcelona and Spain national football team midfielder Xavi The city s castells teams are the Minyons de Terrassa and the Castellers de Terrassa On 22 November 2015 Terrassa s Placa Vella was the scene of the world s first successful 4 de 10 amb folre i manilles completed by the Minyons 10 Twin towns editTerrassa is twinned with five cities 11 Granada Nicaragua Orebro Sweden Pamiers France Tecoluca El Salvador Tetouan Morocco Terrassa also signed a protocol of special relations cooperation with Otavalo EcuadorNotable people editNebridius 5th c 6th c religious Joseph Oller 1835 1922 entrepreneur Domingo Cirici Ventallo 1878 1917 writer Jose Maria Cunill Postius 1896 1949 paramilitary leader Teresa Torrelles 1908 199 anarcha feminist activist Cristina Lacasa 1929 2011 writer Joana Biarnes 1935 2018 photographer Jaime Comas 1936 2021 screenwriter and producer Marta Pessarrodona born 1941 writer Francesc Abad born 1944 artist Eulalia Grau born 1946 artist Jordi Cami born 1952 scholar in pharmacology Josep Roig Boada born 1957 composer and producer Assumpta Escarp i Gibert born 1957 politician Concha Garcia Campoy 1958 2013 journalist Sergi Belbel born 1963 playwright Josep Guijarro born 1957 journalist and writer Pere Navarro born 1959 politician Lluis Puig born 1959 art director Enric Millo born 1960 politician Josep Rull born 1968 politician DJ Skudero born 1976 makina DJ and producer Aleix Villatoro i Oliver born 1979 politician Xavi born 1980 association football player and manager Jordi Ballart born 1980 politician Cristian Canton Ferrer born 1980 writer musicologist and pianist Aleix Alcaraz born 1990 racing driver Miki Nunez born 1996 singer Dani Olmo born 1998 footballerSee also editSchool of Engineering of Terrassa List of Catholic dioceses in Spain Andorra Ceuta and GibraltarReferences edit El municipi en xifres Terrassa Statistical Institute of Catalonia Archived from the original on 29 May 2023 Retrieved 23 November 2015 Municipal Register of Spain 2018 National Statistics Institute Cardus Salvador 1961 Nom i escut de Tarrassa Patronat de la Fundacio Soler i Palet OCLC 1123914215 Moran Josep Batlle Mar Rabella i Ribas Joan Anton 2002 Toponims catalans etimologia i pronuncia in Catalan Barcelona Abadia de Montserrat p 165 ISBN 8484154319 Que eran y quienes eran las brujas catalanas ElNacional cat Archived from the original on 30 October 2020 Retrieved 13 September 2020 Art Nouveau network Archived 18 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine artnouveau net eu Accessed 4 August 2022 Riuades 1962 in Catalan 4 March 2012 Archived from the original on 16 March 2016 Retrieved 13 July 2016 A Lambert lemma Barcelone in Dictionnaire d Histoire et de Geographie ecclesiastiques vol VI 1932 col 676 Els terrassencs Doctor Prats fan el seu primer concert en directe a Faktoria The Terrassan group Doctor Prats give their first live concert in Faktoria terrassadigital cat in Catalan archived from the original on 19 September 2016 retrieved 19 March 2020 Martin Carol 12 November 2015 Els Minyons de Terrassa fan historia en descarregar el quatre de deu amb folre i manilles Ara Archived from the original on 23 November 2015 Retrieved 22 November 2015 Hermanamientos Ajuntament de Terrassa Archived from the original on 12 December 2022 Retrieved 26 January 2020 Sources and external links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Terrassa Terrassa City Council Archived 9 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine Government data pages in Catalan The best things to do in Terrassa in English GCatholic with Google satellite photo Bibliography ecclesiastical history D Mansilla lemma Egara in Dictionnaire d Histoire et de Geographie ecclesiastiques vol XIV Paris 1960 coll 1462 1466 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Terrassa amp oldid 1220893720 Ecclesiastical history, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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