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Trapiche

A trapiche is a mill made of wooden rollers used to extract juice from fruit, originally olives, and since the Middle Ages, sugar cane as well. By extension the word is also sometimes applied to the location of the mill, whether the workshop or the entire plantation.[1]

Trapiche in the island of The Hispaniola in an engraving of the 17th century

Etymology edit

The word has its origin in the Latin trapetum that means oil mill.[2] From the Sicilian language trappitu[3] the term, crossing the Mozarab Valencia, with its typical change of termination to «-ig» via the Catalan language (trapig -Gandía, 1536-, trapitz de canyamel -Mallorca, 1466-)[4] has arrived to the other languages of the Iberian peninsula as trapiche.[5] In the documents of the Duke of Gandía from the beginning of the fifteen century, one can see the term «trapig de canyamel», as a synecdoche to indicate the whole village engenho.[3][6] According to Herrera: "..es de notar que antiguamente no auuia azucar,ſino en Valencia" ("note that in the old days there was no sugar except in Valencia").[7]

Valencian Country edit

 
Trapiche (Mill of traditional sugar) in Cidade Velha

To the start of the 15th century, Oliva's Count mattered of Sicily the method of caring of the cane and the technical to extract the «sugar» with the aid of sicilians mestres sucrer. A true Galceran of Vic, gentleman of Xeresa built the first trapiche in Gandia.[8] The 1433 count already four and to the end of the century fourteen.[9] To the senyoria of the Monastery of Valldigna saw grow the revenue of his trapiche of 40% between 1434 and 1502. Temptatiues To enter the new culture to Castelló were less successful.[10] The culture of cane was the fact especially of the small nobility and of the bourgeoisie, as the farmers were not very motivated to change lands of orchard in industrial «culture». The companies sucreres go to have to take in lease lands or increase proprietary bourgeoisie to happen to the culture of cane.[10]

To the second half of the 15th century Hug of Cardona and Gandia yielded the monopoly of the exploitation of the sugar to Gandia to the negociants of the Magna Societas Alemannorum of Ravensburg.[3] In the year 1500 the sector gave work to some 500 people and 220 animals. Pier Luigi de Borgia possessed three, and Ausiàs March had one to Beniarjó.[11]

Many factors contributed to the declí of the trapiches and of the industry sucrera to Gandia. To the XVI appeared «the engine», a more efficient and faster team. It continued declining with the increase of the competition of Madeira, of the Canary Islands and of the Antilles that had a climate more idoni.[12] The expulsion of the moriscos the October 4, 1609 was the fatal blow to an industry already in declí. The moriscos were the main cultivadors of cane and the expert labour. Whole villages remained empty. Felip's the decree III of Castella was a disaster for the region and drive the house ducal to the ruin.[8]

The majority of the installations disappeared. Today only remain some vestiges material of ancient trapiches and engines that with the course of the time were reformed and immaterial in the toponymy, for example the Street trapiche to Gandia, the Square trapiche to Miramar and the Career trapiche to Xeresa.[8] In spite of this seems that today a lot of people forgot the past glorious of the industry sucrera to the ducat of Gandia 600 years ago.[12]

At the beginning of the fifteenth century, the Conde Oil imported from Sicily method of cultivation of sugarcane and techniques to extract the "çucre" with the help of teachers Sucrers Sicilians. A certain Galceran Vic, Lord of Xeresa built the first trapig in Gandia.[citation needed] In 1433 it already have four and the end of the fourteenth century.[citation needed] A Member of the Monastery of Valldigna you saw revenue grow trapig its 40% between 1434 and 1502. tentative to introduce a new culture Castellon were less successful.[citation needed] The culture of sugarcane was done mainly by the gentry and the bourgeoisie, such as farmers were not very motivated to change land orchard culture "industrial." Sugar companies had to take land on lease or encourage owners to spend bourgeois culture cane.[citation needed]

In the second half of the fifteenth century Hug de Cardona Gandia and gave a monopoly of the operation of the sugar merchants of Gandia Magna Societas Alemannorum of Ravensburg.[citation needed] Around 1500 the sector employed about 500 people and 220 animals. Pedro Luis de Borja possessed three and Ausiàs March in had a Beniarjó.[citation needed]

Many factors contributed to the decline of the sugar industry and trapigs Gandia. In XVI appeared "ingenuity", a computer faster and more efficient. He continued declining with increased competition from Madeira , the Canary Islands and the Antilles that had a climate more suitable.[citation needed] The expulsion of the Moors on 4 October of 1609 was a fatal blow industry already in decline. The Moors were the main cane growers and labor expert. Whole villages were empty. The decree of Philip III of Spain was a disaster for the region and lead to ruin the ducal house.[citation needed]

Most facilities disappeared. Today there are only a few vestiges of old materials and trapigs Ingen with the course of time were reformed[citation needed] and intangible assets in the names , for example Trapig Street Gandia, Trapig Plaza in Miramar and Carrera Trapig in Xeresa . However it seems that today many people forget the glorious past of the sugar industry in the duchy of Gandia 600 years ago.[citation needed]

Caribbean edit

Canarian precedents edit

In the late 15th century, the horizontal two-roller engenho or trapiche transferred seamlessly from the Portuguese in the Madeira Islands to the Canary Islands just as the Castilians, still struggled to control the Guanches, the rebellious indigenous Canarians. They were, in fact, the first coerced workers of the fledgling sugar industry on these islands. As the Iberians colonized the archipelagos off the coast of West Africa they relocated here most of the Mediterranean agricultural industry making of these islands the center of technological advancement in the Atlantic World. And in a matter of two decades after Christopher Columbus touched down on the Bahamas, just across the ocean, the trapiche followed European colonists to the Caribbean.[13] The first stop was the island of Hispaniola.

Hispaniola (Santo Domingo) edit

The trapiche's arrival to the Caribbean coincided with three crucial events in the early history of the Americas. They were the dramatic decline of the indigenous population, the arrival of the first enslaved Africans to the Americas and the sudden drop in the production of gold. While large numbers of colonists sought to escape the ensuing desolation and migrated to settle and desolate in turn other territories, those who stayed on Hispaniola turned to the sugar industry hustled at first by a mixture of enslaved indigenous people and Africans (ladinos and bozales). In a few more years, as the indigenous population retrieved, enslaved Blacks made up the bulk if not all of the coerced workers. With the promise of personal wealth implied in the system of slavery and with the advice of Canarian experts colonists began establishing some types of engenhos as early as 1514.[14] According to Cronistas de Indias (Chroniclers of the Indies), Bartolomé de las Casas and Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés, it was Gonzales de Veloso (also, Gonzalez Veloso and Gonzalo de Vellosa) who built in what today is San Cristobal the first two-roller trapiche pulled by horses on Hispaniola.[15][16] From there, it turned up on the Island of San Juan Bautista (Puerto Rico) and later in Cuba.[17]

Three rollers edit

Though most current examples of trapiches in the Spanish Caribbean are of the three-rollers, according to scholar Anthony R. Stevens-Acevedo, the horizontal two-roller trapiche was the type used in the Caribbean throughout the end of the 16th century. As this piece of technology moved south to Tierra Firme (South America), the trapiche not only acquired a new roller, but it also erected all three of them to become a more efficient instrument of the expanding sugar industry. In this more elaborate shape, it soon returned to the Caribbean as the backbone of the sugar engenho.[14]

South America edit

Sugar cane industry edit

 
Trapiche in Carache, State of Trujillo, Venezuela.

Nowadays, the majority of the ingenios in Argentina or (engenhos in Brazil), use a trapiche to grind the sugarcane and extract its juice. They used water vapor as a driving force for mechanisms. In Latin America one can see small and transportable "street trapiches" handled by just one person. They can be installed almost anywhere to produce fresh cane juice. Its manufacture is artisanal, having even wooden gears.[18]

Mining environment edit

In Argentina, Bolivia and Chile the term also applies to a type of mill used to reduce different kinds of minerals to dust.[19][20] In the seventeenth century, these facilities and the raw material (ore, wages, the lease of the site and water, buildings ...) needed a considerable investment, the major part of it held by wealthy colonial elite.[19]

Among the general mechanisms by which the Chilean economic life developed in the Colony, the trapiches were a highly profitable investment. On the other hand, the perception of metals as means of payment for its use, offered a source of profitability, as they were connected to the commercial circuit of gold but outside the margins of local production centers.

Outside South America this type of mill might be known as Chilean mill.

References edit

  1. ^ "Merriam-Webster: trapiche". Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  2. ^ «trapetum», Pons Latein-Deutsches Wörterbuch
  3. ^ a b c Verlinden, Charles; Schmitt, Eberhard (1986). "1 - Die mittelalterlichen Ursprünge der europäischen Expansion". Dokumente zur Geschichte der europäischen Expansion. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. p. 169. ISBN 9783406303722.
  4. ^ Corominas: trapig en Gandía, 1536, y trapitz de canyamel en Mallorca, 1466
  5. ^ "Diccionari català-valencià-balear". dcvb.iec.cat. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  6. ^ Hug de Cardona editat per Frederic Aparisi Romero, III: Col·lecció diplomàtica (1407-1482) Fonts Històriques Valencianes, València, Universitat de València, 2011, pàgina 1058 ss., ISBN 9788437083025
  7. ^ Antonio de Herrera y Tordesillas (1601). Historia General De Los Hechos De Los Castellanos En Las Islas Itierra Firme Del Mar Oceano: Decada Segvnda. Por Juan Flamenco. p. 105.
  8. ^ a b c "Enginys i trapigs de sucre de la Safor". March 14, 2011. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  9. ^ "Trapigs de la Safor". Google My Maps. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  10. ^ a b Miquel Barceló, El feudalisme comptat i debatut: Formació i expansió del feudalisme català, València, Universitat de València, 2003, pàgines 509 i ss., ISBN 9788437056715
  11. ^ "«La Gandia dels Borja», Els Borja, web de l'Institut Internacional d'Estudis Borgians (IIEB) consulta el 12 de novembre de 2013". Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  12. ^ a b Andrea González Garrigas, «Entrevista a Ana Labarta sobre la canya de sucre, Catedràtica d’Estudis Àrabs i Islàmics i professora del Departament de Filologia Catalana de la Facultat de Filologia, Traducció i Comunicació de la Universitat de València.
  13. ^ de Viera y Clavijo, José (1991). Historia de Canarias T. 2. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria: Islas Canarias: Viceconsejería de Cultura y Deportes, Gobierno de Canarias. p. 420. ISBN 8487137962.
  14. ^ a b R. Stevens-Acevedo, Anthony (January 2013). "The Machines That Milled the Sugar-Canes: The Horizontal Double Roller Mills in the First Sugar Plantations of the Americas". Academia.edu: 81.
  15. ^ de las Casas, Bartolomé (1876). Historia de las Indias escrita. Madrid: M. Ginesta. p. 28.
  16. ^ Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo Valdés; Francisco de Solano; Fermín del Pino (1982). América y la España del siglo XVI: homenaje a Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo cronista de Indias en el V centenario de su nacimento. (Madrid, 1478). Editorial CSIC - CSIC Press, 1982. ISBN 9788400051532.
  17. ^ Christian Daniels; Joseph Needham; Nicholas K. Menzies (1996). Science and Civilisation in China: Volume 6, Biology and Biological Technology, Part 3, Agro-Industries and Forestry. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. p. 317. ISBN 0521419999.
  18. ^ "Trapiches En Madera Don Pedro ----- Pitalito (Huila)". trapichesenmadera.jimdofree.com. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  19. ^ a b Paola Raquel Figueroa, «Trapiches i ingenios mineros en la Mendoza colonial - Argentina segles XVI, XVII i XVIII)»(castellà), Tiempo y Espacio,, any 17, Vol 20, 2008, pàgines 84-97, ISSN 0716-9671
  20. ^ «trapiche» Diccionario de la lengua española, 22a edició, 2001

Bibliography edit

  • Francisco Pons Moncho, Trapig: La producción de azucar en la Safor (siglos XIV-XVIII), Publicaciones del Instituto Duque Real Alonso el Viejo, Ajuntament de Gandia, 1979, 127 pàgines, ISBN 978-8450034769
  • Fernando Nuez Viñals, La herencia árabe en la agricultura y el bienestar de occidente,(in Spanish) València, Universitat Politècnica de València, 2002, 445 pàgines,
  • Miquel Barceló, El feudalisme comptat i debatut: Formació i expansió del feudalisme català, València, Universitat de València, 2003, ISBN 9788437056715
  • Sucre & Borja. La canyamel dels Ducs. Del trapig a la taula Catàleg de l'Exposició, Gandia. Casa de la Cultura "Marqués de González de Quirós", 2000

External links edit

  Media related to Trapiche at Wikimedia Commons

trapiche, other, uses, disambiguation, trapiche, mill, made, wooden, rollers, used, extract, juice, from, fruit, originally, olives, since, middle, ages, sugar, cane, well, extension, word, also, sometimes, applied, location, mill, whether, workshop, entire, p. For other uses see Trapiche disambiguation A trapiche is a mill made of wooden rollers used to extract juice from fruit originally olives and since the Middle Ages sugar cane as well By extension the word is also sometimes applied to the location of the mill whether the workshop or the entire plantation 1 Trapiche in the island of The Hispaniola in an engraving of the 17th century See also Chilean mill Contents 1 Etymology 2 Valencian Country 3 Caribbean 3 1 Canarian precedents 3 2 Hispaniola Santo Domingo 3 3 Three rollers 4 South America 4 1 Sugar cane industry 4 2 Mining environment 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksEtymology editThe word has its origin in the Latin trapetum that means oil mill 2 From the Sicilian language trappitu 3 the term crossing the Mozarab Valencia with its typical change of termination to ig via the Catalan language trapig Gandia 1536 trapitz de canyamel Mallorca 1466 4 has arrived to the other languages of the Iberian peninsula astrapiche 5 In the documents of the Duke of Gandia from the beginning of the fifteen century one can see the term trapig de canyamel as a synecdoche to indicate the whole village engenho 3 6 According to Herrera es de notar que antiguamente no auuia azucar ſino en Valencia note that in the old days there was no sugar except in Valencia 7 Valencian Country edit nbsp Trapiche Mill of traditional sugar in Cidade VelhaTo the start of the 15th century Oliva s Count mattered of Sicily the method of caring of the cane and the technical to extract the sugar with the aid of sicilians mestres sucrer A true Galceran of Vic gentleman of Xeresa built the first trapiche in Gandia 8 The 1433 count already four and to the end of the century fourteen 9 To the senyoria of the Monastery of Valldigna saw grow the revenue of his trapiche of 40 between 1434 and 1502 Temptatiues To enter the new culture to Castello were less successful 10 The culture of cane was the fact especially of the small nobility and of the bourgeoisie as the farmers were not very motivated to change lands of orchard in industrial culture The companies sucreres go to have to take in lease lands or increase proprietary bourgeoisie to happen to the culture of cane 10 To the second half of the 15th century Hug of Cardona and Gandia yielded the monopoly of the exploitation of the sugar to Gandia to the negociants of the Magna Societas Alemannorum of Ravensburg 3 In the year 1500 the sector gave work to some 500 people and 220 animals Pier Luigi de Borgia possessed three and Ausias March had one to Beniarjo 11 Many factors contributed to the decli of the trapiches and of the industry sucrera to Gandia To the XVI appeared the engine a more efficient and faster team It continued declining with the increase of the competition of Madeira of the Canary Islands and of the Antilles that had a climate more idoni 12 The expulsion of the moriscos the October 4 1609 was the fatal blow to an industry already in decli The moriscos were the main cultivadors of cane and the expert labour Whole villages remained empty Felip s the decree III of Castella was a disaster for the region and drive the house ducal to the ruin 8 The majority of the installations disappeared Today only remain some vestiges material of ancient trapiches and engines that with the course of the time were reformed and immaterial in the toponymy for example the Street trapiche to Gandia the Square trapiche to Miramar and the Career trapiche to Xeresa 8 In spite of this seems that today a lot of people forgot the past glorious of the industry sucrera to the ducat of Gandia 600 years ago 12 At the beginning of the fifteenth century the Conde Oil imported from Sicily method of cultivation of sugarcane and techniques to extract the cucre with the help of teachers Sucrers Sicilians A certain Galceran Vic Lord of Xeresa built the first trapig in Gandia citation needed In 1433 it already have four and the end of the fourteenth century citation needed A Member of the Monastery of Valldigna you saw revenue grow trapig its 40 between 1434 and 1502 tentative to introduce a new culture Castellon were less successful citation needed The culture of sugarcane was done mainly by the gentry and the bourgeoisie such as farmers were not very motivated to change land orchard culture industrial Sugar companies had to take land on lease or encourage owners to spend bourgeois culture cane citation needed In the second half of the fifteenth century Hug de Cardona Gandia and gave a monopoly of the operation of the sugar merchants of Gandia Magna Societas Alemannorum of Ravensburg citation needed Around 1500 the sector employed about 500 people and 220 animals Pedro Luis de Borja possessed three and Ausias March in had a Beniarjo citation needed Many factors contributed to the decline of the sugar industry and trapigs Gandia In XVI appeared ingenuity a computer faster and more efficient He continued declining with increased competition from Madeira the Canary Islands and the Antilles that had a climate more suitable citation needed The expulsion of the Moors on 4 October of 1609 was a fatal blow industry already in decline The Moors were the main cane growers and labor expert Whole villages were empty The decree of Philip III of Spain was a disaster for the region and lead to ruin the ducal house citation needed Most facilities disappeared Today there are only a few vestiges of old materials and trapigs Ingen with the course of time were reformed citation needed and intangible assets in the names for example Trapig Street Gandia Trapig Plaza in Miramar and Carrera Trapig in Xeresa However it seems that today many people forget the glorious past of the sugar industry in the duchy of Gandia 600 years ago citation needed Caribbean editCanarian precedents edit In the late 15th century the horizontal two roller engenho or trapiche transferred seamlessly from the Portuguese in the Madeira Islands to the Canary Islands just as the Castilians still struggled to control the Guanches the rebellious indigenous Canarians They were in fact the first coerced workers of the fledgling sugar industry on these islands As the Iberians colonized the archipelagos off the coast of West Africa they relocated here most of the Mediterranean agricultural industry making of these islands the center of technological advancement in the Atlantic World And in a matter of two decades after Christopher Columbus touched down on the Bahamas just across the ocean the trapiche followed European colonists to the Caribbean 13 The first stop was the island of Hispaniola Hispaniola Santo Domingo edit The trapiche s arrival to the Caribbean coincided with three crucial events in the early history of the Americas They were the dramatic decline of the indigenous population the arrival of the first enslaved Africans to the Americas and the sudden drop in the production of gold While large numbers of colonists sought to escape the ensuing desolation and migrated to settle and desolate in turn other territories those who stayed on Hispaniola turned to the sugar industry hustled at first by a mixture of enslaved indigenous people and Africans ladinos and bozales In a few more years as the indigenous population retrieved enslaved Blacks made up the bulk if not all of the coerced workers With the promise of personal wealth implied in the system of slavery and with the advice of Canarian experts colonists began establishing some types of engenhos as early as 1514 14 According to Cronistas de Indias Chroniclers of the Indies Bartolome de las Casas and Gonzalo Fernandez de Oviedo y Valdes it was Gonzales de Veloso also Gonzalez Veloso and Gonzalo de Vellosa who built in what today is San Cristobal the first two roller trapiche pulled by horses on Hispaniola 15 16 From there it turned up on the Island of San Juan Bautista Puerto Rico and later in Cuba 17 Three rollers edit Though most current examples of trapiches in the Spanish Caribbean are of the three rollers according to scholar Anthony R Stevens Acevedo the horizontal two roller trapiche was the type used in the Caribbean throughout the end of the 16th century As this piece of technology moved south to Tierra Firme South America the trapiche not only acquired a new roller but it also erected all three of them to become a more efficient instrument of the expanding sugar industry In this more elaborate shape it soon returned to the Caribbean as the backbone of the sugar engenho 14 South America editSugar cane industry edit nbsp Trapiche in Carache State of Trujillo Venezuela Nowadays the majority of the ingenios in Argentina or engenhos in Brazil use a trapiche to grind the sugarcane and extract its juice They used water vapor as a driving force for mechanisms In Latin America one can see small and transportable street trapiches handled by just one person They can be installed almost anywhere to produce fresh cane juice Its manufacture is artisanal having even wooden gears 18 Mining environment edit In Argentina Bolivia and Chile the term also applies to a type of mill used to reduce different kinds of minerals to dust 19 20 In the seventeenth century these facilities and the raw material ore wages the lease of the site and water buildings needed a considerable investment the major part of it held by wealthy colonial elite 19 Among the general mechanisms by which the Chilean economic life developed in the Colony the trapiches were a highly profitable investment On the other hand the perception of metals as means of payment for its use offered a source of profitability as they were connected to the commercial circuit of gold but outside the margins of local production centers Outside South America this type of mill might be known as Chilean mill References edit Merriam Webster trapiche Retrieved June 29 2023 trapetum Pons Latein Deutsches Worterbuch a b c Verlinden Charles Schmitt Eberhard 1986 1 Die mittelalterlichen Ursprunge der europaischen Expansion Dokumente zur Geschichte der europaischen Expansion Wiesbaden Otto Harrassowitz Verlag p 169 ISBN 9783406303722 Corominas trapig en Gandia 1536 y trapitz de canyamel en Mallorca 1466 Diccionari catala valencia balear dcvb iec cat Retrieved June 29 2023 Hug de Cardona editat per Frederic Aparisi Romero III Col leccio diplomatica 1407 1482 Fonts Historiques Valencianes Valencia Universitat de Valencia 2011 pagina 1058 ss ISBN 9788437083025 Antonio de Herrera y Tordesillas 1601 Historia General De Los Hechos De Los Castellanos En Las Islas Itierra Firme Del Mar Oceano Decada Segvnda Por Juan Flamenco p 105 a b c Enginys i trapigs de sucre de la Safor March 14 2011 Retrieved June 29 2023 Trapigs de la Safor Google My Maps Retrieved June 29 2023 a b Miquel Barcelo El feudalisme comptat i debatut Formacio i expansio del feudalisme catala Valencia Universitat de Valencia 2003 pagines 509 i ss ISBN 9788437056715 La Gandia dels Borja Els Borja web de l Institut Internacional d Estudis Borgians IIEB consulta el 12 de novembre de 2013 Retrieved June 29 2023 a b Andrea Gonzalez Garrigas Entrevista a Ana Labarta sobre la canya de sucre Catedratica d Estudis Arabs i Islamics i professora del Departament de Filologia Catalana de la Facultat de Filologia Traduccio i Comunicacio de la Universitat de Valencia de Viera y Clavijo Jose 1991 Historia de Canarias T 2 Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Islas Canarias Viceconsejeria de Cultura y Deportes Gobierno de Canarias p 420 ISBN 8487137962 a b R Stevens Acevedo Anthony January 2013 The Machines That Milled the Sugar Canes The Horizontal Double Roller Mills in the First Sugar Plantations of the Americas Academia edu 81 de las Casas Bartolome 1876 Historia de las Indias escrita Madrid M Ginesta p 28 Gonzalo Fernandez de Oviedo Valdes Francisco de Solano Fermin del Pino 1982 America y la Espana del siglo XVI homenaje a Gonzalo Fernandez de Oviedo cronista de Indias en el V centenario de su nacimento Madrid 1478 Editorial CSIC CSIC Press 1982 ISBN 9788400051532 Christian Daniels Joseph Needham Nicholas K Menzies 1996 Science and Civilisation in China Volume 6 Biology and Biological Technology Part 3 Agro Industries and Forestry Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press p 317 ISBN 0521419999 Trapiches En Madera Don Pedro Pitalito Huila trapichesenmadera jimdofree com Retrieved June 29 2023 a b Paola Raquel Figueroa Trapiches i ingenios mineros en la Mendoza colonial Argentina segles XVI XVII i XVIII castella Tiempo y Espacio any 17 Vol 20 2008 pagines 84 97 ISSN 0716 9671 trapiche Diccionario de la lengua espanola 22a edicio 2001Bibliography editFrancisco Pons Moncho Trapig La produccion de azucar en la Safor siglos XIV XVIII Publicaciones del Instituto Duque Real Alonso el Viejo Ajuntament de Gandia 1979 127 pagines ISBN 978 8450034769 Fernando Nuez Vinals La herencia arabe en la agricultura y el bienestar de occidente in Spanish Valencia Universitat Politecnica de Valencia 2002 445 pagines Miquel Barcelo El feudalisme comptat i debatut Formacio i expansio del feudalisme catala Valencia Universitat de Valencia 2003 ISBN 9788437056715 Sucre amp Borja La canyamel dels Ducs Del trapig a la taula Cataleg de l Exposicio Gandia Casa de la Cultura Marques de Gonzalez de Quiros 2000External links edit nbsp Media related to Trapiche at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trapiche amp oldid 1174533456, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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