Ferrol, Spain

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This article refers to Ferrol, Galicia. For other uses, see Ferrol (disambiguation).
City & Naval Station of Ferrol
El Miguel de Cervantes in El Ferrol - 1943
Location in Galicia, Spain and Europe
Coordinates :
43°28′N, 8°15′W
Time zone :
UTC+1/SummerUTC+2
Flag Coat of arms
Flag of Ferrol
Escudo Ferrol
Settlement History
Fishing Village 1st century BC - Roman Empire
Christian Outpost 8th century - House of Asturias
Royal Arsenal 16th century - House of Austria
Royal Dockyard 18th century - House of Bourbon
Maritime Department Capital
Vickers Shipyard 20th century - House of Bourbon
Outer-Port 21st century - House of Bourbon
Basic information
Area 81.9  km² City
19,214   km² Metrop. Area
Population 241,528 Ferrolterra (04/2005)
77,859 Ferrol City Centre
163,669 Ferrol Borough Region
241,528 Ferrol Metropolitan Area
Density 942.06/km²
Ferrolterra Ferrol, Eume & Ortegal
Government
NUTS-Code ES4
Country Spain
Region Galicia
Subdivisions 21 Boroughs
Governing Mayor Vicente Irisarri since 2007
Governing Parties PSOE / IU
Website http://www.ferrol-concello.es

Ferrol is an Atlantic-facing city in the Province of A Coruña in Galicia in north-western Spain. Today, is best known for the Navantia shipbuilding yards and for having been the capital of the Spanish Navy's Maritime Department of the North since the time of the early Bourbons of Spain. Before that, in the 17th century, Ferrol was the most important arsenal in Europe. The enormous cranes, to foot of the sea, are part of the landscape of Ferrol for many years. Because the native of Ferrol if of something they know, it is of building ships. That has been their main activity from half-filled of the XVII century and it is noticed there by the quantity of big built ships. The city was the birthplace of the Spanish General Francisco Franco in 1892, and was officially known as El Ferrol del Caudillo from 1938 to 1982. It was also the birth place of the founder of the Spanish socialist party PSOE, Pablo Iglesias, in 1850. Ferrol has a population of 77,859 and its metropolitan area (i.e., the urban area plus all the satellite towns known as Ferrolterra) has a population of over 241,528 (2007).

Contents

[edit] Ferrol

(Classification of the Outer and Inner Ports of Ferrol)

Note: For those who want to read further about the, non-military, "Ferrol-San Cibrao Port Authority" which covers a substantial part of the Galician coast including all its ports and lighthouses from San Cibrao to Ferrol, it is advisable to visit the external official link which follows: (English) [4]

[edit] History

In Roman times a fishing port existed in the area of Ferrol during the 1st century BC. After the fall of Rome the whole Iberian peninsula, including Ferrol, was occupied by the Vandals and then the Visigoths. After the 8th century AD Arab invasion, Ferrol was a Christian outpost north of the Islamic Emirate of Spain. In the 14th century Henry II gave the town to the powerful Andrade family. [5]

The Spanish Armada (1588)
The Spanish Armada (1588)

During the reign of Phillip II parts of the existing fortifications at the entrance of the estuary were built; some of these still exist today as they were in the late-16th century, when the Spanish Armada sought refuge locally, to protect themselves from the rough Atlantic waters they encountered, when they were on their military mission to persuade the English to return to the Catholic faith. At that time the town was considered more important as a Royal Arsenal than as a safe harbour. [6]

With the arrival of the Bourbons in the 18th century, the City and Port of Ferrol became a leading naval centre, and for the first time, the immense strategic importance of the port was appreciated. Ferrol was made Capital of the Maritime Department of the North, formed under Ferdinand VI and Charles III for the defence of the Spanish Colonial Empire in America. Rapid and well-planned improvements followed, and the position of Ferrol was made almost unassailable from the sea, the difficulties of disembarking troops on its precipitous coast being heightened by a renewed line of fortresses and newly built castles, including San Carlos.

The Royal Dockyards of A Graña and Ferrol, were built between 1726-1783 and produced ships protected with copper sheets from the rolling mills of Xubia.[7] In 1772, The Spanish Royal Academy of Naval Engineers of Ferrol was created -- the first such academy in Spain.

Ferrol was virtually impossible to blockade in the age of sail, as strong westerly winds would take any blockading force away along the treacherous north coast of Spain where they had no safe haven. The geography of Ferrol meant that an entire Spanish fleet could slip out on a single tide. By the time the British were able to resume the blockade, the Spanish would be safely away and out to sea. (By contrast, British forces blockading Cadiz could seek refuge at Gibraltar, and those blockading the French naval port of Brest could seek refuge in Torbay. The British could then quickly return when the weather changed before too many of the blockaded ships had time to reach open water via the narrow channels).

Despite these advantages, a decline set during the reign of Charles IV, and in 1800, after the defences had been reduced, a British fleet of 109 vessels landed troops on the beach of Doniños to take the Castle of San Felipe. This attack on Ferrol took place during the Napoleonic wars in Europe, when the Spaniards were expected to take side with the French, as they did in the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805. Although only equipped with meagre artillery, the castle's small defence force under the command of Count Donadio together with a sizable number of volunteer citizens of Ferrol, successfully resisted the attack and the fleet withdrew. [8]

After the unsuccessful attempt to capture Ferrol in 1800, the British Prime Minister William Pitt said in the House of Commons that "If Great Britain had a naval station so easy to defend as Ferrol, due to its location, it would have been surrounded by a thick silver wall" [9].

The alliance with England during the Peninsular War of 1808-14 failed to prevent the deterioration in the town’s fortunes. The arsenals and fortresses were abandoned and they were easily occupied by the French in 1809. [10] (The English author C. S. Forester (1899-1966) immortalized Ferrol in his Horatio Hornblower novels when he decided that this was the Naval Station where his imaginary Royal Navy Officer was taken as a prisoner of war when captured by the Spanish during the Napoleonic Wars).

Under Ferdinand VII, Ferrol became a “dead” town, losing its title of capital. New activities sprang up, however, in the mid-19th century, during the administration of the Marquis de Molina, Spanish Minister for Naval affairs, which included amongst other political successes the construction and launch in the Royal Dockyards of Ferrol, of Spain's first steam propelled ship in 1858.

Ten years after the Spanish-American War of 1898 where the Spaniards lost Cuba and the Philippines, the Maura Government, in an attempt to restore the Spanish Navy and Spanish shipbuilding industry hired to the Spanish Society for Naval Construction (whose major investors were the British firms: John Brown, Vickers and Armstrong) the shipbuilding yards, workshops, foundries and dry docks in Ferrol.

For a period of sixteen years, all the technicians were exclusively British, and the situation was not altered till 1925 when the management was taken over by Spanish engineers, as one of the new policies introduced by the then newly created government, including ministers both civil and military, of the dictator Miguel Primo de Rivera (19231930).

In sight of the outbreak of a civil war, and because there was fear of social unrest in the naval station, the Foreign Office in London, organized a ship to repatriate all the remaining British citizens and on July 22, 1936. The HMS Witch (D89), captained by B.A. Warburton-Lee, departed from Ferrol back to Britain. The outbreak of the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) meant that the shipbuilding yards, workshops, foundries and dry docks in Ferrol were taken over by the state and fully nationalized in 1945 under the name "Bazàn", later renamed "IZAR", and from January 2005, Navantia. The town has also been, for centuries, the birthplace of national and international personalities: men and women of letters, statesmen, politicians, and others, amongst them Francisco Franco, after whom the city was officially known as El Ferrol del Caudillo from 1938 to 1982 [11]. The end of the dictatorship and the arrival of democracy in 1978 did not help Ferrol, [12] and from 1982 to the early 1990s, the city confronted numerous problems due to a decline in the naval sector. The beginning of the new millennium however, has been a time of economic expansion and prosperity in general. A new motorway and an outer-port [13] have been recently built; making the communications by land and sea, with the rest of the world, much easier and faster.

Ferrol, the most important Naval Station in the north of Spain [14] , with its well sheltered harbour and busy port, together with the Navantia shipyards seems to be flourishing once again, and with it, the whole heavily populated district of As Mariñas and Ferrolterra. [15] During June 2008, Ferrol will be host to the large NATO Maritime Exercise Loyal Mariner. RN

[edit] Climate

Weather averages for Ferrol, Spain
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 13 (56) 14 (57) 15 (60) 16 (61) 18 (64) 20 (69) 22 (71) 23 (73) 22 (71) 19 (66) 16 (60) 14 (57) 17 (59)
Average low °C (°F) 9 (47) 9 (47) 10 (49) 10 (50) 12 (54) 14 (58) 16 (61) 16 (62) 16 (60) 13 (56) 11 (52) 10 (49) 10 (53)
Precipitation cm (inches) 8.38 (3.3) 5.61 (2.21) 5.18 (2.04) 6.98 (2.75) 5.1 (2.01) 3.08 (1.21) 2.37 (0.93) 2.79 (1.1) 4.82 (1.9) 10.36 (4.08) 9.95 (3.92) 8.32 (3.28) 72.94 (28.73)
Source: weather.uk.msn.com[1] Dec 2007

[edit] Economy

  1. Primary IndustriesAgriculture (Horse Breeding), Aquaculture (Fish Farming), Fishing (Specializing in the Atlantic Shoals), Important Mines (ENDESA), NTFP (Forest Harvest), Quarries and Timber.
  2. Secondary IndustriesShipbuilding, Ship Engines, Turbines (Wind Mills and Ships), Electrical Equipment, Ironworks, Fashion (Textiles), Food (Canned Fish) and Wood-Made Products.
  3. Tertiary IndustriesMercantile, Fishing and Military Ports, Restaurants, News Media (Ferrol TV/Diario de Ferrol), Hotels (Barceló Almirante/Pazo Libunca), Leisure and Tourism (World Surf Competitions, Popular Transatlantic Steamships Stop), Consulting, Health Care/Hospitals (Arquitecto Marcide Hospital Complex), Education (Schools, Colleges/ESENGRA and Universities/UNED/PERITOS) and Public Utilities, Franchises (main brand names and designer label's shops), Wholesale (Navy Suppliers/Anton-Martin) and Retail Industries (El Corte Inglés/Alcampo).
  4. Quaternary Sector IndustriesNaval, Electrical and Mechanical Equipment together with New Technologies (Galician Centre for Innovations and Services CIS-FERROL).

[edit] Sister Cities

These are the official sister cities of Ferrol:

Flag of Australia Adelaide, Australia (2008)
Flag of Spain Mondoñedo, Spain (2004)

[edit] See also

Visit Ferrol this Summer Festival August (1934)
Visit Ferrol this Summer Festival August (1934)

[edit] Notable Galicians born in Ferrol

[edit] Life, culture and industry in Ferrol

[edit] History of Galicia and Ferrol

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[edit] External links

Partial view of the Navantia Shipyards in Ferrol - In the middle ground of the picture an oil tanker is being repaired - Ferrolterra
Partial view of the Navantia Shipyards in Ferrol - In the middle ground of the picture an oil tanker is being repaired - Ferrolterra

Coordinates: 43°28′N 8°15′W / 43.467, -8.25