It was founded in 1255 with the name
Villa Real ('Royal Town') under the auspices of
Alfonso X, who granted it a charter that followed the model of
Cuenca's. It was not founded from scratch, but founded over Pozuelo de San Gil, a hamlet belonging to the land of
Alarcos. An independent royal demesne enclave embedded within the dominion of the
Military Order of Calatrava, repopulation struggled initially. Weary of the influence of Villa Real, the masters of the Order of Calatrava established a rival market in nearby
Miguelturra seeking to disrupt the town's economic activity.
Jews soon settled in Villa Real, with the existence of a middle-sized jewry already documented by 1290, only three decades after the foundation of Villa Real. Friction between Villa Real and the Order of Calatrava reached its climax towards 1323, with an armed conflict between the two parties. Villa Real hosted the Cortes of Castile in 1346. The local
aljama was by and large dismantled upon the
1391 pogroms. The endogenous element of
antisemitism was underpinned by the Jews' deals with the Calatravans throughout the 14th century and their local reputation as loan sharks.
Juan II of Castile granted
Villa Real the status of city in 1420, thus becoming
Ciudad Real ('Royal City'). The city most probably did not have more than 2000 inhabitants by the time and despite having celebrated Cortes once, the dominant city in the area was still
Almagro. After the unification of the Iberian kingdoms under the
Catholic Monarchs, Ciudad Real became the capital of the in 1691. This fact favoured its economic development which was shown by the construction of several important buildings. The
1755 Lisbon earthquake destroyed many of these buildings. In 1809, during the
Peninsular War, French troops defeated the Spanish army and occupied the town, using the local hospital as their headquarters and barracks. Following the creation of the
province of Ciudad Real as per the
1833 territorial division, the status of provincial capital of Ciudad Real was challenged by the cities of Almagro and
Manzanares, with a similar population by the mid-nineteenth century. However the initiatives intending to take the provincial capital out of Ciudad Real did not succeed. Much of the centre was destroyed during the
Spanish Civil War. == Geography ==