La Carolina was formerly the capital of the
Intendencia of the
Nuevas Poblaciones de Andalucía y Sierra Morena founded in this formerly remote and desolate area of the
Sierra Morena in 1767 by King
Charles III. The object of the plan, drawn up by his minister
Pablo de Olavide, administrator of
Andalusia, was to populate the area around
Despeñaperros gorge. Known as "the gateway to Andalusia", this pass was a notorious point on the
Cádiz-to-
Madrid route for bandits. Other towns of note in this plan were La Carlota and La Luisiana. The
Intendencia administrative division was wrapped up in 1813. Six thousand Catholic settlers arrived from Belgium, Germany, Austria and Switzerland to take advantage of the generous offers of land and livestock being made to colonizers (five chickens, five goats, five sheep, two cows, and a sow per family). With a few years, about half of them had died from illness or gone home: the rest gradually lost their national identities over the years, and took on the language and customs of their host country. One can still find people in this area with Germanic surnames such as Eisman, Minch, Clap, Smidt, Ming and Kobler. The town's relatively recent history, as well as its northern European target population, explains its unusually regular, colonial-style grid layout, with wide avenues, as opposed to the more common winding narrow streets typical of the
Moorish-patterned towns in Andalusia.
Towns of the Intendencia Became later part of Jaén Province •
Aldeaquemada •
Arquillos •
Carboneros •
La Carolina •
Concepción de Almuradiel •
Guarromán •
Miranda del Rey, a village of Santa Elena municipality •
Magaña-
Montizón, Magaña is a village of Santa Elena municipality •
Navas de Tolosa, a village of La Carolina municipality •
Santa Elena ====Became later part of
Córdoba Province==== •
La Carlota •
La Luisiana •
Fuente Palmera •
San Sebastián de los Ballesteros ==Notable people==