Arab period In the time of the Arabs it was called
Ellerina, a place contested between Arabs and Christians. It was definitively occupied in the year 1243 by
Pelayo Pérez Correa, master of the
Order of Santiago, to whom
Ferdinand III of Castile had entrusted the reconquest of
Sierra Morena.
Order of Santiago The settlement was given to the
Order of Santiago, to provide for its defense and resettlement. The masters of the order granted
Fueros in 1297. The tradition emerged that the masters of the order used Llerena as their temporal residence. The most noteworthy masters who resided there were: • The prince Don Fadrique (1342–1358), half-brother of
King Peter I of Castile. • Don Pedro Fernández Cabeza de Vaca (1382–1387) • Don Enrique García Fernández of Villagarcía (1385–1387) • Lorenzo Suárez de Figueroa (1387–1409), master buried in the Church of our Lady of Grenada • Don
Alonso de Cárdenas (1480–1493), last of the masters of the
Order of Santiago. His sepulchre is also in the city. Llerena was the habitual residence of the Masters of the
Order of Santiago, and this fact favored the city in the 15th century, when it became capital of the
Priory of the Hostal San Marcos de León. For this reason it was the most important center of the territory, which until then had been Reina. So much was its increase in importance that it became the most important administrative center of the
Leon province of the order of Santiago in
Extremadura, the headquarters of the Maestral order table, and the principal town of the more than 30 towns governed from Llerena and dependent upon the Prior of the Order of San Marcos in León. In the year 1340, King
Alfonso XI of Castile presided over the
Cortes in Llerena. In 1383, Pedro Fernández celebrated the General Chapter of the Order of Santiago in Llerena, with the assistance of all of the Order's commanders. The Master of the Order Lorenzo Suárez de Figueroa received the license to hold the San Mateo fair on September 21, built the chapel of the Trinity in the Church of Granada, built the bastimentos, and finished the building designed to be the Casa Maestral or the convent of Santa Elena. Enrique García Fernández of Villagarcía built the castle in the neighboring town of
Villagarcía de la Torre, and became the patron of the chancel of the Church of Santa Maria, and decided to be buried in it. Alonso de Cárdenas built the Church of Santiago on the site occupied by the
shrine of Saint Peter, and gave to the walled enclosure some of the most important gates of the city. Having once been a Muslim territory, its reconquest produced a repopulation by Leonese, Basque and Cantabrian families. But an important core
Jewish population also emerged within the city, and made it a prosperous city with high economic and cultural achievements. A peaceful coexistence emerged among the three cultures: Christians, Jews and Muslims. In the year 1479, the Jewish leader Rabí Mayr persuaded
Isabella to remove the ban on Jews holding fairs and markets that existed in the Kingdom of Castile. This improved the economic levels of the city and allowed creation of the school of translators. At this time there were 600 Jewish families in Llerena, who lived in the vicinity of the synagogue (Chapel of Santa Catalina). In 1490, the final Chapter General of the Order of Santiago was held, started in
Uclés. It was called by the order's last master before that role was incorporated into the power of the Spanish Crown. After
Isabella signed the Decree of Expulsion of the Jews in 1492, 125 Jewish families remained in Llerena and became Jewish converts to Christianity.
Inquisition Court In 1508, the Tribunal del Santo Oficio of the
Inquisition court was instituted. Obtained by the influence of the degree Luis Zapata, Director and Advisor to
Isabella, it was aided by the existence of a Jewish population in lower Extremadura. It was the third Court of Spain, as regards the extension of its jurisdiction. It occupied 42,260 square kilometers, and included the bishoprics of
Ciudad Rodrigo,
Piacenza,
Coria, and
Badajoz. Occupying three headquarters in Llerena, the Priory Palace in Zapatería Street, the House maestral Street La Prison and finally, until its abolition in 1834, Palace of the Zapata, now justice in la Corredera Street today. Its period of maximum splendor was in the 16th century when it had seven convents, as well as a great cultural activity. During this century there was a large population increase that had only decreased by a certain amount of emigration to the New World, becoming the second largest population centre of Extremadura in 1591, behind the capital of Badajoz. At the end of the century it had 8,300 inhabitants. In 1594, the census of population in the provinces and marches of the
Crown of Castile in the 16th century was part of the
Leon province and had 2,066 neighbors, including the suburbs of Llerena such as
Maguilla. In the year 1640, due to the growth it had achieved,
Philip IV granted Llerena the title of City.
Decline By the end of the 17th century the city's decline had begun, influenced by several factors: the political crisis in the
Spanish Empire, war with Portugal, few suitable local rulers, the
Moorish expulsion and successive plagues which kept it isolated from the outside during the quarantine. In the 18th century the places of
Higuera de Llerena in 1786 and
Maguilla in 1749 achieved independence from the municipality. They had previously belonged to its City Council.
Independence During the
War of Independence (1808–1814), on the occasion of the Battle of Cantalgallo in 1810, produced a large destruction of the city. There were many buildings damaged and part of the archive was destroyed, and served as the seat to the chivalry, large number of works of art were plundered, as part of the
altar of the Church of our Lady of Granada
Zurbarán. The fall of the old disappeared the Order of San Marcos in León, ceased to hold office in Llerena the Governor of the province and the party and decreed the abolition of the
Holy Office in 1834 of the
Inquisition. Then this city was in northeastern
Extremadura and 1834 was capital and headquarters of the judicial district of Llerena.
Schism After the Decree of suspension of the religious jurisdiction maintained centuries the
military orders, Llerena produced the "
schism", caused by the clergyman Don Francisco Maesso's jurisdiction of the
bishopric of Badajoz. In just over a year there were several altercations that subsided when
Alfonso XII to the throne, leading to the disappearance of that decree for Llerena.
Reposessions The successive ground and building confiscations produced a great misfortune for the municipal economy of Llerena and to the rest of the neighborhood. Of
Juan Álvarez Mendizábal of 1837 and
Madoz in 1855, it was left almost without resources to the municipality of Llerena. He lost the
dehesas of their property that he had maintained and exploited for centuries by providing significant benefits for the municipal coffers. Some convents, such as those dedicated to
Santa Isabel,
San Francisco,
La Merced,
San Sebastian, and
La Concepción disappeared, leaving only the
Santa Clara convent. During the 19th century, some industries that remained in the city together with the construction of the railway line
Mérida–
Sevilla, in the second half of the century until its conclusion in the last section in 1885 between Llerena and
El Pedroso, contributing to the economic progress of the region. ==Climate and geography==