Prehistory The first known human settlements in what is now Catalonia were at the beginning of the
Middle Paleolithic. The oldest known trace of human occupation is a
mandible found in
Banyoles, described as pre-
Neanderthal, that is, some 200,000 years old; other sources suggest it to be only about one third that old. There are important remains from the
Epipalaeolithic or
Mesolithic, dated between 8000 and 5000BC. The most important sites from these eras, all excavated in the region of
Moianès, are the Balma del Gai (Epipaleolithic) and the Balma de l'Espluga. The
Neolithic era began in Catalonia around 5000BC, although the population was slower to develop fixed settlements thanks to the abundance of woods, which allowed the continuation of a fundamentally
hunter-gatherer culture, for example, La Draga at Banyoles, an "early Neolithic village which dates from the end of the 6th millenniumBC". The
Bronze Age occurred between 1800 and 700BC. There were some known settlements in the
low Segre zone. The Bronze Age coincided with the arrival of the
Indo-Europeans through the
Urnfield Culture, whose successive waves of migration began around 1200BC, and they were responsible for the creation of the first proto-urban settlements. Around the middle of the 7th centuryBC, the
Iron Age arrived in Catalonia.
Pre-Roman and Roman period ,
Roman aqueduct in
Tarragona In pre-Roman times, the area that is now Catalonia was populated by the
Iberians. The Iberians tribes – the
Ilergetes,
Indigetes and
Lacetani (Cerretains) – also maintained relations with the peoples of the Mediterranean. Some urban agglomerations became relevant, including Ilerda (
Lleida) inland, Hibera (perhaps
Amposta or
Tortosa) or Indika (
Ullastret). Coastal trading colonies were established by the
ancient Greeks, who settled around the
Gulf of Roses, in Emporion (
Empúries) and
Roses in the
8th century BC. After the Carthaginian defeat by the
Roman Republic, the north-east of Iberia became the first to come under Roman rule and became part of
Hispania, the westernmost part of the
Roman Empire.
Tarraco (modern
Tarragona) was one of the most important Roman cities in Hispania and the capital of the
province of
Tarraconensis. Other important cities of the Roman period are Ilerda (Lleida), Dertosa (Tortosa), Gerunda (Girona) as well as the ports of Empuriæ (former Emporion) and Barcino (
Barcelona). As for the rest of Hispania,
Latin law was granted to all cities under the reign of
Vespasian (69–79AD), while
Roman citizenship was granted to all free men of the empire by the
Edict of Caracalla in 212AD (Tarraco, the capital, was already a colony of
Roman law since 45BC). It was a rich agricultural province (olive oil, wine,
wheat), and the first centuries of the Empire saw the construction of roads (the most important being the
Via Augusta, parallel to Mediterranean coastline) and infrastructure like
aqueducts. Conversion to
Christianity, attested in the 3rdcentury, was completed in urban areas in the 4thcentury. Although Hispania remained under Roman rule and did not fall under the rule of
Vandals,
Suebi and
Alans in the 5thcentury, the main cities suffered frequent sacking and some
deurbanization.
Middle Ages After the fall of the
Western Roman Empire, the area was conquered by the
Visigoths and was ruled as part of the
Visigothic Kingdom for almost two and a half centuries. In 718, it came under
Muslim control and became part of
Al-Andalus, a province of the
Umayyad Caliphate. From the conquest of Roussillon in 760, to the
conquest of Barcelona in 801, the
Frankish empire took control of the area between Septimania and the
Llobregat river from the Muslims and created heavily militarised, self-governing
counties. These counties formed part of the historiographically known as the
Gothic and
Hispanic Marches, a
buffer zone in the south of the Frankish Empire in the northeast of the Iberian Peninsula, to act as a defensive barrier against further invasions from Al-Andalus. (left),
Petronilla of Aragon (right) and their son Alfonso II of Aragon and I of Barcelona (bottom), dynastic union of the
Crown of Aragon These counties came under the rule of the
counts of Barcelona, who were Frankish
vassals nominated by the emperor of the Franks, to whom they were
feudatories (801–988). At the end of the 9thcentury, the Count of Barcelona
Wilfred the Hairy (878–897) made his titles hereditary and thus founded the dynasty of the
House of Barcelona, which reigned in Catalonia until 1410. In 988
Borrell II, Count of Barcelona, did not recognise the new French king
Hugh Capet as his king, evidencing the loss of dependency from Frankish rule and confirming his successors (from
Ramon Borrell I onwards) as independent of the Capetian crown. At the beginning of eleventh century the Catalan counties experienced an important process of feudalisation, however, the efforts of church's sponsored
Peace and Truce Assemblies and the intervention of
Ramon Berenguer I, count of Barcelona (1035–1076) in the negotiations with the rebel nobility resulted in the partial restoration of the comital authority under the new feudal order. To fulfill that purpose, Ramon Berenguer began the modification of the legislation in the written
Usages of Barcelona, being one of the first European compilations of feudal law. The earliest known use of the name "
Catalonia" for these counties dates to 1117. In 1137,
Ramon Berenguer IV, Count of Barcelona decided to accept
King Ramiro II of Aragon's proposal to receive the
Kingdom of Aragon and to marry his daughter
Petronila, establishing the dynastic union of the County of Barcelona with Aragon, creating a composite monarchy later known as the
Crown of Aragon and making the Catalan counties that were vassalized or merged with the County of Barcelona into a
principality of the Aragonese Crown. During the reign of his son
Alphons, in 1173, Catalonia was regarded as a legal entity for the first time, while the Usages of Barcelona were compiled in the process to turn them into the law and custom of Catalonia (
Consuetudinem Cathalonie), being considered one of the "milestones of
Catalan political identity". In 1258, by means of the
Treaty of Corbeil James I of Aragon renounced his family rights and dominions in
Occitania, while the king of France,
Louis IX, formally relinquished to any historical claim of feudal lordship he might have over the Catalan counties. This treaty confirmed, from French point of view, the independence of the Catalan counties already established the previous three centuries. As a coastal land, Catalonia became the base of the Aragonese Crown's maritime forces, which spread the power of the Crown in the Mediterranean, turning Barcelona into a powerful and wealthy city. In the period of 1164–1410, new territories, the
Kingdom of Valencia, the
Kingdom of Majorca, the
Kingdom of Sardinia, the
Kingdom of Sicily, and, briefly, the
Duchies of
Athens and
Neopatras, were incorporated into the dynastic domains of the
House of Aragon. The expansion was accompanied by a great development of the Catalan trade, creating an extensive trade network across the Mediterranean which competed with those of the maritime republics of
Genoa and
Venice. At the same time, the
Principality of Catalonia developed a complex institutional and political system based on the concept of a pact between the
estates of the realm and the king. The legislation had to be passed by the
Catalan Courts (
Corts Catalanes), one of the first parliamentary bodies of Europe that, after 1283, officially obtained the power to pass legislation with the monarch. The Courts were composed of the three estates organized into "arms" (
braços), were presided over by the monarch, and approved the
Catalan constitutions, which established a compilation of rights for the inhabitants of the Principality. In order to collect general taxes, the Catalan Courts of 1359 established a permanent representative body, known as the
Generalitat, which gained considerable political power over the next centuries. . The Principality of Catalonia appears in light green. The domains of the Aragonese Crown were severely affected by the
Black Death pandemic and by later outbreaks of the
plague. Between 1347 and 1497 Catalonia lost 37percent of its population. In 1410, the last reigning monarch of the House of Barcelona, King
Martin I died without surviving descendants. Under the
Compromise of Caspe (1412), the representatives of the kingdoms of Aragon, Valencia and the Principality of Catalonia appointed
Ferdinand from the Castilian
House of Trastámara as King of the Crown of Aragon. During the reign of his son,
John II, the persistent economic crisis and social and political tensions in the Principality led to the
Catalan Civil War (1462–1472) and the
War of the Remences (1462–1486) that left Catalonia exhausted. The
Sentencia Arbitral de Guadalupe (1486) liberated the
remença peasants from the feudal "
evil customs". In the later Middle Ages,
Catalan literature flourished in Catalonia proper and in the kingdoms of Majorca and Valencia, with such remarkable authors as the philosopher
Ramon Llull, the Valencian poet
Ausiàs March, and
Joanot Martorell, author of the novel
Tirant lo Blanch, published in 1490.
Modern era (1608)
Ferdinand II of Aragon, the son of John II, and queen
Isabella I of Castile were married in 1469, later taking the title the
Catholic Monarchs; subsequently, this event was traditionally seen as the first step towards a unified Spain. At this time, though united by marriage, the Crown of
Castile and the states of the Crown of Aragon remained distinct polities, each keeping its own institutions, parliaments, laws, jurisdictions, and currency. Castile commissioned expeditions to the
Americas and benefited from the riches acquired in the
Spanish colonization of the Americas, but, in time, also carried the main burden of military expenses of the united Spanish kingdoms. After Isabella's death, Ferdinand II personally ruled both crowns. By virtue of descent from his maternal grandparents, Ferdinand and Isabella, in 1516
Charles I of Spain became the first king to rule the Crowns of Castile and Aragon simultaneously by his own right. Following the death of his paternal (
House of Habsburg) grandfather,
Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor, he was also elected
Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, in 1519. '' (7 June 1640), one of the main events of the Reaper's War. Painted in 1910 Over the next few centuries, the Principality of Catalonia was generally on the losing side of a series of wars that led steadily to an increased centralization of power in Spain. However, between the 16th and 18th centuries, the participation of the political community in the local and the general Catalan government grew (thus consolidating its constitutional system), while the kings remained absent, represented by a
viceroy. Tensions between Catalan institutions and the monarchy began to arise. The large and burdensome presence of the Spanish royal army in the Principality due to the
Franco-Spanish War led to an uprising of peasants, provoking the
Reapers' War (1640–1652), which saw Catalonia rebel, briefly as a
republic led by the president of the Generalitat,
Pau Claris with French help against the Spanish Crown for overstepping Catalonia's rights during the
Thirty Years' War. Within a brief period France took full control of Catalonia. Most of Catalonia was reconquered by the Spanish monarchy but Catalan rights were mostly recognized.
Roussillon and half of Cerdanya was lost to France by the
Treaty of the Pyrenees (1659). The most significant conflict concerning the governing monarchy was the
War of the Spanish Succession (1701–1715), which began when the childless
Charles II of Spain, the last Spanish Habsburg, died without an heir in 1700. Charles II had chosen
Philip V of Spain from the French
House of Bourbon. The Principality of Catalonia, like the other states of the Crown of Aragon, rose up in support of the Austrian Habsburg pretender
Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor, in his claim for the Spanish throne as Charles III of Spain. The fight between the houses of Bourbon and Habsburg for the Spanish Crown split Spain and Europe. After a series of advances and stalemates between the two sides, geopolitical changes in Europe led to peace. Philip V was internationally recognized as king of Spain by the
Treaty of Utrecht (1713). In July 1713 the Junta de Braços (parliamentary assembly) of Catalonia opted to unilaterally remain in the war to protect Catalan constitutions and lives from Bourbon punishment, beginning a separate conflict known as the
War of the Catalans (1713–1714). The
siege and capitulation of Barcelona (11 September 1714) ended Catalan resistance. In retaliation for the betrayal, and inspired by the French model, Philip enacted the
Nueva Planta decrees (1707, 1715 and 1716), forcibly incorporating the realms of the Crown of Aragon, including the Principality of Catalonia in 1716, as provinces of Castile, terminating their status as separate states along with their parliaments, institutions and
public laws, within a French-style centralized and
absolutist kingdom of Spain. After the War of the Spanish Succession, the assimilation of the Crown of Aragon in the Castilian Crown through the Nueva Planta Decrees was the first step in the creation of the Spanish
nation state. These nationalist policies, sometimes aggressive, and still in force, have been and are the seed of repeated territorial conflicts within the state, although, a survey of language usage in 1807, commissioned by
Napoleon, indicates that, except in the royal courts, Spanish was absent from everyday life. In the second half of the 17th century and the 18th century (excluding the parentheses of the Succession War and the post-war instability) Catalonia carried out a successful process of economic growth and
proto-industrialization, reinforced in the late quarter of the century when Castile's trade monopoly with American colonies ended.
Late modern history (1809),
Peninsular War against Napoleon At the beginning of the nineteenth century, Catalonia was severely affected by the
Napoleonic Wars. In 1808, it was occupied by French troops; the resistance against the occupation eventually developed into the
Peninsular War. The rejection of French dominion was institutionalized with the creation of "juntas" (councils) who, remaining loyal to the Bourbons, exercised the sovereignty and representation of the territory due to the disappearance of the old institutions. In 1810, Napoleon took direct control of Catalonia, creating the Government of Catalonia under the rule of
Marshall Augereau, and making Catalan briefly an official language again. Between 1812 and 1814, Catalonia was annexed to France. The French troops evacuated Catalan territory at the end of 1814. After the Bourbon restoration in Spain and the death of the absolutist king
Ferdinand VII (1833),
Carlist Wars erupted against the newly established
liberal state of
Isabella II. Catalonia was divided, with the coastal and most industrialized areas supporting liberalism, while most of the countryside were in the hands of the
Carlist faction; the latter proposed to reestablish the institutional systems suppressed by the Nueva Planta decrees in the ancient realms of the Crown of Aragon. The consolidation of the liberal state saw a new provincial division of Spain, including Catalonia, which was divided into four provinces (Barcelona, Girona, Lleida and Tarragona). during the
Tragic Week, 1909 In the second third of the 19thcentury, Catalonia became an important industrial center, particularly focused on
textiles. This process was a consequence of the conditions of proto-industrialisation of textile production in the prior two centuries, growing capital from wine and brandy export, and was later boosted by the government support for domestic manufacturing. In 1832, the
Bonaplata Factory in Barcelona became the first factory in the country to make use of the
steam engine. The first railway on the Iberian Peninsula was built between Barcelona and
Mataró in 1848. A policy to encourage
company towns also saw the textile industry flourish in the countryside in the 1860s and 1870s. Although the policy of Spanish governments oscillated between free trade and protectionism, become more common. To this day Catalonia remains one of the most industrialised areas of Spain. During the 19th century, as well as other Spaniards, there were Catalan business involved in the
Atlantic slave trade and in the owning and management of
slave plantations in Cuba and Puerto Rico. Between 1817 and 1867, they were involved in the transportation of 550,000 to 700,000 slaves from West Africa to the Caribbean. The Spanish government turned a blind eye to illicit slave trading. When slavery was abolished in 1886, various other Spaniards, the "
indianos", as well as Catalans returned and invested their fortunes in constructing mansions in areas such as
La Rambla. At the same time, Barcelona was the focus of industrial conflict and revolutionary uprisings known as "bullangues". In Catalonia, a
republican trend began to develop among the progressives, attracting many Catalans who favored the federalisation of Spain. Meanwhile, the Catalan language saw a
Romantic cultural renaissance from the second third of the century onwards, the
Renaixença, among both the working class and the bourgeoisie. Right after the fall of the
First Spanish Republic (1873–1874) and the subsequent restoration of the Bourbon dynasty (1874), Catalan nationalism began to be organized politically under the leadership of the republican federalist
Valentí Almirall. proclaiming the
Catalan Republic on 14 April 1931 in Barcelona The
anarchist movement had been active throughout the last quarter of the 19th century and the early 20th century, founding the
CNT trade union in 1910 and achieving one of the first
eight-hour workdays in Europe in 1919. Growing resentment of conscription and of the military culminated in the
Tragic Week (Catalan:
Setmana Tràgica) in Barcelona in 1909. Under the hegemony of the
Regionalist League, Catalonia gained a degree of administrative unity for the first time in the Modern era. In 1914, the four Catalan provinces were authorized to create a
commonwealth (Catalan:
Mancomunitat), lacking legislative power or political autonomy, which carried out an ambitious program of modernization, but it was disbanded in 1925 by the dictatorship of
Primo de Rivera (1923–1930). During the final stage of the Dictatorship, with Spain beginning to suffer an economic crisis, Barcelona hosted the
1929 International Exposition. After the end of the dictatorship and a brief proclamation of the
Catalan Republic, during the events of the proclamation of the
Second Spanish Republic (14–17April1931), Catalonia received, in 1932, its
first Statute of Autonomy from the Spanish Republic's Parliament, granting it a considerable degree of self-governance, establishing an autonomous body, the Generalitat of Catalonia, which included a
parliament. The left-wing pro-independence leader
Francesc Macià was appointed its first president. Under the Statute, Catalan became an official language. The governments of the
Republican Generalitat, led by the
Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC) leaders Francesc Macià (1931–1933) and
Lluís Companys (1933–1940), sought to implement a modernizing and progressive social agenda, despite the internal difficulties. This period was marked by political unrest, the effects of the economic crisis and their social repercussions. The Statute of Autonomy was suspended in 1934, due to the
Events of 6 October in Barcelona, after the accession of right-wing Spanish nationalist party
CEDA to the government of the Republic, considered close to
fascism. After the electoral victory of the left wing
Popular Front in February 1936, the Government of Catalonia was pardoned and the self-government was restored.
Spanish Civil War (1936–1939) and Franco's rule (1939–1975) The defeat of the
military rebellion against the Republican government in Barcelona placed Catalonia firmly in the
Republican side of the
Spanish Civil War. During the war, there were two rival powers in Catalonia: the de jure power of the Generalitat and the de facto power of the armed popular militias. Violent confrontations between the workers' parties (
CNT-FAI and
POUM against the
PSUC) culminated in the defeat of the former in 1937. The situation resolved itself progressively in favor of the Generalitat, but at the same time the Generalitat lost most of its autonomous powers within Republican Spain. In 1938 Franco's troops broke the Republican territory in two, isolating Catalonia from the rest of the Republican territory. The defeat of the Republican army in the
Battle of the Ebro led in 1938 and 1939 to the
occupation of Catalonia by Franco's forces. in Barcelona producing wood and steel products The defeat of the Spanish Republic in the
Spanish Civil War brought to power the dictatorship of
Francisco Franco, whose first ten-year rule was particularly violent, autocratic, and repressive both in a political, cultural, social, and economical sense. In Catalonia, any kind of public activities associated with
Catalan nationalism,
republicanism,
anarchism,
socialism,
liberalism,
democracy or
communism, including the publication of books on those subjects or simply discussion of them in open meetings, was banned. Franco's regime banned the use of Catalan in government-run institutions and during public events, and the Catalan institutions of self-government were abolished. The president of Catalonia,
Lluís Companys, was taken to Spain from his exile in the German-occupied France and was tortured and executed in the
Montjuïc Castle of Barcelona for the crime of 'military rebellion'. During later stages of
Francoist Spain, certain folkloric and religious celebrations in Catalan resumed and were tolerated. Use of Catalan in the
mass media had been forbidden but was permitted from the early 1950s in the theatre. Despite the ban during the first years and the difficulties of the next period, publishing in Catalan continued throughout his rule. The years after the war were extremely hard. Catalonia, like many other parts of Spain, had been devastated by the war. Recovery from the war damage was slow and made more difficult by the international trade embargo and the
autarkic politics of Franco's regime. By the late 1950s, the region had recovered its pre-war economic levels and in the 1960s was the second-fastest growing economy in the world in what became known as the
Spanish miracle. During this period there was a spectacular growth of industry and tourism in Catalonia that drew large numbers of workers to the region from across Spain and made the area around Barcelona one of Europe's largest industrial metropolitan areas.
Transition and democratic period (1975–present) of
Barcelona during the
1992 Summer Olympics After Franco's death in 1975, Catalonia voted for the adoption of a democratic Spanish Constitution in 1978, in which Catalonia recovered political and cultural autonomy, restoring the Generalitat (exiled since the end of the Civil War in 1939) in 1977 and adopting a
new Statute of Autonomy in 1979, which defined Catalonia as a "nationality". The
first elections to the Parliament of Catalonia under this Statute gave the Catalan presidency to
Jordi Pujol, leader of
Convergència i Unió (CiU), a center-right Catalan nationalist electoral coalition, with Pujol re-elected until 2003. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, the institutions of Catalan autonomy were deployed, among them an autonomous police force, the
Mossos d'Esquadra, in 1983, and the broadcasting network
Televisió de Catalunya and its first channel
TV3, created in 1983. An extensive program of normalization of Catalan language was carried out. Today, Catalonia remains one of the most economically dynamic communities of Spain. The Catalan capital and largest city, Barcelona, is a major international cultural centre and a major tourist destination. In 1992,
Barcelona hosted the
Summer Olympic Games.
Independence movement In November 2003, elections to the Parliament of Catalonia gave the government to a left-wing Catalanist coalition formed by the
Socialists' Party of Catalonia (PSC-PSOE),
Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC) and
Initiative for Catalonia Greens (ICV), and the socialist
Pasqual Maragall was appointed president. The new government prepared a bill for a
new Statute of Autonomy, aiming to consolidate and to expand self-government. The new Statute of Autonomy of Catalonia, approved after a referendum in 2006, was contested by important sectors of Spanish society, especially by the conservative
People's Party, which sent the law to the
Constitutional Court of Spain. In 2010, the Court ruled non-valid various articles establishing an autonomous Catalan system of Justice, improved financing, a new territorial division, the protected status of Catalan language, the recovering of
historical rights via Constitution's First Additional Provision or the symbolical declaration of Catalonia as a nation. This decision was severely contested by large sectors of Catalan society, which increased the demands of independence. ,
Carles Puigdemont, addresses the crowd following the unilateral declaration of independence on 27 October. A controversial
independence referendum was held in Catalonia on 1 October 2017, using a disputed voting process. It was declared illegal and suspended by the
Constitutional Court of Spain, because it breached the
1978 Constitution. Subsequent developments saw, on 27 October 2017, a symbolic
declaration of independence by the Parliament of Catalonia, the enforcement of
direct rule by the Spanish government through the use of Article 155 of the Constitution, the dismissal of the
Executive Council and the dissolution of the Parliament, with a
snap regional election called for 21 December 2017, which ended with a victory of pro-independence parties. Former President
Carles Puigdemont and five former cabinet ministers fled Spain and took refuge in other European countries (such as
Belgium, in Puigdemont's case), whereas nine other cabinet members, including vice-president
Oriol Junqueras, were sentenced to prison under various charges of rebellion, sedition, and misuse of public funds.
Quim Torra became the
131st President of the Government of Catalonia on 17 May 2018, after the Spanish courts blocked three other candidates. In 2018, the
Assemblea Nacional Catalana joined the
Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization (UNPO) on behalf of Catalonia. On 14 October 2019, the Spanish Supreme court
sentenced several Catalan political leaders, involved in organizing a referendum on Catalonia's independence from Spain, and convicted them on charges ranging from
sedition to
misuse of public funds, with sentences ranging from 9 to 13 years in prison. This decision sparked demonstrations around Catalonia. They were later pardoned by the Spanish government and left prison in June 2021. In the early-to-mid 2020s support for independence declined to 40% in favour, with support for dropping significantly, with the left-wing
unionist Socialists' Party of Catalonia (PSC-PSOE) returning to office in the
May 2024 elections. == Geography ==