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DISCOVER SPAIN

Eight fascinating facts about Spain’s Asturias region

To celebrate Día de Asturias or Asturias Day on September 8th, we've uncovered eight fascinating facts about one of Spain's greenest regions.

Eight fascinating facts about Spain's Asturias region
8 fascinating facts about Asturias. Photo: Daniel Nebreda / Pixabay

Many of the festivities on Asturias Day centre around the coastal city of Gijón. On this day, all the mayors from different towns around the region gather in Gijón and locals come dressed in traditional costumes to parade through the city. 

Located on Spain’s northern coast, hemmed in between Cantabria to the East and Galicia to the West, Asturias is one of the country’s smallest regions and is often overlooked, but it definitely has a strong sense of identity and many reasons for visiting.

Situated in the area known as ‘Green Spain’, it’s a lush and verdant region, famed for its apples, cider, dairy produce, nature, and elegant architecture

The most remote location on the planet can be found in Asturias

OK, so this remote location may not be situated on the land, but it lies deep under the sea and is known as the Avilés Canyon. At 4,750 metres deep, it is considered to be the deepest underwater valley in the world. It is said that more is known about the moon than about the Avilés Canyon. 

Thirty percent of the region is protected

A natural paradise, almost 30 percent of Asturias is protected, which is well above the national average. It’s home to five natural parks and five biosphere reserves, as well as the largest oak forest in Spain. Some of these include Fuentes del Narcea and Ibias, Peña Ubiña-La Mesa, the Picos de Europa National Park, Eo River and Terras de Burón. 

There are many protected natural parks in Asturias. Photo: Pablo Valerio / Pixabay

Many movies have been shot here

Because of its natural beauty, Asturias has been used as a filming location for many different movies. Some of the best-known films that have been shot here include Woody Allen’s Vicky Cristina Barcelona, The Orphanage, ​​Oviedo Express, and Rowing with the Wind, starring Hugh Grant and Elizabeth Hurley. Asturias has also appeared in several Spanish series, including such as Don Matteo, in which a Catholic priest investigates local crimes. 

The largest gold deposit of gold in Europe is located in Asturias

The largest unexploited gold deposit in all of Western Europe was found in Asturias. Approximately two million ounces of gold are said to be located in the subsoil of Salave, located in the area of Tapia de Casariego, which borders Galicia. There’s even a gold route that visitors can follow from Navelgas towards Luarca.

Gold panning in Asturias. Photo: Janothird / Wikimedia Commons

It is one of the most diverse cheese regions in Europe

Cheese fans are in luck if they choose to visit the region as there is no other region in Europe of the same size that has such a wide variety of cheeses as Asturias. More than 40 different types of cheese are made in Asturias, including Cabrales, Gamonedo, Afuega’l Pitu, Los Beyos and Casín, which all have designation of origin protection endorsed by the European Union. Asturias is also known for its other excellent dairy products including milk and yoghurt. 

It could be said that the Camino de Santiago actually started in Asturias

According to the history books, the first pilgrim to travel the route to Santiago de Compostela was King Alfonso II of Asturias. He travelled all the way from the capital Oviedo to see for himself if the tomb of the Apostle Santiago had been discovered. This became known as the Camino Primitivo, which is very similar to the original route of the Camino de Santiago, whose origin dates back to the 9th century. 

Pilgrims walking part of the original Camino Primitivo. Photo: Miguel Saenz de Santa María / Unsplash

It’s the most mountainous region in Spain  

The highest mountain in Spain may be Teide, found on the Canary Island of Tenerife, but the region with the most mountains and the most undulating landscapes is in fact, Asturias. This is partly due to the spectacular Picos de Europa mountain range that runs through it. According to a geographical study, Guipuzcoa in the Basque Country is the next mountainous, followed by Tenerife. 

The University of Oviedo once sentenced dolphins

It is said that in a small coastal town of Asturias, the locals became enraged because the dolphins were eating all the fish and were even destroying the fishermen’s nets, so they couldn’t catch any for themselves. The people and the fishermen became so angry that they took their plight to the University of Oviedo. The professors decided that a trial should take place and in the end, the dolphins were found guilty and issued with a sentence. The local fishermen went out to sea to read the dolphins their sentence and it is said that from that day forward the dolphins no longer bothered the locals and went to find their fish elsewhere. 

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SPANISH HISTORY

The forgotten country that existed between Spain and Portugal

The surprising story of Couto Mixto, a landlocked microstate located in between Spain and Portugal.

The forgotten country that existed between Spain and Portugal

The tiny republic of Couto Mixto or Couto Misto was situated between the towns of Montalegre in northern Portugal and Ourense in the Galician region of Spain.

It included the villages of Santiago de Rubiás, Rubiás and Meaus, all of which are located in Spain today, and measured approximately 27 km².

You could easily pass through this area of Galicia and into Portugal without knowing you were driving through an ancient nation.

Today, all that remains are several small sparsely-populated villages and herds of cows that roam the pastures next to the Salas River.

The independent nation of Cuoto Mixto was located in between Spain’s Galicia region and Portugal. Source: Google Maps

Historians aren’t exactly sure when Couto Mixto was established as a state, but it was thought to be sometime between the 10th and 12th centuries.

Some believe that its creation was born out of the signing of the Treaty of Zamora on October 5th, 1143. It was an agreement between two Alfonsos – Alfonso I of Portugal and Alfonso VII of León, which somehow left out a piece of land that was too small to fight over, but large enough to become a republic.

Another hypothesis is that it was created in the Middle Ages as a place where prisoners could serve out their sentences, repopulating lands after the occupation of the Moors.

Meanwhile, locals talk of a legend of an exiled princess who took refuge in the region and was looked after by the inhabitants. To thank them, the princess granted the people freedom to govern themselves.

Whatever the reason it was formed, Couto Mixto continued to be independent for around 700 years and even had its own flag and national anthem.

The inhabitants of Couto Mixto enjoyed several special privileges over those from neighbouring Spain and Portugal, including little to no taxes, exemption from military service, freedom to trade and cultivate land and few crop regulations, meaning that the tobacco trade flourished here.

Inhabitants also had the right to choose their nationality, whether they wanted it to be Spanish, Portuguese or both.

The country of Couto Mixto which once existed in between Spain and Portugal. Photo: Fabio Mendes / Wikimedia Commons

Because of these privileges, it was a haven for refugees and fugitives, and some historians even believe that it was founded for this purpose.

Because of the relaxation of trade rules and the freedom to cultivate, Couto Mixto became a popular smuggling destination. A smuggling route connected the villages within the state with Tourém in Portugal, named the Caminho Privilegiado or Privileged Path, where there were no border guards and no products could be seized. In addition to this, anyone found smuggling here couldn’t be detained.

This doesn’t mean that Couto Mixto was a completely lawless state, on the contrary, it had its own form of democracy.

It wasn’t ruled over by kings or feudal lords, instead it was presided over by a judge who was elected every three years and was supported by delegates in each of the villages. There was also a local vicar, who also had the responsibilities of a sheriff to carry out orders.

Couto Mixto continued to exist until the mid-19th century, when it was finally absorbed by the two neighboring countries as a result of the Treaty of Lisbon in 1864. It was signed in order to put an end to the smuggling and local gangs that had formed. Most of it became part of Spain, modern-day Galicia, while a small slither went to Portugal and the town of Montalegre.

Couto Mixto’s penultimate judge was Delfín Modesto Brandán and today you can find statue of him the atrium of the church of Santiago, as well as in the village of Calvos de Randín where this microstate once existed. 

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