This article may be a rough translation from Spanish. It may have been generated, in whole or in part, by a computer or by a translator without dual proficiency.(August 2022) |
Cigarral refers to recreational estates or mansions on the south bank of the Tagus river as it passes by the city of Toledo, Spain, with a main building intended for recreational housing, a secondary building for the grounskeepers (cigarraleros) and, most important and characteristic, large grounds of a minimum of 7000 m2. Until the mid-20th century areas of around 20,000 m2 were common.
The origin of the word cigarral is unknown. The most commonly believed etymology is that it comes from the seasonal presence of cicadas (Spanish : cigarras) in the summer months, when these residences were primarily occupied. [1] Other versions relate it to the conjunction of two Arabic words that refer to recreational houses. [2]
Cigarrales are believed to have originated in the middle of the 15th century. Once the clashes between the Arab and Christian kingdoms subsided, important church leaders began to buy land on the Tagus river's southern shore, and spend the summer on these farms. By the middle of the 17th century, the lands of the cigarrales were devoted to fruit trees.
Their use as second residences for the Toledan bourgeoisie continued until the mid-20th century, when they began to subdivided into smaller properties, as the large areas were not profitable and the maintenance costs of these farms were high.
In 1994, the PECHT (Plan Especial del Casco Histórico, Special Plan of the Historic District), the urban planning regulations of the Toledo and the Tagus area, entered into force. Due to the PECHT, it became more difficult to subdivide large cigarrales, and a gradual change of use of the area began. It lost its residential character, as hotels and restaurants began to take over the cigarrales.
In 2006, in the face of the great deterioration of the cigarrales area due to the transformation of use, the first advance of the Special Cigarrales Plan was presented, a document proposed by PECHT to organize the urbanization of the cigarrales.
One of the chapters of Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes takes place in the cigarrales area, as the protagonist passes through Toledo.
Spanish dramatist Tirso de Molina's first published work, in 1621, was titled Los Cigarrales de Toledo.
Galdós, a great lover of Toledo and the cigarrales, showed them to his friend Gregorio Marañón.
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