Guadalajara
Spain
Guadalajara: Palacio del Infantado
Guadalajara, city, capital of Guadalajara provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Castile–La Mancha, central Spain. It is situated on the Henares River northeast of Madrid. The city, the ancient Arriaca, is Iberian in origin and was for a time held by the Romans, but its name is derived from Arabic (Wādī al-Ḥijārah, River of Stones). Taken by Christian forces in 1085, the city from the 15th to the 17th century was the seat of the Mendoza family, duques del Infantado, who were munificent patrons of Spanish artists and writers. The facade of their palace (begun 1461; now an orphanage) is the city’s chief artistic monument; the churches of Santa María de la Fuente (13th century), San Ginés (Mudéjar style; once part of a Dominican monastery), and San Nicolás (1691) are also notable.
The city was a commercial centre (woolens) in the Middle Ages. Modern Guadalajara maintains its traditional agricultural industries, but its economy has grown with the addition of modern textile and machinery manufacturing facilities. The city has high-speed-train service to Madrid. It is the site of a military airfield. Pop. (2006 est.) 74,149.
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