in full Guernica y Luno city, just northeast of Bilbao, province of Vizcaya (Biscay), in the autonomous Basque Country, northern Spain. The city, on the Ro de Plencia (Butrn) near the inlet of the Bay of Biscay, is the statutory capital of the former Lordship of Vizcaya, sacred to the Basques. It is symbolized by a venerable oak, the tree of Guernica (Guernikako arbola), under the branches of which the councils (batzarraks) of Vizcaya met to determine defense policies and to receive royal assurances of fueros (charters of privileges), which were retained from the Middle Ages through the 19th century. In 1366 Count Tello organized Guernica as an enclave, autonomous from the surrounding district of Luno, a status that endured until 1882, when Guernica and Luno were united as a municipality. After surviving the Carlist Wars of the 19th century, Guernica led the futile agitation for an independent Basque state in 1932. In 1937 it was heavily bombed, supposedly by German planes, an incident that inspired Pablo Picasso's famous painting Guernica (1937; Prado, Madrid). The city's architectural highlights include the Council or Parliament House (182433), the Tribunales (law courts), and the church of Santa Mara la Antigua (1418). Industries include food processing, furniture making, metalworking, and ammunition manufacture. Tourism is an added source of income. Pop. (1981) 17,836.
GUERNICA
Meaning of GUERNICA in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012