
Last modified: 2015-01-17 by ivan sache
Keywords: medina del campo | 
Links: FOTW homepage |
search | 
disclaimer and copyright | 
write us | 
mirrors
Flag of Medina del Campo - Image by Ivan Sache, 14 February 2014
See also:
The municipality of Medina del Campo (21,594 inhabitants in 2012, therefore the 3rd most populous municipality in the province; 15,327 ha; tourism website) is located in the south-east of Valladolid Province, 50 km from Valladolid.
Medina del Campo, although already settled in the Age of Iron and in the Roman times, bears a name of Arab origin; "medina" means "the oldest part of a town". Medina del Campo was mentioned for the first time, as Metina, on a document dated 1170. The town was established during the re-settlement campaign organized by King Alfonso VI (1040-1109). The charter granted to the town was confirmed in 1258 by Alfonso X the Wise (1221-1284). The Cortes of Medina were gathered for the first time by Ferdinand IV (1285-1312).
Medina del Campo is nicknamed the Town of the Fairs. Ferdinand I of  
Aragón (1380-1416), born in Medina del Campo, is considered as the  
founder of the fairs (1404), probably on the model of those  
established in Cuéllar in 1390. His wife, Eleanor of Aragó n  
(1402-1445), lord of Medina, signed on 12 April 1421 the first  
Ordinances regulating the fairs, which were granted  in 1491 the title  
of General Fairs of the Kingdom by the Catholic Monarchs. Beside the  
Royal privilege, the fairs were favoured by the location of Medina del  
Campo on the Toledo-Burgos road, at the crossing of roads to  
Valladolid, Zamora, Salamanca, Segovia and Ávila. Two fairs of 50 days  
each were organized every year in May and October, respectively.  
Originally free markets, the fairs progressively attracted changers  
and bankers from Antwerp, Lyon, Geneva, Florence and Lisbon. The local  
tradition says that bills of exchanges were invented in Medina del  
Campo in the 16th century, although earlier examples of such bills are  
known in Italy. The fairs declined in the second half of the 16th  
century following the economical crisis caused by the indebtedness of  
the Crown. The break of trade with Flanders and the transfer of the  
Court to Madrid caused in October 1594 the suppression of the fairs;  
attempts of re-establishement failed during the reign of Philip V  
(1700-1746).
The old downtown that developed in the 15th-16th  
centuries was registered as an Historical and Artistic Monument in 1978.
Regional fairs were founded in Medina del Campo after the inauguration  
of the railway line (1860); a weekly cattle market was established in  
1870, as was a grain market in 1871. The San Antolín Main Fair was  
created in 1873; its duration was extended in 1878 from 6 to 8 days,  
as it is today.
The blaze that destroyed in 1492 some 260 buildings of Medina del  
Campo prompted Isabel the Catholic to edict the "Fire Ordinances". The  
queen dicted her last will on 26 November 1504 in the palace known  
since then as "Palacio Real Testamentario" (Palace of the Royal Last  
Will).
Medina del Campo took the party of the Comuneros revolted against  
Charles I, refusing in 1520 to deliver the cannons required to attack  
Segovia. As a retaliation, the Royal troops burned down more than 900  
houses.
Ivan Sache, 14 February 2014
The flag of Medina del Campo (photo, photo, photo, photo) is purple with the municipal coat of arms in the middle.
The coat of arms of Medina del Campo is "Azure 13 roundels argent 3 +  
3 + 3 + 3 + 1 a bordure argent inscribed 'NI EL REY OFICIO NI EL PAPA  
BENEFICIO' in letters sable. The shield surmounted by a Royal crown  
open".
The origin of the 13 roundels involves an old legend featuring Luis  
Díez, captain of the militias of Medina del Campo. During the disaster  
of Alarcos, a battle lost on 19 July 1195 by King Alfonso VIII to Al- 
Mansur, Díez could not prevent his banner to be captured by the Moors.  
For such a disgrace, he vowed not to come back to Medina until the  
banner is retrieved; accordingly, he spent the rest of his life in a  
small hut located out of the town. When about to die, he asked his son  
Sancho to fulfil his promise. A few years later, Sancho commanded the  
Medina troops, which, without any banner, defeated the Moors near  
Ronda (Andalusia), together with the Ávila troops (in fact, Ronda was  
re-conquered only in 1485!). In the abandoned Moorish camp, the  
assaulters found two banners; Díez took the blue banner charged with  
13 white roundels and brought it back triumphally to Medina del Campo.  
To celebrate the fulfilment of the vow, Medina superseded its old  
banner, made of yellow and blue bends, with the new one.
The motto on the bordure reads "Neither the King has office nor the  
Pope has benefice", reflecting the civil and ecclesiastic autonomy  
once enjoyed by the town (description).
The old chronicles present Medina del Campo before the Muslim invasion  
as a kind of small republic, in which the power was exerted by the  
people, the kings having no jurisdiction on any matter. This autonomy  
was confirmed after the reconquest by the establishment of the  
Lineages, which, however, transferred the power to a limited number of  
families. Medina subsequently lost its full civil autonomy, at least  
in 1170 when King Alfonso VIII granted the town to Queen Consort  
Leonor of England. The town was then granted by John I to the Duchess  
of Lancaster and by Ferdinand I to Eleanor of Aragón. The Lineages  
were maintained, but they decreased even more the civil autonomy of  
the town by asking in 1407 the King to appoint a "corregidor" to rule  
the town and an "alcalde" to run the fortress. Those rulers defended  
the interests of the king rather than those of the the town, so that  
the civil autonomy of Medina del Campo had completely vanished in the  
18th century.
The ecclesiastic autonomy of Medina del Campo resulted, more or less,  
from the unresolved status of 16 "median" parishes disputed between  
the Archdeaconry of Olmedo, which belonged to the Diocese of Ávila,  
and the Archdeaconry of Medina, which belonged to the Diocese of  
Salamanca, and, much later, to the Diocese of Valladolid. The disputed  
parishes were incorporated into the Land of Medina, both their  
ecclesiastic status remained indeterminate: they were ruled the one  
year by Ávila and the next year by Salamanca. The bishops in charge  
had little to decide about the ecclesiastic affairs in Medina del  
Campo but to approve the local decisions, as confirmed in the Bull  
signed by Pope Sixtus IV in 1480 to allow the building of the  
collegiate church. Permanent struggle between the parish and the  
collegiate church for precedence in processions and election of abbots  
required in 1568 the intervention of King Philip V. As for the civil  
autonomy, the ecclesiastic autonomy of Medina was then significantly  
reduced; the inhabitants of the town attempted to prevent the direct  
appointment of a vicar by the Bishop of Valladolid, to no avail. The  
last local privileges were eventually suppressed by the Concordat  
signed in 1851.
Ivan Sache, 14 February 2014
A Spanish national flag is hoisted over the highest tower of the collegiate church of Medina del Campo. The flag is changed every year for the inauguration of the San Antolín Festival by members of a local association (Lowering of the flag, 31 August 2012; Hoisting of the flag, 1 September 2012).
Ivan Sache, 14 February 2014