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Cádiz is the fifty-seventh-largest Spanish city. [72] In recent years, the city's population has steadily declined; it is the only municipality of the Bay of Cádiz (the comarca composed of Cádiz, Chiclana, El Puerto de Santa María, Puerto Real, and San Fernando), whose population has diminished.
Algeciras, which surpassed Cádiz with 122,982 inhabitants, is the second most populated city. The entire province had a population of 1,245,960 (as of 2021), of whom about 600,000 live in the Bay of Cádiz area (including Jerez), making it the third most populous province in Andalusia. Its population density is 167.93 per square kilometre.
Map of Spain with the province of Cádiz highlighted Map of the municipalities in the province of Cádiz. This is a list of the 44 municipalities in the province of Cádiz in the autonomous community of Andalusia, Spain.
1587 – Spanish fleet attacked and Cádiz raided by Sir Francis Drake. [3] 1596 – Capture of Cádiz by English and Dutch forces; city sacked. 1602 – Santa Cruz Cathedral rebuilt. 1625 – November: Attempted English and Dutch Cádiz Expedition. 1656 – 9 September: Battle of Cádiz; English win. [3] 1702 Battle of Cádiz. [3] Population ...
The Bay of Cádiz (Spanish: Comarca de la Bahía de Cádiz) is a comarca (county, but with no administrative role) in the province of Cádiz, Andalusia, southern Spain. The present-day comarca was established in 2003 by the Government of Andalusia .
Estimates of the pre-Columbian population of the Americas vary but possibly stood at 100 million—one fifth of humanity in 1492. Between 1500 and 1600 the population of the Americas was halved. In Mexico alone, it has been estimated that the pre-conquest population of around 25 million was reduced within 80 years to about 1.3 million.
Casa de contratación and Seville Cathedral View of Cadiz, where the American commerce was transferred in 1717. The crises of the 17th century had their culmination with the War of the Spanish Succession, which had hardly any repercussions in Andalusia, which was from the beginning on the side of Philip of Anjou.
The Costa del Sol (Spanish: [ˈkosta ðel ˈsol]; literally "Coast of the Sun") is a region in the south of Spain in the autonomous community of Andalusia, comprising the coastal towns and communities along the coastline of the Province of Málaga and the eastern part of Campo de Gibraltar in Cádiz.